On Wednesday, the federal
government’s total debt exceeded fifteen trillion dollars.
That’s $48,000 in debt per citizen and over $133,000 in debt per
taxpayer. Adding in all U.S. debt, including personal (mortgages,
credit cards, student loans), plus government at all levels, the
debt is approaching an incomprehensible $55 trillion, representing
almost $661,000 per American family.
If you want to see just how literally big these numbers
are, take a look at this screen shot from USDebtClock.org taken a couple of
seconds after the fateful $15 trillion national debt was
reached.

As Stein’s law says, “If something cannot go on forever,
it will stop.” The question is how.
I fear to learn the answer, not least because in this
high-stakes game of musical chairs, the Democrats want to keep the
music playing while Republicans alternate between feckless and
spineless despite a 2010 election that should have given them some
backbone.
As economist
Brian Wesbury states, “Cutting spending is the most important
thing Congress can do to boost economic growth, create jobs and
lift stock markets to new highs.”
But in Congress and the “Super Committee,”
Republicans are walking away from pledges not to raise taxes in
a poorly conceived desire to cooperate with Democrats. When will
Republicans realize that the public is awake and that good policy
is, at long last, good politics? When will they realize that acting
like Democrats is what has cost the GOP electoral success for the
past decade, if not the past century?
It could be that Republicans are trying to appear willing
to accept modest tax increases in return for tax rate cut
permanence and entitlement reform, knowing that Democrats will
refuse to accept the offer, thus placing Democrats in the role of
obstructionists. But Republicans are simply not that smart, and in
the meantime they’re playing right into Democrat hands.
After all, Republicans now seem to be offering tax
increases (in the form of reduced deductions for upper-income
earners) in return for extending the Bush tax rate cuts. But those
cuts are likely to be extended by Congress in any case. Republicans
can then make them permanent by electoral success in 2012 without
having to cave in to John Kerry and friends. In the meantime, all
the recent headlines from the Super Committee are about the size of
tax increases, with nary a mention of spending cuts.
The key to fixing our economic problems is the realization
that our federal government’s deficits and debt are caused by a
spending problem — and only a spending problem. Brian Wesbury uses
a few simple data points to make this clear: “Federal spending
increased from 18% of GDP in 1965 to 23% in 1982. During that
time, stock prices went nowhere, P-E ratios fell, unemployment rose
and the economy suffered. From 1982 to 2000, government
spending was cut back to 18.5% of GDP. Stocks soared,
unemployment plummeted and the economy boomed. Since 2000, as
government spending shot up again, the economy has suffered,
unemployment has climbed and stocks have flat-lined
again.”
On Tuesday, Congressional Budget Office (CBO) director
Doug Elmendorf
testified before a Senate committee that while the
roughly $800 billion spent on the “stimulus” created an initial
boost to GDP, the level of GDP will “be a little lower at the end
(of the decade)” than it would have been without stimulus. It’s the
economic equivalent of a hangover — after a party that wasn’t very
much fun to begin with. He also conceded Senator Jeff Sessions’
(R-AL) point that ongoing interest payments on the stimulus’s
deficits would create a “continual negative” and a “continuing
drag” on GDP “if no other action were taken.”
Elmendorf, who has been willing to speak the economic
truth more often than other high-ranking DC functionaries, is
nevertheless stuck in the CBO’s world of static modeling and
Keynesian thinking. CBO’s policy analyses systematically understate
the benefits of tax cuts and the damage of excessive spending,
including transfer payments.
Therefore, while Elmendorf’s
testimony acknowledges the likelihood of a weak economy for a
prolonged period, including an “unemployment rate close to 9
percent through the end of 2012,” his policy prescriptions have
superficial short-term appeal but miss the big picture. Bastiat
would say that the CBO’s suggestions represent the work of a “bad
economist,” one who anticipates that which is seen but ignores that which is not
seen.
In particular, the CBO favors reducing payroll taxes and
“providing aid to the unemployed” over reducing tax rates on
corporate income and repatriated earnings from foreign divisions of
American companies. It’s true that the first two policies might
give a short-term boost to economic activity — though even that is
not demonstrated by evidence. However, reducing income or payroll
taxes is only effective if the reductions are perceived to be
permanent, or at least long lasting. The ad hoc tinkering
with rates we’ve seen so far will not boost employment because
companies aren’t looking to hire someone for just a year or two;
they look at the expected long-term total cost of an
employee.
Similarly, aid to the unemployed is not a strategy for
economic growth. After all, if you subsidize something, you get
more of it. Beyond that obvious maxim, however, take this idea to
its logical conclusion: if the best way to create economic growth
were unemployment checks, then shouldn’t we aim to have as many
unemployed people as possible and send them free money, mined from
rich veins deep in Big Rock Candy
Mountain?
The insanity of the CBO’s approach shows in a
chart in which they suggest, much
as Nancy Pelosi has, that increasing unemployment benefits is
the biggest employment booster of all their policy suggestions. Any
economic model paradigm that can reach this conclusion should be
jettisoned without further ado — but won’t be because this
Keynesian approach is the keystone holding up the rotting edifice
of big, Progressive government against the weight of decades of
failure.
On the other hand, reducing corporate tax rates and
allowing a trillion dollars of capital to return to our shores are
precisely the foundation on which long-term business investment
could be built. (An income repatriation “holiday” is not without
critics, even on the right, some of whom prefer a
permanent change in taxation of U.S. companies’ foreign-earned
income.)
If you’re a corporation or entrepreneur with cash sitting
idle in bank accounts earning zero percent interest, you are
motivated to do something to generate returns on that capital. The
way to do that is to grow your business by a combination of hiring
and increasing productivity.
You’ll be deterred from doing so if the risks are so high
that simple preservation of capital is more attractive than your
risk-adjusted returns of doing business. And few things increase
those risks more than a government that tries to borrow its way to
prosperity while implementing economic policies with short-term
benefits but long-term costs. We have a government addicted to the
rush of redistributing the earnings of Americans (whether working
today or not yet born) while ignoring the DTs the
rest of us suffer for their profligacy.
Despite how obvious it is to any businessman that
long-term incentives for growth and capital formation are the key
to economic success, the CBO estimates that cutting corporate
income taxes will generate only one sixth as many jobs as raising
unemployment benefits (per dollar cost to the government.) Again,
any government operating on a model that could reach this
conclusion is so economically ignorant it’s remarkable we’re not in
even worse shape than we are.
To be fair, Mr. Elmendorf points out that his policy
suggestions “might be considered to promote economic growth and
increase employment in the near term.” But thinking near term is
exactly what has gotten us into this mess. And unless we do in fact
live on Big Rock Candy Mountain, it’s time — far past time — to
start thinking about economic policies for the long-term and the
real world.
The real world is now a $15 trillion federal debt and a
Republican Party — as represented by its negotiators on the “Super
Committee” — drifting toward Democratic positions, just as efforts
at “bipartisanship” always do. It’s time to put our foot down, to
scream from the rooftops that we have a spending problem, not a
revenue problem, that we are stunting long-term growth by focusing
on short-term false solutions due to lack of political courage and
economic wisdom.
In terms of both economics and politics, no deal is better
than a bad deal when it comes to the not-so-Super Committee and
Republican votes in Congress. Economically, as Wesbury makes clear,
“every extra dollar of tax revenue the Committee might agree to,
will limit spending reductions.… No agreement and a complete
breakdown of the committee — which forces automatic sequestration
— is better for the economy than a compromise that includes large
tax hikes.”
And politically, it’s time for Republicans to recognize
that voters want authenticity. Few things will bode better for GOP
electoral hopes than their being authentic, consistent champions of
cutting budgets. Good policy will be good politics a year from now.
Republican Super Committee members Jeb Hensarling (TX) and Pat
Toomey (PA) need to back away from “getting along” for its own
sake, stand up for economic rationality, and remind the world that
the spending-addicted Democrats’ only answer — just like the
answer from almost every addict — is to inject more drugs rather
than to get our nation into a desperately needed fiscal 12-step
plan.