Is the problem cruelty, ignorance, or greed? You decide

We’ll begin with our usual reminders:

1. The U.S. federal government is not like state/local governments. It is uniquely Monetarily Sovereign, meaning it cannot unintentionally run short of its sovereign currency, the U.S. dollar.

Unlike state/local governments, the federal government never spends “taxpayer money.” It creates new dollars ad hoc when it pays any bills. Even if the government collected $0 in taxes, it could continue spending forever.

Because federal taxes do not fund federal spending, what is their purpose? The first purpose of federal taxes is to control the economy by taxing what the government wishes to discourage and giving tax breaks to what the government wishes to reward.

The second purpose is to assure demand for the dollar by requiring taxes to be paid in dollars.

2. Federal deficit spending does not, has not, and will not cause inflation. All inflations in history have been caused by scarcities of key goods and services, most notably oil and food, but more recently, transportation, computer chips, metals, lumber, labor, and other goods.

Today’s inflation was COVID-induced by all of the above scarcities. The scarcities and inflation could be cured by more federal spending to acquire and distribute the scarce goods and services.

Recently, I read an article in THE WEEK Magazine that reflects Congress’s cruelty, ignorance, and or greed, primarily those of the right. Here are excerpts and comments:Child Poverty in Western Cities: learning from global approaches – Child in  the City

The child poverty rate in the United States more than doubled between 2021 and 2022, according to new data on poverty, income, and health insurance from the U.S. Census Bureau on Sept. 12.

A year after the rate hit a historic low of 5.2 percent, the percentage of impoverished children jumped to 12.4 percent.

The bureau pointed to the end of the pandemic-era expansion of child tax credits in late 2021 as a critical factor in the dramatic increases.

“This represents a return to child poverty levels before the pandemic,” Liana Fox, assistant division chief at the Census Bureau, said during a news conference, per the Associated Press. “We did see the child tax credit substantially decreased child poverty.”

Why was the program discontinued if the child tax credit was proven to work and no taxpayer dollars were involved? We’ll discuss that later in this post.

The increase was “part of a wider rise in poverty recorded by the Census,” Time noted, “some of which can be attributed to inflation.” However, child advocates said, “the leap was particularly stark for kids — and was avoidable,” the outlet added.

The federal government can cure inflation by using its infinite money-creation power to acquire scarce items and/or reduce business expenses.

How did the rate go from a record low to more than doubling in one year? During the pandemic, Congress expanded the child tax credit as a part of the American Rescue Plan, which helped families stay afloat alongside stimulus checks.

Families received up to $3,600 for kids under 6 and $3,000 for children aged 6 to seventeen.

Officials also made the tax credit refundable, meaning families who did not make enough money to owe income tax could still be eligible for the monthly payments. This allowed millions of low-income families to be qualified and helped drive the child poverty rate to its lowest level in years.

That progress was reversed when the pandemic relief lapsed, and Congress did not vote to extend the expanded child tax credit at the end of 2021. With the program ending, millions of families lost eligibility for the credit.

The child tax credit can sometimes be considered “an upside-down policy,” Sharon Parrott, president of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, told NPR. “That’s because the children who need it the most get the least, while higher income children get more.”

That means when the pandemic relief ended, many families no longer reached the income requirement to qualify for the credit.

In contrast, families making six-figure incomes still get the full tax credit, Parrott explained. The child credit is income-based, so the more money you make, the more you earn per child.

Why did Congress favor giving more to the rich and less to the poor? Logically, it should be the other way around. But the rich make bigger campaign contributions. It’s that simple.

The data highlights “that poverty in our country isn’t a personal failing, but rather a policy choice,” said Melissa Boteach, vice president of income security at the National Women’s Law Center, per Time.

Legislators could “lift millions of women and children out of poverty” if they “prioritize families over their wealthy donors,” Boteach added.

The rich have convinced the voting public that the poor are lazy takers whose poverty results from their sloth. “If only they worked harder like I do,” goes the mantra, “they wouldn’t be poor.” It’s all a convenient lie to excuse cruelty and lack of compassion. If anything, the poor work harder than the rich. They are tasked with the most menial, least pleasant, most demeaning, least rewarding, back-breaking jobs our society offers. More than any other fact, luck separates the poor from the rich. “There, but for the grace of God, go I.”

If the expanded tax credit was working, why wasn’t it extended? President Biden blamed congressional Republicans for not extending the expanded child tax credit, arguing that the rise reported by the Census was “no accident.”

But the push to expand the child tax credit reached a stalemate in Congress, with opposition from Democrats and Republicans. “One flash point was an insistence by some lawmakers that it should go only to families with working parents,” wrote The Washington Post editorial board.

That’s the WSJ expression of the “lazy takers” poverty theory. If someone doesn’t have a job, that “proves” they don’t deserve help. It’s a disgusting lie promulgated to support cruelty and indifference. “I am a good person, but I don’t give to charity because (fill in the blank).

Others objected because they felt the money would discourage people from working and fuel inflation, which was already at a record high.

Think about it. Some 0f the financially fortunate in Congress felt that people receiving $3,600 to support a child for a year would not look for work. Only the clueless would believe such nonsense. Others falsely claimed that increasing the federal deficit would exacerbate inflation. (They had no objections to the gigantic tax loopholes enjoyed by the rich, which further increased the deficit.) When Donald Trump paid only $500 in total annual taxes for income that otherwise would have resulted in many millions of tax dollars, he alone increased the deficit by more than several thousand poor people receiving child tax credits.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) reportedly suggested that parents would use the extra money on drugs, per Intelligencer, and he later opposed his party’s Build Back Better budget proposal, which included an extension to the child tax credit program.

Manchin’s disturbing suggestions were:. If you give anything to the poor, they’ll blow it on booze, cigarettes, and drugs rather than feeding their children. If you’re one of the (mostly) right-wingers who like to make that claim, I genuinely feel sorry for the terrible job your parents did on you. They made you into a small, mean-spirited excuse for a person.

On a smaller scale, it’s “encouraging that 13 states have a version of the tax credit in place,” the Post editorial board reported. Most are blue states, but “there are also programs in conservative states such as Idaho and Oklahoma, where lawmakers understand how effectively it works,” the board noted.

The irony is that when states spend money, their taxpayers fund the dollars, unlike federal taxpayers, who fund nothing. And here’s a cute switch by the increasingly right-wing extremist Wall Street Journal:

The temporary infusion of cash provided by the child tax credits and other pandemic stimulus programs contributed to “an inflation surge that gutted real incomes.”

Manchin was right to oppose a program that would have cost $1.2 trillion over the next decade.

The U.S. doesn’t need more inflationary spending that disproportionately “punishes lower-income Americans.”

Get it? The Wall Street Journal tells its gullible readers that helping the poor is bad for the economy and even bad for the poor!  (As though that right-wing paper gives a fig about the well-being of the poor.) In the lying words of the hate-mongers, giving to the poor encourages unemployment, drugs, inflation, and amazingly, even makes the poor and their children poorer. (Never mind that the child poverty rate more than doubled when the child tax credit ended.) Perhaps the death of the WSJ’s owner, Rupert Murdoch, will help this paper come to some semblance of accuracy, though it has not yet improved the equally extremist Fox News. SUMMARY Giving money to the poor makes them less poor, doesn’t cause inflation, doesn’t increase illegal drug use, doesn’t increase unemployment, doesn’t threaten America’s solvency, and doesn’t cost taxpayers a thing. In answer to the title question, “Is the problem cruelty, ignorance, or greed”? The answer, of course, is: All three. And it applies to Washington and the voting public. Rodger Malcolm Mitchell Monetary Sovereignty Twitter: @rodgermitchell Search #monetarysovereignty Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell

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The Sole Purpose of Government Is to Improve and Protect the Lives of the People.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY

–Why even the GAO is part of the movement for economic ignorance.

The debt hawks are to economics as the creationists are to biology. Those, who do not understand Monetary Sovereignty, do not understand economics. If you understand the following, simple statement, you are ahead of most economists, politicians and media writers in America: Our government, being Monetarily Sovereign, has the unlimited ability to create the dollars to pay its bills.
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Excerpt from a March 1, 2011 article in the “Federal Eye” by Ed O’Keefe, titled: “Government overlap costs taxpayers billions, GAO reports”

. . . according to a Government Accountability Office report released Tuesday. The U.S. government has more than 100 programs dealing with surface transportation issues, 82 monitoring teacher quality, 80 for economic development, 47 for job training, 20 offices or programs devoted to homelessness and 17 different grant programs for disaster preparedness. Another 15 agencies or offices handle food safety, and five are working to ensure the federal government uses less gasoline.

“Reducing or eliminating duplication, overlap, or fragmentation could potentially save billions of taxpayer dollars annually and help agencies provide more efficient and effective services,” the GAO said. Merging or terminating operations as recommended in the report could save up to several billion dollars.

You who understand Monetary Sovereignty are aware that taxpayers do not pay for federal spending. In fact, there is no relationship between federal taxes and federal spending (unlike the situation with monetarily non-sovereign governments, where taxes do pay for spending.) By using the words “taxpayer dollars,” the GAO demonstrates it does not understand the realities of federal finances. If you think this is amazing, bordering on the impossible, for the Government Accountability Office, not to understand federal finances, you may be right.

Without subscribing too deeply into conspiracy theory, one might conclude the GAO actually does understand, but has an axe to grind. Consider their decision to use the word, “taxpayer.” Why do they refer to “taxpayer dollars,” rather than just to “dollars”?

Clearly, they are attempting to make the point appear more shocking. We are not the government, but we all are taxpayers. So spending government dollars would not seem nearly as serious as spending yours and my (aka “taxpayer”) dollars.

According to the GAO website:

The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) is known as “the investigative arm of Congress” and “the congressional watchdog.” GAO supports the Congress in meeting its constitutional responsibilities and helps improve the performance and accountability of the federal government for the benefit of the American people. The agency examines the use of public funds; evaluates federal programs and policies; and provides analyses, recommendations, and other data to help Congress make informed oversight, policy, and funding decisions. GAO’s commitment to good government is reflected in its core values of accountability, integrity, and reliability.

We all know Congress loves to point with pride and view with alarm, and the GAO gives them the opportunity to do both. The GAO works for Congress and its purpose is to give Congress ammunition to criticize, and this ammunition is based on the believing federal dollars are limited, so must be used “efficiently” (i.e. minimally). Since, in fact, Monetarily Sovereign federal dollars are not limited, but taxpayer dollars are limited, referring to “taxpayer” dollars provides Congress with much greater alarm for viewing.

Now, consider this GAO press release:

U.S. GOVERNMENT’S 2010 FINANCIAL REPORT SHOWS SIGNIFICANT FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND FISCAL CHALLENGES

WASHINGTON (December 21, 2010) – The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) cannot render an opinion on the 2010 consolidated financial statements of the federal government, because of widespread material internal control weaknesses, significant uncertainties, and other limitations.

“Even though significant progress has been made since the enactment of key financial management reforms in the 1990s, our report on the U.S. government’s consolidated financial statement illustrates that much work remains to be done to improve federal financial management. Shortcomings in three areas again prevented us from expressing an opinion on the accrual-based financial statements,” said Gene Dodaro, Acting Comptroller General of the United States.

The main obstacles to a GAO opinion were: (1) serious financial management problems at the Department of Defense (DOD) that made its financial statements unauditable, (2) the federal government’s inability to adequately account for and reconcile intragovernmental activity and balances between federal agencies, and (3) the federal government’s ineffective process for preparing the consolidated financial statements.

[. . . ] Dodaro also cited material weaknesses involving an estimated $125.4 billion in improper payments, information security across government, and tax collection activities. He noted that three major agencies—DOD, the Department of Homeland Security, and the Department of Labor—did not get clean opinions.

Not only does this report provide Congress with plenty of ammunition to view with alarm, but more importantly (for the GAO), it demonstrates the importance of the GAO. One almost can hear Congress sighing, “Thank God for the GAO.”

In short, it is in the GAO’s interest to make its reports seem as troubling as possible. The more grim its revelations, the more likely will the GAO receive increased funding, and the more likely will Comptroller General, Gene L. Dodaro, not only keep his job, but be hailed by Congress as a true guardian of the public domain. Imagine Mr. Dodaro coming before Congress and saying, “Everything is O.K.” They’d boot him out of town.

So why should Mr. Dodaro state concern about federal dollars, when the federal government has the unlimited ability to create dollars? Who cares about saving something that is endlessly available? Better he should talk about “taxpayer” dollars, and give the (false) impression innocent Americans are being injured by federal spending.

The myth of federal deficits and debt benefits so many vested interests, is here any wonder the plain facts are ignored?

Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
http://www.rodgermitchell.com

No nation can tax itself into prosperity, nor grow without money growth.

MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY