To call
Greece First World may be a stretch, but Greece has defaulted once already, and
it is only a matter of time until Greece defaults again. Welcome to
default-o-rama, the next chapter in the First World's struggle for fiscal
sustainability.
Japan is
piling up debt in the manner of a nation beyond hope. France, Belgium, Spain
and Italy are defaults waiting to happen unless Europe can somehow generate the
kind of growth that has eluded it for decades.
America's
fiscal cliff is an artificial crisis. We have no trouble borrowing in the short
term. But at some point the market will demand evidence that long-term balance
is being restored. President Obama said in his first post-election press
conference that he doesn't want any proposals that "sock it to the middle
class." He knows better. A long-term socking is exactly what's coming to
the middle class, which must pay for the benefits it consumes.
A few
years ago, when the economy was humming, a common estimate held that federal
taxes would have to rise 50% immediately to fully fund entitlement programs.
Today, a 50% tax increase would be needed just to meet the government's current
spending, never mind its future obligations.
One way or another, then, entitlements will be cut.
Don't call it default. The correct term is entitlement reform.
You saw
this day coming and saved for your own retirement. Don't call it default when
Washington inevitably confiscates some of your savings, say, by raising taxes
on dividends and capital gains. Taxpayers accept the risk of future tax hikes
that may make the decision to save seem foolish in retrospect.
According to economists Robert Novy-Marx and Josh
Rauh, state and local taxes would have to increase by $1,385 per household
immediately to make good the pension promises to state and local workers,
including firefighters and cops. That's not going to happen given all the other
demands on taxpayers. Default, in this case, is the proper word for cities and
states using bankruptcy to repudiate their pension obligations.
Prominent voices ask why the Treasury shouldn't just
cancel the government bonds the Federal Reserve has been buying. It's money one
part of the government owes the other. Dispensed with, of course, would be the
idea that the Fed, in buying these bonds in the first place, was engaged in
monetary policy. The Fed was printing money so Washington could spend it.
Now let it be said that inflation isn't fundamentally
a solution to the entitlement problem, but the Federal Reserve is being led by
increments to accommodate inflationary financing of future deficits. Don't call
it default. Inflation is a risk savers are deemed to have accepted by putting
their faith in the U.S. dollar.
Here's
what you weren't told about Medicare during the presidential debates. Under the
Paul Ryan plan, the affluent would pay more. Under the Obama plan, the affluent
would flee Medicare to escape the waiting lists, shortages and deteriorating
quality as Washington economizes by ratcheting down reimbursements to doctors
and hospitals. Don't call either default. You don't have a legally enforceable
right to the free care you imagined you were promised.
"Don't
worry" was President Obama's implicit message during the campaign: If
cutting subsidies for Big Bird is unthinkable, a joke, how much more so cutting
benefits for middle-class voters?
Don't go running to a judge when this doesn't pan out.
The courts do not overrule changes in government policy just because citizens
find their promised free lunch isn't forthcoming. Nor will it be fruitful to
appeal to politicians' sense of "fairness." Politicians can be relied
on to do what will get them re-elected. And, believe it or not, that is the
good news.
If politicians weren't eager to be re-elected, the
trust necessary to be an investor would vanish altogether. While there is no
escaping our challenges, there is a path in which the economy grows strongly
and we don't savage each other, and there is the other path. For years the
trustees of Social Security and Medicare were accused of exaggerating the
programs' deficits by envisioning that America's long-run growth would become
more like Europe's. Now who doesn't fret that America's growth is becoming
permanently slower like Europe's?
Which
brings us to President Obama. He knows cuts are necessary but seeks to position
Democrats politically as the defender of all spending. Notice that, with
ObamaCare, he is deliberately creating a constituency of the young to set
against the old in future fights over the allocation of federal health care
dollars.
Meanwhile, saving the dynamism of the U.S. economy,
while still affording an entitlement state, naturally falls to the other party
in a two-party system.
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