Once again there is panic running through the halls of Congress, the Oval
Office, and in the chattering classes that make up mainstream media over the
government shutdown and the debt ceiling. Most of the panic is a result of the
inability of politicians to reach an agreement on government
spending. If we hope to
begin to recover true prosperity, then making real, significant cuts in
government spending should be a top priority. Only true, substantial reductions
in government spending will free necessary capital for entrepreneurs to use in
productive investment. This investment, in turn, will allow for sustainable
economic progress.
We
are in the fiscal mess we are in because, since the early 1970s, tax revenues
have been unable to keep pace with government spending. Real government
spending has increased almost twice as fast as government revenue. In 1970
our total government debt equaled $371 billion. Today it stands at $16.8
trillion. Even if we adjust for inflation, federal government debt has increased more than eight times what it was
in 1970.
Things have only gotten worse following the financial meltdown of 2008. It took from 1789 to 2001 to accumulate a
federal debt of $5.8 trillion. However, our government officials have added a nearly identical $5.8 trillion in
four short years between 2007 and 2011.
The
10 highest monthly budget deficits have all occurred since February 2009.
During the Obama administration, the federal government has accumulated more
new debt than it did from the time that George Washington became president to
the time that Bill Clinton became president. Since
President Obama entered the White House, the
national debt has increased by an average of more than $64,000 per taxpayer.
In fact, Obama will become the first president to run deficits of more than a
trillion dollars during each of his first four years in office.
Talking in trillions of dollars can easily boggle the mind. To provide some perspective on the magnitude
of our current debt, think about this: If you were alive when Jesus Christ was
born and spent one million dollars every day since that point, you still would not
have spent one trillion dollars yet.
Last
summer, the New York Times
columnist and economist Paul Krugman
told Business Insider that in
order to avoid an economic depression, “Somebody has to spend more than their income, and,
for the time being, that has to be the government.” Krugman stands the economic problem on its
head. Instead of not enough desired production, it is thought that our problem
is not enough demand. The perceived
solution is increased government spending. If people do not voluntarily demand
enough, don’t worry, the government will make up the difference.
The problem with this
thinking is that government
spending has to be paid for. It can be funded in only three ways:
with taxes, borrowing, or inflation. All three of these funding methods have
negative economic consequences. Taxation consumes capital and discourages productive
activity. It does so partly because higher
taxes reduce the incentive for laborers to work and for land owners to rent
land for productive uses. Additionally, taxes reduce the ability for
people to save and invest. Taxes lower disposable income and they reduce the
return for productive investments.
Less
saving and
investment reduces capital over time, decreasing our productivity.
The economy output decreases, real wealth falls and people see a drop in their
standard of living. Funding increased government spending by increased taxation
is like pouring weed killer on your garden, all the while thinking that it is
fertilizer.
Taxes are politically unpopular, and because of this the government
relies on borrowing money to fund deficit spending. There are two sources from
which the government can borrow: The banking system and private savers.
Borrowing
from the banking system is inflationary. Banks lend newly created dollars,
thereby increasing the money supply with all of the associated negative
consequences. Overall, prices increase and the purchasing power of the dollar
falls. Additionally, artificial credit expansion — credit not funded by
savings — creates the business cycle by spawning capital malinvestment.
Artificial credit expansion makes many unwise investments (say, in residential and commercial real estate and
financial derivatives) look profitable because of the accessibility of
cheap credit, so business activity expands, manifesting itself in an
inflationary boom. These unwise investments eventually must be liquidated,
and the boom resolves itself in a bust whose twin offspring are capital
consumption and unemployment.
Borrowing from private savers is not inflationary but does have serious
negative economic consequences. This
type of borrowing diverts savings from private investment to government
consumption. Savings that would have been invested in productive
activity will instead be spent on bureaucratic feasting.
The
bottom line is that we are correct to be concerned with the fiscal situation
facing the federal government. The larger the percentage of a nation’s economy
absorbed by government spending, the
slower their economic expansion because real economic expansion is the product
of wise entrepreneurs using capital that is funded by real savings. As
the deadline for the federal budget knocks on the door it is quite clear what
is needed: fiscal reform. Only facing
the melancholy music of drastically cutting government spending will put us
back on the path to prosperity.
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