Including the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare, the United States owes 911 percent of gross domestic product, more than even Greece.
By Mark Steyn
I was in Australia
earlier this month, and there, as elsewhere on my recent travels, the consensus
among the politicians I met (at least in private) was that Washington lacked
the will for meaningful course correction, and that, therefore, the trick was
to ensure that, when the behemoth goes over the cliff, you're not dragged down
with it. It is faintly surreal to be sitting in paneled offices lined by formal
portraits listening to eminent persons who assume the collapse of the dominant
global power is a fait accompli. "I don't feel America is quite a First
World country anymore," a robustly pro-American Aussie told me, with a
sigh of regret.
Well, what does some rinky-dink 'roo-infested didgeridoo mill on the other side of the planet know about anything? Fair enough. But Australia was the only major Western nation not to go into recession after 2008. And in the past decade the U.S. dollar has fallen by half against the Oz buck: That's to say, in 2002, one greenback bought you a buck-ninety Down Under; now it buys you 95 cents. More of that a bit later.
I have now returned
from Oz to the Emerald City, where everything is built with borrowed green.
President Obama has run up more debt in three years than President Bush did in
eight, and he plans to run up more still – from ten trillion in 2008 to
fifteen-and-a-half trillion now to 20 trillion and beyond. Onward and upward!
The president doesn't see this as a problem, nor do his party, and nor do at
least fortysomething percent of the American people. The Democrats' plan is to
have no plan, and their budget is not to budget at all. "We don't need to
bring a budget," said Harry Reid. Why tie yourself down? "We're not
coming before you to say we have a definitive solution," the Treasury
Secretary told House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan. "What we do know
is we don't like yours."
Nor do some of Ryan's fellow conservatives. Texas
Congressman Louie Gohmert, for whom I have a high regard, was among those
representatives who appeared at the Heritage Foundation to express misgivings
regarding the Ryan plan's timidity. They're not wrong on that: the alleged
terrorizer of widows and orphans does not propose to balance the budget of the
Government of the United States until the year 2040. That would be 27 years
after Congressman Ryan's current term of office expires. Who knows what could
throw a wrench in those numbers? Suppose Beijing decides to seize Taiwan. The
U.S. is obligated to defend it militarily. But U.S. taxpayers would be funding
both sides of the war – the home team, via the Pentagon budget, and the Chinese
military, through the interest payments on the debt. (We'll be bankrolling the
entire People's Liberation Army by some point this decade.) A Beijing-Taipei
conflict would be, in budget terms, a U.S. civil war relocated to the straits
of Taiwan. Which is why plans for midcentury are of limited value. When the
most notorious extreme callous budget-slasher of the age cannot foresee the
government living within its means within the next three decades, you begin to
appreciate why foreign observers doubt whether there'll be a 2040, not for
anything recognizable as "the United States."
Yet it's widely agreed that Ryan's plan is about as
far as you can push it while retaining minimal political viability. A
second-term Obama would roar full throttle to the cliff edge, while a President
Romney would be unlikely to do much more than ease off to third gear. At this
point, it's traditional for pundits to warn that if we don't change course
we're going to wind up like Greece. Presumably they mean that, right now, our
national debt, which crossed the Rubicon of 100 percent of GDP just before
Christmas, is not as bad as that of Athens, although it's worse than Britain,
Canada, Australia, Sweden, Denmark, and every other European nation except
Portugal, Ireland and Italy. Or perhaps they mean that America's current
deficit-to-GDP ratio is not quite as bad as Greece's, although it's worse than
that of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, and every
other European nation except Ireland.
But these comparisons tend to understate the
insolvency of America, failing as they do to take into account state and
municipal debts and public pension liabilities. When Morgan Stanley ran those
numbers in 2009, the debt-to-revenue ratio in Greece was 312 percent; in the
United States it was 358 percent. If Greece has been knocking back the ouzo,
we're facedown in the vat. Michael Tanner of the Cato Institute calculates
that, if you take into account unfunded liabilities of Social Security and
Medicare versus their European equivalents, Greece owes 875 percent of GDP; the
United States owes 911 percent – or getting on for twice as much as the
second-most insolvent Continental: France at 549 percent.
And if you're thinking, wow, all these percentages are
making my head hurt, forget 'em: When you're spending on the scale Washington does,
what matters is the hard dollar numbers. Greece's total debt is a few
rinky-dink billions, a rounding error in the average Obama budget. Only America
is spending trillions. The 2011 budget deficit, for example, is about the size
of the entire Russian economy. By 2010, the Obama administration was issuing
about a hundred billion dollars of Treasury bonds every month – or, to put it
another way, Washington is dependent on the bond markets being willing to
absorb an increase of U.S. debt equivalent to the GDP of Canada or India –
every year. And those numbers don't take into account the huge levels of
personal debt run up by Americans. College debt alone is over a trillion
dollars, or the equivalent of the entire South Korean economy – tied up just in
one small boutique niche market of debt which barely exists in most other
developed nations.
"We are headed for the most predictable economic
crisis in history," says Paul Ryan. And he's right. But precisely because
it's so predictable the political class has already discounted it. Which is why
a plan for pie now and spinach later, maybe even two decades later, is the only
real menu on the table. There's a famous exchange in Hemingway's "A Place
In The Sun." Someone asks Mike Campbell, "How did you go bankrupt?"
"Two ways," he replies. "Gradually, then suddenly." We've
been going through the gradual phase so long, we're kinda used to it. But it's
coming to an end, and what happens next will be the second way: sudden, and
very bad.
By the way, that decline in the U.S./Australian
exchange isn't the only one. Ten years ago the U.S. dollar was worth 1.6
Canadian; now it's at par. A decade ago, the dollar was worth over 10 Swedish
Kroner, now 6.7; 1.8 Singapore dollars, now 1.2. I get asked with distressing
frequency by Americans where I would recommend fleeing to. The reality is,
given the dollar's decline over the past decade, that most Americans can no
longer afford to flee to any place worth fleeing to. What's left is the
non-flee option: taking a stand here, stopping the spendaholism, closing
federal agencies, privatizing departments, block-granting to the states – not
in 2040, but now. "Suddenly" is about to show up.
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