The
Washington Post reports on the fiscal bind into which we
have been led by the neo-Keynesian "stimulus" approach to the
recession:
The nation can't sustain trillion-dollar deficits without driving
up the debt owed to private investors to dangerous levels that
could undermine the nation's global economic dominance. That debt
now stands at nearly $6 trillion.
A tax hike to pay for all this "stimulus" would certainly make
matters much worse, yet the bond market --
a subject I referenced this morning -- must calculate the
likelihood of repayment, and it's not just "global economic
dominance" that is at stake, but rather the fundamental integrity
of the federal government's "good faith and credit."
The Post article goes on to cite the unfunded
liabilities of Medicare and Social Security, and Jennifer
Rubin comments:
The president and his spinners declared this all to be a "long
term" problem that had to take a back seat to the short term
"solution" for the recession. But little they have done in the
short term will improve the economy, which by their own
calculations would have begun to bounce back on its own by the
end of 2009.
The "long term" problem is now. The first act comes with
the next major auction of Treasury debt. Are we going to start
printing dollars ourselves to buy up Treasury paper? Raise the
interest rate on bonds to keep Chinese and other investors in the
game?
Rubin hits the nail on the head. The fiscal fantasies of Hope are
about to slam head-on into the economic realities of the bond
market. Economic reality is an unmovable object, and liberals are
about to discover that Hope is not an irresistible force.
Or, in fewer words: It
Won't Work.
(Cross-posted at The
Other McCain.)