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Economy
Bankrupting America
2020-04-09
[Townhall] Two weeks ago, President Donald Trump signed the largest stimulus bill in U.S. history: more than $2 trillion.

For once, both Republicans and Democrats agreed. The Senate voted 96-0. The House didn't even bother with a formal vote.

At the White House, a reporter asked the president, pointing out that the bill includes $25 million for the Kennedy Center, "Shouldn't that money be going to masks?"

"The Kennedy Center has suffered greatly because nobody can go there," Trump responded. "They do need some funding. And look -- that was a Democrat request. That was not my request. But you got to give them something."

"Something" they got. The bill includes $25 million for Congressional salaries, $50 million for an Institute of Museum and Library Services and lots of other wasteful things.

Only a few politicians were wary. Rep. Thomas Massie complained that he wasn't even allowed to speak against the bill.

Rep. Alex Mooney asked: "How do you pay for it? Borrow it from China, borrow it from Russia? Are we going to print the money?"

Those are good questions.

Our national debt is already $24 trillion. Now it will jump, percentage-wise, to where Greece's debt was shortly before unemployment there hit 27%.

Greece was bailed out by the European Union. But the United States can't be bailed out by others.
CARTOONS | Mike Lester
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How will we pay off our debt? That's the topic of my new video.

There are really three options:

1. Raise taxes.

2. Print money.

3. Default.

Let's consider each:

1. Raising taxes on rich people is popular. Even Michael Bloomberg wants "higher taxes on billionaires" like him.

But raising taxes on the rich often kills the wealth and jobs some rich people create. And it won't solve our debt problem. Even if we took all the billionaires' wealth -- reducing their net worth to zero -- it would cover only an eighth of our debt.

2. Some on the left now say, "Don't worry about debt, just print money!"

This belief, called Modern Monetary Theory, destroys lives.

Zimbabwe's dictator tried it. Eager to spend more money on wars, higher salaries for government officials and luxury for himself, he had his government print more money. But that meant more money pursued the same goods. That caused explosive inflation. Soon, a $2 bag of onions cost $30 million Zimbabwean dollars.

The more money the government printed, the more inflation there was. They eventually even issued 100 trillion dollar bills. Today those 100 trillion bills are worth about 40 cents.

Inflation wrecked lives in 1920s Germany, Argentina and Russia, and in modern-day Venezuela, too.

3. America could simply refuse to pay our debt. But that would betray everyone who invested in America, and bankrupt Americans who bought Treasury Bonds.

Defaulting on your debt wrecks economies, too. When Argentina defaulted, unemployment rose to 21%.

Once you're deep in debt, no option is good.

How did we get to this point?

Presidents have talked about the dangers of debt for decades. But they didn't deal with it; they just talked about it.

"We have piled deficit upon deficit, mortgaging our future and our children's future," warned Ronald Reagan. "We must act today to preserve tomorrow."

Bill Clinton said, "We've got to deal with this big long term debt problem."

Barack Obama called driving up the national debt "irresponsible" and then proceeded to do exactly that.

Donald Trump complained that Obama "doubled" the nation's debt. But now, under Trump's presidency and the new CARES Act, our debt will grow even faster.

This will not end well.

So far, the deficit spending hasn't done enormous harm. But it will. You can stretch a rubber band only so far, until it breaks.

Our debt will wreck our children's lives.

Yet, today politicians mostly talk about spending more.
Posted by:Clem

#15  Cut government to 1/4 the current size so that we'll have money the next time an emergency comes up.

Also IRS audit for every congressperson and make the results public so we can see where they get the money and how they hide it.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2020-04-09 15:55  

#14  ^ Ding, ding DING! We have a winner...
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-04-09 12:26  

#13  Funny that the Fed funds rate is essentially ZERO. How are those credit card APR's? Probably closer to 20% than zero. Pathetic.
Posted by: Clem   2020-04-09 11:09  

#12  A simple 12 month bond that would pay 2.5 taxfree percent? They couldn't print the damn things fast enough.
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-04-09 11:08  

#11  Imagine a Norman Rockwell in this day and age. They would have driven him to the local insane asylum.
Posted by: Clem   2020-04-09 11:02  

#10  Something old, something new ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-04-09 11:01  

#9  Infrastructure improvements + bringing manufacturing & manufacturing jobs back to this country will provide an enormous boost.

Inflationary perhaps but a bit of inflation now is OK. we need wage growth and it devalues the debt to our advantage - and to the ChiCom creditors' disadvantage.
Posted by: Lex   2020-04-09 10:56  

#8  /\ A rigorous dumping of foreign aid programs may also provide a boost.
Posted by: Besoeker   2020-04-09 10:51  

#7  4. Grow our way out. That's what was done with pretty much all gov debt. Grow the economy over a few decades so the debt is a small portion of GDP. Problem is that also has to coupled with spending discipline. Not something the USA has seen in 60 years.
Posted by: Cholutch Shereper2174   2020-04-09 10:49  

#6  Everyone has been at that night time party where Billy Joe decides what the bonfire needs is a couple more gallons of gasoline.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-04-09 09:18  

#5  Now the Fed is going to pump over $2 trillion more into the economy. Geeeesh.
Posted by: Clem   2020-04-09 09:12  

#4  Best way to get the budget under control is to quarantine congress for a couple decades.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2020-04-09 09:06  

#3  #1 remember the Misery Index?
Posted by: Lex   2020-04-09 08:06  

#2  Can I recommend "For Us, The Living: A Comedy of Customs" by Robert A. Heinlein?
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2020-04-09 04:02  

#1  US eperienced inflation too. Anyone that lived thru the late 1970's knows Jimmy Carter's "stagflation" with high taxes, high inflation, double digit interest rates, and double digit unemployment. It took Ronald Reagan to fix that, and it was not painless. Thats why when trump is re-elected, he needs to address the debt by demanding a painful balanced budget, and stick to it. If he starts in early 2021, the pain will be over by mid 2022, and we'll see a Reagan like boom in late 2022, that will roar all the way to President Haley's (or fill in the name of any prominent GOP from outside DC) inauguration.
Posted by: Marilyn Tojo7566   2020-04-09 00:12  

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