This piece should scare you. It was written by a top notch economist, in
plain language. I urge you to read it http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/10/03/the-loss-of-u-s-pre-eminence/?_r=0. It in part answers some of the questions I
have been hearing lately that pretty much all can be summed up as, “What’s the
big deal about the debt ceiling?”
The debt ceiling is the United States Government’s limit
on the amount of debt the Treasury Department is legally allowed to issue. Think of it as the limit on your credit card,
but the consequences of exceeding it are much more dire. Among other things, this
debt is accrued interest on amounts already borrowed and payments due for money
Congress already authorized and appropriated for spending. To not allow an increase to the debt ceiling
is tantamount to being told you could buy something, but when the bill comes not
given the money to do so.
The blog included above points out the current fiscal and
political environments are sowing the seeds for the decline of the US from its
pre-eminent position economically.
Economics is weird. Is it a
science or an art? Is it mathematics and statistics or psychology? The basis for all economics is the idea of
utility; how much an individual wants something. Utility explains why gold costs more than
silver, Coke costs more than Kroger cola and someone is willing to spend $5,000
on Prada; yet pretty much all sugar costs the same. We as consumers, all things being equal,
assign intrinsic values to items based on perception and past performance; and
are willing to pay more for items with intrinsic value. Without utility, advertisers would not have a
job. This phenomenon is the basis for
everything we purchase.
Utility plays a role in currency and sovereign debt. At different points in the recent past, up to
90% of global financial transactions passed through the US, daily. The United States dollar is the most well
respected piece of currency in the world, therefore gets used all over the
world. It is the confidence in the
United States economy (not necessarily Government) that accounts for use of the
US Dollar, and purchase of US debt.
Without this confidence, the US will have to pay more through higher
interest rates. Recent examples of this
are the lack luster performance of debt issuances by Ireland, Spain, Greece and
Malta. A sharp increase in the cost of
issuing debt will immediately drain funds from the US economy and begin
hyperinflation like that seen in Mexico and Venezuela. Albert Einstein once said the greatest power
in the universe is compound debt.
As for the global economy, simply look to the reaction to
defaults by Greece and Malta. Greece
caused a recession in the entire Eurozone, and some experts believe muted growth
of both the US and Chinese economies due to the reduction of imports to the
Eurozone. Malta, a very small island
nation, almost caused another recession in the Eurozone. The US Economy is magnitudes of order greater
than either Greece or Malta. The results
of a US default would also be magnitudes of order greater. Too big to fail? Definitely!
The silence from industry as discussed in the blog above
is a warning. Regardless of personal
opinion on Obamacare, Keystone XL or changes to the tax code, Congress and the
president CANNOT let this happen. It’s
not a question of whether or not there will be a global recession if the US
defaults. It’s only a question of how severe. And when the dust settles, the US may no
longer be at the top of the heap.
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