Showing posts with label Deficit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deficit. Show all posts

Friday, March 28, 2014

How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare



A Tea Party congressman calls out greedy Wall Streeters for the ruse.








Generational grievances pitting struggling young millennials against supposedly better-off seniors is creeping back into American politics, fanned by a new wave of deficit hawks who want to undermine public confidence in Social Security and Medicare—as the first step in cutting the social insurance programs.


A string of recent examples—rants from MSNBC’s wealthy young commentator, a notorious elderly-attacking House candidate, think tanks promoted on NPR—generational warfare cheerleaders are proclaiming that America is heading toward an epic and immoral conflict as better-off seniors are robbing millennials of shrinking federal dollars because retirement programs cost too much. That’s simply false, as Social Security is solvent through 2033, and spending as a percentage of GDP is close to where it’s been since 1975, at 21 percent. 


This line of attack isn’t in a political vacuum. It comes as some Democrats are reframing the debate on Social Security and campaigning for increased benefits. Nor is it a new argument, as a right-wing club of libertarians, Wall Street bankers and deficit hawks have tried for decades to undermine and privatize the program. Amazingly, the generational warmongers are not just irking progressives who see shifting political winds; they"re scaring at least one Republican congressman who called out the generational warfare ruse and game plan in fundraising letter.        


Pennsylvania Republican Tom Marino is a former U.S. Attorney and conservative two-term incumbent. His re-election website boasts he is anti-Obamacare, pro-gun, pro-fracking and anti-gay marriage. Yet, the top news item on his website is a letter from Vivian Mae Marino, “to let all of you know that my son, Tom Marino, will save Medicare and strengthen Social Security.”


Why is a 62-year-old Tea Partier calling on mom? Because a generational antagonist bent on sounding “the alarm of gerontocracy, or rule by the elderly,” may run against Marino as an independent in 2014. That self-proclaimed Paul Revere for millennials is Nick Troiano, 24, who co-founded a group supposedly representing young Americans who are losing sleep because they feel Congress is stealing their future by spending on seniors. Never mind that his deficit hawk group spectacularly imploded last month, after e-mails revealed that it couldn’t balance its budget, and had burned through funds from Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson, the leading Social Security privateer.


“As a college student in Washington, D.C., this individual [Troiano] founded a group called The Can Kicks Back,” Marino’s appeal said. “The Can Kicks Back claimed to be concerned about our nation’s debt and deficit. In reality, it is just another front group funded by Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson.” Marino’s letter did what Republicans almost never do—unmask other Republicans’ real agenda. “Why are Pete Peterson and Kick The Can Back so dangerous?” he wrote. “Their goal is to increase tax loopholes for the largest corporations in the country and they plan to pay for this corporate giveaway to the Fortune 500 by cutting Social Security benefits for older Americans.”


Marino didn’t stop there. “One commentator recently suggested that The Can Kicks Back’s strategy was, ‘to attempt the enlistment of millennial (young Americans age 18 to 25) in the effort to impoverish their grandparents,” he said. “Within just a day of his announcement, this individual considering running against me claimed that he had already raised $ 10,000. How much of that do you think was from Peterson and other Wall Street fat cats who want to get their hands on your Social Security benefits.”


This spat captures the contours of an old and still looming political fight where centrist Democrats and most Republicans refuse to fortify America’s most popular and widely used social insurance programs by a mix of simple tax increases and more realistic cost-of-living increases. More than 80 percent of Social Security benefits go to people with incomes of less than $ 30,000—and most average less than $ 12,000 a year. Yet faces are appearing on America’s airwaves posing a false analysis and choice: that federal finances are a mess; and that the only fix is depriving seniors of earned social insurance benefits so those funds could be diverted to struggling youths. 


Abby Huntsman, the poised 27-year-old daughter of multi-millionaire 2012 GOP presidential candidate, Jon Huntsman, and a co-host of MSNBC’s millennial-targeted show, “The Cycle,” is a prime example. Two weeks ago, she went into an on-air tizzy about how Social Security would disappear for her peers if older Americans kept getting all the benefits. “At the rate we are spending, the system will be bankrupt by the time you and I are actually eligible to get these benefits,” she declared, citing new Pew Research Center research. “Would you rather have 80 percent of what you have today, or nothing at all?” 


Baby boomers will have to forgive Huntsman for plagiarizing the Beatles—she calls her TV commentary Abby’s Road. But they shouldn’t let her off the hook for wild inaccuracies, Los Angeles Times business columnist Michael Hiltzik noted. Telling her peers that they will get zero when the retire, which is incorrect, so that they will accept a budget deal that would instead lower their eventual retirement benefits, is not looking out for her generation.


On Thursday, Huntsman hit back at Hiltzik, flashing his column on the air, and declaring, “entitlement reform is the most pressing long-term budget decision we have to make as a country. Come on, man! It isn’t about me. It’s about the major problem.” Her solution, needless to say, was cutting Social Security, screening incomes of Medicare recipients, and postponing the onset of that program from age 65 to 67.


The problem is that Huntsman doesn’t understand the real problem—and refuses to consider other options besides spending cuts, as Hiltzik said in a Friday piece. “That’s where she really goes off the rails,” he said, citing her remarks no one is discussing serious options. “We have been debating those options, for years.”


Huntsman is not alone in resurrecting a generational warfare meme. Comedian Bill Maher recited the same incorrect clichés in jokes on his TV show. But more serious is the Pew Research Center report—and a new related book—cited by Huntsman, from ex-Washington Post reporter turned Pew research czar Paul Taylor.


Taylor’s book, The Next America: Boomers, Millennial and The Looming Generational Showdown, is a full-throttled Pew production. It’s packed with facts, figures, graphs, and dire-sounding analysis to support a particular conclusion, which Taylor told NPR. Speaking of Social Security and Medicare, he said, “Everybody who looks at the demographics knows that those systems are going broke within 15 or 20 years and the longer you wait, the more the burden of the solution is going to fall on millennials.”


It’s worth noting that this is the same line that U.S. News and World Report, the pro-business weekly magazine, took in its November 5, 1984 editorial, after President Ronald Reagan, the conservative Republican, and Democratic House Speaker Tip O’ Neill, put together a bill modifying but not privatizing Social Security—as right-wingers had hoped. The magazine called it “nothing less than a massive transfer of wealth from the young, many of them struggling, to the elderly, many of them living comfortably.”


Fast-forward 30 years and Paul Taylor is making the same case on NPR—as an information broker to its educated, influential audience. “I leave this book thinking we have very serious demographically driven challenges,” he said on March 4. “We’ve got to rebalance the social safety net so it’s fair to all generations.” 


Pew isn’t the disinterested wise observer that’s NPR presents. It and the right-wing Laura and John Arnold Foundation have lead a tag team effort to cut back government employee pensions. They recite austerity frames—talking about slashing spending and avoiding other options where wealthy interests would pay more. Taylor is a bit too black and white when he says “everyone” in Washington knows that a retirement safety net crisis will explode in 15 or 20 years. That’s not how liberal economists see it.


“It is striking that NPR is willing to focus so much more attention on the threat to the living standards of millennials presented by a 2-3 percentage point increase in payroll taxes,” blogged Dean Baker, at Washington’s Center for Economic and Policy Research after Taylor’s appearance. That focus ignores the “policies that could lead to much or all of the benefits of productivity growth over the next three decades going to those at the top, as has been the case for the last three decades,” he said, referring to America’s wage and income stagnation.  


When you peel back the details, what’s going on here is simple and not new. Right-wingers—starting at the libertarian Cato Institute which doesn’t want federal social insurance programs to work, going next to Wall Street firms that see a gold mine from privatizing Social Security, and continuing to today’s spokespeople for these interests—want to undermine public confidence in government and push for-profit substitutes. They know that seniors and near-retirees won’t buy into any of this, which is why they have tried for decades—as Republican Congressman Marino’s fundraising letter noted—to create generational grievances pitting America’s young against its elderly.


“I’m not quite a believer in cabals, but that’s sort of what happened,” said Eric Kingson, Syracuse University Professor of Social Work and co-director of Social Security Works, the national advocacy organization. “It [generational warfare] doesn’t take off when people see their parents and their grandparents struggling on fairly minimal income.”


Right Wing History Repeats Itself


Experts who have studied America’s social insurance programs for decades know that cutting Social Security would cause more poor seniors in the future—including today’s millennials. That is because smaller baseline benefits would yield smaller future monthly checks, even after cost-of-living increases. How do they know that? Because in the early 1980s, when Social Security faced a funding shortfall in a bad economy, Congress’s fix ended up shrinking payments to today’s retirees by more than 20 percent, compared to what they would have been if left alone. Three factors did that: increasing income taxes on Social Security benefits, delaying annual cost of living increases every year by six months, and eventually raised the retirement age from 65 to 67.


The losers in that political fight—lead by the Cato Institute and anti-tax Wall Streeters—have been fighting to privatize Social Security ever since. Their best strategy, as laid out in the fall 1983 Cato Journal, was seen as fomenting a generational divide fighting for a shrinking slice of the federal pie. At the same time, they also began to push businesses to replace employee pensions with individual retirement accounts, which, as AlterNet’s Lynn Stuart Parramore has described in detail, have produced far less for retirees.


“We must prepare the political ground so that the fiasco of the last 18 months is not repeated,” Cato Journal’s influential 1983 article, “Achieving A “Leninist” Strategy,” began. “We must begin to divide this [pro-Social Security] coalition and cast doubt on the picture of reality it presents to the general public.” Cato knew who it wanted on its team. It “should consist not only of those who will reap benefits from the IRA-based private system [that a lawyer and columnist Peter J.] Ferrara has proposed, but also the banks, insurance companies, and other institutions that will gain from providing such plans to the public.” 


And Cato knew its target. “The young are the most obvious constituency for reform and a natural ally for the private alternative,” it said. “The overwhelming majority of people in this group have stated repeatedly that they have little or no confidence in the present Social Security system.” Youthful indignation and grievance could be powerful, Cato said, fantasizing about its coming revolution. “Younger workers… would see just how much of a loss they are taking by participating in the program… assuming, for the sake of argument, that they would ever have received those benefits.” 


Needless to say, Social Security has not collapsed as Cato forecast—even though today’s generational warfare arguments are basically repeating 30-year-old rhetoric. The program is solvent under promised benefits through 2033—a half-century after Congress reformed it. Social Security advocates say such longevity is a sign of its great success. But, as was the case in 1983, federal law requires Social Security to pay out only what it takes in. The next funding shortfall is predicted to come in 2033, when benefits would be cut by about 20 percent to Baby Boomers and GenXers if no revenue changes were made. But modest increases in payroll taxes—fifty cents a week for most workers, and raising the cap on how much of one’s annual income is subject to Social Security taxes (the first $ 117,000) would more than offset 2033’s predicted shortfall.


Those simple options, needless to say, are almost never discussed by Cato’s narrative or by its more modern descendents. Cato’s generational warfare script had another dark thread that was developed in a second article the same issue of the Cato Journal, where it suggested that elderly people were more likely to be greedy when the government was signing the check, which amounted to taking money from younger people’s pockets. That feeds rightwing scripts that seniors are immorally stealing federal funds from the young. 


“If transfers to aged parents were purely a family decision, I doubt those among today’s elderly who have accumulated significant wealth would be willing to ask their children for a significant portion of their income,” Marilyn Flowers wrote. “Yet these same individuals seemingly have no qualms about using their political clout to demand through Social Security what is, in an objective sense, the same thing.”   


Back To Reality


There have been many fact-filled rebuttals to these frames—that seniors are taking too large a slice of America’s limited public resources—even as this pro-austerity script has evolved under the more recent deficit hawk banner. It’s key to note what these right-wingers aren’t calling for. They don’t want to cut corporate subsidies or defense spending, nor do they want to pay more in taxes—such as taxing investment income. They’ll cite big numbers on how much is spent on safety nets to scare people, but they don’t mention the even bigger sums spent on corporate welfare. That’s was the striking takeaway from David Sirota’s investigate report on the joint Arnold Foundation and Pew attack on pensions for The Institute for America’s Future and PandoDaily, which prompted WNET, New York City’s largest public television station, to return Arnold’s $ 3.5 million grant and cancel a “Pension Peril” series.   


Social Security defenders like Kingson know that the right’s arguments are simplistic while real life is more complicated. It’s almost impossible to quantify how much money flows from one generation to the next over a lifetime—such as parents raising children and paying for college, helping with a first home down payment or bailing out a child’s bad business decision; to elderly people on the other end not being paid at all for their care giving as their life partners age in their own homes. This reality points to Kingson’s biggest disappointment with today’s political leaders—they aren’t noting how American of all ages are facing intertwined economic struggles.


“Obama’s failure is not building on his promise of we’re in all in this together,” Kingson said. “The concept of all of us being connected and being together leads to policies of compassion, citizenry, decency, dignity. It leads to form social structures that support human beings throughout life. And we as a country aren’t seeing ourselves as being in it together, and nobody is speaking out for that with moral force today.”


“Instead, there’s moral force that’s being exerted from the right in a negative way,” he continued. “They have a narrative that government is falling apart, too much money is being spent, you’re being screwed—and we thought that Obama was going to do this—counter that.”    


But a funny thing is happening as today’s generational warmongers—MSNBC’s Abby Huntsmen, prospective GOP House candidate Nick Troiano, Pew research czar Paul Taylor—are that saying generational conflict is America’s fate.


“What’s so fascinating is there isn’t any tension at the moment,” Taylor told NPR. “You have a generation coming in that isn’t wagging its finger with blame at mom or grandma. In fact, they’re living with mom and grandma… and maybe that’s the best basis upon which to go forward and rebalance our books on Social Security and Medicare.”


In other words, there’s no real generational warfare. There are just new faces touting an old line, which is an opportunistic political attack for sponsors to line their pockets or hobble effective government programs—which is exactly what Republican Rep. Tom Marino wrote in his edgy March 10 fundraising appeal unmasking this rhetorical red herring.


“You will not believe the length to which this community organizer and his Wall Street friends will go to buy a seat in Congress,” Marino’s letter began. It ended, “We’ll let the billionaires know that we mean business when we tell them to keep their hands off the Social Security benefits we have earned.”


 

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How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare

How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare

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How Deficit Hawks Are Trying to Pit Millennials Against Seniors to Attack Social Security and Medicare

Thursday, February 6, 2014

Japan January trade deficit on track to reach record: MOF

Japan January trade deficit on track to reach record: MOF
http://s1.reutersmedia.net/resources/r/?m=02&d=20140207&t=2&i=836125695&w=580&fh=&fw=&ll=&pl=&r=CBREA160I3V00




TOKYO Fri Feb 7, 2014 1:31am EST



A worker stands in a container area at a port in Tokyo January 27, 2014. REUTERS/Toru Hanai

A worker stands in a container area at a port in Tokyo January 27, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Toru Hanai




TOKYO (Reuters) – Japan is on track to post a record trade deficit in January, preliminary data showed on Friday, in a warning sign that consistently weak export demand could weigh on economic growth.


The data also provide further evidence that a weak yen is doing more to push up import costs than it is to boost exports as many Japanese manufacturers have shifted factories overseas.


A record trade deficit would also suggest that overseas demand may not be strong enough to offset the negative impact of a scheduled sales tax increase in April.


“It may be difficult to expect consumption to continue to lead growth as wages will not rise as fast as prices,” said Norio Miyagawa, senior economist at Mizuho Securities Research & Consulting Co.


“If external demand doesn’t pick up, the overall trend for growth would weaken.”


For the first 20 days of January, Japan’s trade deficit was 2 trillion yen ($ 19.6 billion), data from the finance ministry showed on Friday.


That would put it on track to surpass the current record high deficit, which was 1.6 trillion yen in January 2013. The finance ministry will release trade data for all of January on February 20.


Exports rose 11.3 percent in the first 20 days of January, compared with the same period a year ago. Imports, however, jumped an annual 30.2 percent.


The yen has fallen around 23 percent versus the dollar since late 2012 as Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s government embarked on a bold plan to end 15 years of deflation with expanded quantitative easing from the Bank of Japan.


The yen’s decline has helped consumer prices rise as it pushes up import costs, which is contributing toward reaching the Bank of Japan’s 2 percent inflation target.


Many in the government also expected the yen’s fall to boost exports, but this has largely failed to materialize as Japanese companies are producing more goods outside of the country.


Growing signs of weakness in emerging market countries has also raised concerns that demand for Japanese exports could deteriorate further.


The economy is likely to boom until March as consumers rush to beat the sales tax hike, and many analysts agree with the BOJ’s view that the pain from the higher tax will be temporary.


However, weak exports could mean that the rebound is slower than some economists anticipate. ($ 1 = 101.8600 Japanese yen)


(Editing by Kim Coghill)






Reuters: Economic News




Read more about Japan January trade deficit on track to reach record: MOF and other interesting subjects concerning Economy at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Congress’ selective deficit disorder: Why America’s poor are screwed

Budget fears prompted huge cuts to food stamps in the new farm bill. So why does it increase subsidies to the rich?




    








Salon.com



Congress’ selective deficit disorder: Why America’s poor are screwed

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

NAFTA At 20: 1 Million Lost Jobs, 580% Increase In Trade Deficit



NAFTA was not just a "trade" agreement. Trade agreements focus on cutting tariffs and easing quotas and barriers to goods moving across borders. The report points out that NAFTA was much more, giving corporations special rights, incentivizing offshoring and limiting regulation.



Public Citizen’s Global Trade Watch has issued a new report, NAFTA at 20: One Million U.S. Jobs Lost, Mass Displacement and Instability in Mexico, Record Income Inequality, Scores of Corporate Attacks on Environmental and Health Laws.
















(Credit: Flickr)







read more





NAFTA At 20: 1 Million Lost Jobs, 580% Increase In Trade Deficit

Wednesday, December 11, 2013

New estimate says budget deal raises deficit $41B




House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., left, and Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., announce a tentative agreement between Republican and Democratic negotiators on a government spending plan, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013. Negotiators reached the modest budget agreement to restore about $ 65 billion in automatic spending cuts from programs ranging from parks to the Pentagon, with votes expected in both houses by week’s end. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., left, and Senate Budget Committee Chairwoman Patty Murray, D-Wash., announce a tentative agreement between Republican and Democratic negotiators on a government spending plan, at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 10, 2013. Negotiators reached the modest budget agreement to restore about $ 65 billion in automatic spending cuts from programs ranging from parks to the Pentagon, with votes expected in both houses by week’s end. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)





Graphic shows highlights of budget deal; 1c x 3 inches; 46.5 mm x 76 mm;





Politics Headlines



New estimate says budget deal raises deficit $41B

Saturday, December 7, 2013

CBO: US Deficit $61B Lower Than Last Year

The government has racked up a $ 231 billion budget deficit for the first two months of the new fiscal year, but that’s down $ 61 billion from last year’s figures, according to a report from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office.

The CBO’s findings said increased tax revenues and lower spending led to the drop, reports The Hill.


Individual tax receipts were up by 10 percent after a two-point payroll tax expired in January. In addition, tax rates increased on people making more than $ 400,000 a year, also narrowing the deficit.


The decline also reflects a five percent spending decrease, reported the CBO, which came with sequestration cuts. For example, in the first two months of the year, there was $ 10 billion less in defense spending.


In addition, unemployment benefits spending and net interest on the public debt also each dropped by $ 3 billion, and disaster aid spending was down as well.


Department of Agriculture spending also dipped by $ 4 billion, and Federal Emergency Management Agency spending dropped by $ 2 billion, reports the CBO.


But increases in two of the government’s largest entitlement programs, Social Security and Medicaid went up, by $ 7 billion and $ 1billion, respectively.


The difference of one Day made a huge spending difference for the month of December, the CBO reports. Because Dec. 1 fell on a weekend, the government incurred a $ 140 billion deficit in November, $ 33 billion smaller than the $ 172 billion deficit in November 2012.


With Dec. 1 falling on a weekend in both years, some payments that would have been made in December came instead in November.


Related Stories:


© 2013 Newsmax. All rights reserved.




Newsmax – America



CBO: US Deficit $61B Lower Than Last Year

Monday, November 25, 2013

CORRECTED-Mexico posts wider current account deficit in 3rd quarter

CORRECTED-Mexico posts wider current account deficit in 3rd quarter
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/083c8__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



MEXICO CITY Mon Nov 25, 2013 10:12am EST



MEXICO CITY Nov 25 (Reuters) – Mexico’s current account deficit was $ 5.457 billion in the third quarter, widening slightly from the second quarter, the central bank said on Monday


The deficit was the equivalent of 1.7 percent of gross domestic product, according to a statement posted on the central bank’s website.



Reuters: Bonds News




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Wednesday, November 13, 2013

US budget deficit falls 24 percent in October

US budget deficit falls 24 percent in October

WASHINGTON (AP) — The partial government shutdown and steep federal spending cuts helped lower the U.S. federal deficit last month, signaling more improvement in the government’s finances.
Business Headlines



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Saturday, November 2, 2013

Economic Coup d’Etat: Debt and Deficit as Shock Therapy

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Economic Coup d’Etat: Debt and Deficit as Shock Therapy

Monday, October 28, 2013

Deficit Hawks "Have No Monopoly On Morality," Summers Says

Deficit Hawks "Have No Monopoly On Morality," Summers Says
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/488f3__summers282way-df6d0ddfd199f4739b94a4d9d08122dde5ce7f3b-s6-c30.jpg


Republican Rep. Paul Ryan and others from the GOP have spoken with NPR in recent years about why they believe the federal debt is the nation’s “No. 1″ problem.



Lawrence Summers on deficit reduction, investment and morality



And in Ryan’s view, as he told us in 2011, lawmakers have “a moral obligation … to put up solutions to fix this problem.”


Morning Edition plans to air a view from the Democratic side on Tuesday. We listened in on host Steve Inskeep’s conversation with Lawrence Summers, who was Treasury secretary in the final years of the Clinton administration and was a top White House economic adviser during President Obama’s first term.


Here is Summers on another way to look at the moral issues:



“If we were to cut the deficit on the back of deferring maintenance on our infrastructure, on the back of short-changing investments in providing educational opportunity, on the back of cutting back basic measures in science, on the back of failing to protect the environment, that would be doing our children no favor.


“If we were to leave our children in a situation where because we had slashed away at entitlement programs they lived their lives in the shadow of a need to take care of us during our retirement, in the shadow of a need to protect their parents from the vicissitudes of high health care costs, that would be doing our children no favor.


“The deficit alarmists have no monopoly on morality. Their arguments, in fact, by short-changing economic growth, put our moral obligation to succeeding generations at risk.


“Yes, we do need to make budget adjustments. Yes, once we get this economy growing there are important changes that are necessary.


“But for now, a political process that cannot focus on very much at a time and has great difficulty getting anything done needs to focus its energy and the right focus for its energy is on economic growth.”




Economic growth, Summers argues (including in a recent Washington Post op-ed) can be boosted by spending on education, infrastructure, science and technology — spending that’s going to be done at some point anyway and can arguably do the most immediate good when the economy is sluggish. What’s more, as he wrote in the Post, “spurring growth has a multiplicity of benefits” that include deficit-reduction.


Much more from the conversation with Summers, as we said, is due on Tuesday’s Morning Edition. Click here to find an NPR station that broadcasts or streams the show. After the interview airs, it will be posted on the show’s webpage.


A related from September: Summers Pulls Out Of Running To Be Federal Reserve Chief.





Clinton-era Treasury secretary and former Obama economic adviser Lawrence Summers last week in Washington, D.C.



Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Clinton-era Treasury secretary and former Obama economic adviser Lawrence Summers last week in Washington, D.C.



Clinton-era Treasury secretary and former Obama economic adviser Lawrence Summers last week in Washington, D.C.


Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images





News




Read more about Deficit Hawks "Have No Monopoly On Morality," Summers Says and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, October 18, 2013

Empire Building, the Debt Ceiling, the Budget Deficit and the “Samson Solution”


economy (2)


Introduction


            US and world political and economic leaders are faced with what they describe as a ‘systemic catastrophe’:  the inability to pay global creditors, including domestic and foreign banks, investors and governments, who hold $ 16.7 trillion in US Treasury notes.  There is a related crisis: the government cannot secure passage of a budget to finance its military and civilian agencies and activities, including large-scale payments to military contractors, the financing of business, agriculture and banking operations and social programs.  The raising of the debt-ceiling is central to the functioning of the financial ruling class as it extracts hundreds of billions of tax dollars in interest payments from the US Treasury.  Raising the debt ceiling allows the State to keep borrowing and pay its billionaire creditors.  In turn, as long as the US Treasury has liquidity, it remains a ‘safe haven’ for investors thus providing guaranteed profits.  In addition, as long as the dollar remains the principle currency for global transactions, it allows the US Treasury to print money at will and to borrow at a lower cost – at the expense of its competitors and adversaries.


             Financing the budget deficit requires borrowing, which involves the sale hundreds of billions of dollars worth of US government bonds through Wall Street – but at a cost to the taxpayer.  The common denominator is that the entire edifice of finance capital and all of its support structures depend on debt financing by the State.  By borrowing and then taxing its citizens the Treasury extracts wealth from the vast majority of Americans.


            To understand the fight to raise the debt ceiling and to pass a deficit budget it is necessary to analyze the long-term, large-scale sources of State debt.


Imperial Wars, the Ascendancy of Finance Capital and the Debt Crisis


            The ever-increasing debt and the constant raising of the debt ceiling is a result of long-term, large-scale military spending to build the US Empire.  The imperial enterprise has generated a huge deficit:  the cost/benefit ratio has been overwhelmingly negative.  Contrary to militarist propaganda, the empire has not been ‘self-financing’:  Wars and occupation in Iraq , Afghanistan and elsewhere have cost the US taxpayers trillions of dollars, not off-set by incoming imperial plunder or domestic economic expansion.


            Parallel to the cost of wars and occupations, the rise of finance capital has largely resulted from the pillage of the US Treasury.  Huge bailouts, low interest loans, large-scale interest payments on bonds, subsidies and tax exemptions have created a financial ruling class based on maintaining a debt-laden, interest-paying State, which meets its obligations to the creditors while it privatizes (and eliminates) social programs.  The result is a ‘poor indebted State’ and a rich and prosperous Wall Street.  Wall Street stands to gain trillions with the privatization of the multi-billion dollar health (Medicare) and retirement plans (Social Security): this will form an integral component of the “Grand Bargain” to raise the debt ceiling.


Who are the Beneficiaries of Raising the Debt Ceiling?


            The principle and immediate beneficiaries of increasing the debt ceiling are the wealthy, bond-holders and the medium and long-term beneficiaries are the military-intelligence-empire-builders who can continue to secure over $ 700 billion in annual budget allocations.  The principle strategic losers from raising the debt ceiling will be the hundreds of millions of beneficiaries of social programs like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid and their family members.  As part of the ‘Grand Bargain’ struck by the Democratic President and Republican Congress – between $ 1.3 trillion and $ 1.4 trillion in social cuts will take effect over the next ten years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.  The cuts in Social Security will occur by raising the age of eligibility for full benefits to 70 years, resulting in a loss of $ 120 billion, as many older retired workers would be expected to die before drawing a single payment while millions of Americans  will be forced to delay retirement and work an extra five years.


Secondly, the earliest age of eligibility for partial benefits will increase from 62 to 64 years – resulting in an additional loss of $ 144 billion dollars from workers.


Thirdly, the cost of living index would be reduced – a ten- year loss of $ 112 billion dollars.


Fourthly, the calculation for initial benefits would discard the wage-based method for a so-called “price-index”, resulting in American workers losing another $ 137 billion dollars over 10 years.  In sum, workers’ social security benefits would be reduced by more than half a trillion dollars – an enormous transfer of wealth to the billionaire creditors, investors and empire builders – all in the name of ‘debt reduction’.


The cuts in MEDICARE and MEDICAID would result in an even more retrograde class polarization.  The ‘Grand Bargain’ could lead to additional losses of over $ 419 billion dollars.


The biggest cost to the workers will come in the form of an increase in their  monthly premium  for physician services (MEDICARE Part B) from the current 25%  to 35%, resulting in a loss of $ 241 billion dollars.  The second biggest loss to workers will result from raising the age of eligibility for MEDICARE from 65 to 67 years costing workers an additional S125 billion dollars.  The third loss for workers will be a $ 53 billion hit  from restricting the use of MEDIGAP insurance – supplementary policies that cover MEDICARE cost sharing requirements.


Further cuts of $ 187 billion in MEDICAID– the medical plan for the poor and disabled– would result when the federal government shifts its direct funding to block grants to the states that would severely cut services for the poor – a plan first proposed during the Clinton Administration with regard to welfare funding.


Once these reactionary cuts in basic social programs are in place, the beneficiaries, who are able, will be forced to buy alternative supplementary private medical insurance and private retirement plans, while the poor will go without.  The running down of public social services by Wall Street has been a deliberate, cynical strategy to cause popular discontent paving the way for the gradual privatization of services: adding costs, eliminating options and limiting medical treatment, surgery and procedures, especially for the elderly.  The privatization of Social Security, MEDICARE and MEDICAID, will maximize insecurity while minimizing services and lead to untreated and under-treated illness, greater suffering and economic distress.  Bi-partisan Congressional –White House agreements via the “Great Bargain” to raise the debt ceiling will widen and deepen inequalities in the United States .


In sum, “the Grand Bargain” will cause American workers to lose over $ 1.119 trillion dollars over the next 10 years, leading to a sharp decline in life expectancy, access to health care, living standards and quality of life.


The Samson Solution


            Given the harsh terms, which accompany the “Grand Bargain” to raise the debt ceiling, it would be better if no agreement were reached.  The financial elite is counting on the ‘Grand Bargain’ to leverage their debt collection over the lives and welfare of hundreds of millions of Americans.  It would be better to shake the pillars and pull down this Temple of Mammon (the ‘Samson Solution’) making them pay a price!


            The ‘shock and awe’ induced by default would shake the very foundations of the financial pillage of the US Treasury and the taxpayers; default would seriously undermine the financial basis for imperial wars, spying, torture and death squads.  The entire empire building project would crumble.


            True, in the short-run, the workers and middle class would also suffer from a default.  But the discredit of the ruling political parties, the political elite and Wall Street, could lead to a new political alignment, which would fund social programs by, in David Stockman’s phrase, “soaking the rich” – raising corporate taxes by 50%, imposing a financial transaction tax of 5%, uncapping the social security tax and collecting taxes on overseas US multi-nationals’ profits.  Additional billions would be saved by ending imperial wars, closing bases and canceling military contracts.  Tax reform, imperial dismantlement and increased domestic investment in productive activity would generate domestic growth leading to a budget surplus, extending MEDICARE to all Americans, reducing the age of retirement to 62 and providing a living wage for all workers!




Global Research



Empire Building, the Debt Ceiling, the Budget Deficit and the “Samson Solution”

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Video: WATCH Crazy Senator Claim Obama “Cut The Deficit In Half”


Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) claimed on Friday that the federal budget deficit has “been cut in half” under Obama.


Budget figures provided by the White House show that the deficit nearly tripled from 2008 to 2009, when Obama took office, and has remained above $ 1 trillion since then, though 2013 projections are slightly lower.


The country has seen higher budget deficits during every year of Obama’s presidency than it did during any of his predecessor’s eight years in office.



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Video: WATCH Crazy Senator Claim Obama “Cut The Deficit In Half”

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Did You Know the Deficit Is Shrinking? Most Americans Don"t, Thanks to Shameless Deficit Hawk Propaganda



The deficit is down 37.6 percent for the first 10 months of 2013. But half of Americans think it’s growing.








Remember all those deficit hawks who screamed that the federal deficit is spiraling out of control and must be stopped with spending cuts that have a funny way of hurting the pocketbooks of the most vulnerable Americans? Their excuse for ripping us off has been literally disappearing, but a new Google survey shows that not only do the vast majority Americans not know it — half of the public actually believes that the deficit is growing.


Here are the facts: The U.S. budget deficit has been shrinking at a rapid rate over the last few months. The deficit peaked at 10.2 percent of GDP in 2009, but over the past four quarters, it has shrunk to a mere 4.2 percent of GDP. What’s more, the Congressional Budget Office predicts that the deficit will fall to 2.1 percent of GDP in 2015.


Why such a disconnect? Unfortunately, disgraceful propaganda has left the public misinformed and confused.


Over in Economic Wonderland, the deficit hawk duo of Alan Simpson and Erksine Bowles have made a second career over the last several years wildly exaggerating the deficit issue and scaring Americans into thinking that deep cuts in the federal budget were necessary for the economy. The reality was just the opposite. If these two had ever sat down to read John Maynard Keynes, whose work is vital to understanding how to respond to economic crises, they would have known that cutting the federal budget when the economy is weak actually slows it down even more.  Yet to this day, Simpson and Bowles continue waging battle for a “grand bargain” that would shred the social safety net and cost many Americans their jobs by requiring trillions of dollars to be cut from the federal budget over ten years. All in the name of a “problem” that doesn’t even exist.


Deficit hawks like Simpson and Bowles, and their grand funder, hedge fund billionaire Pete Peterson, go on promoting the nonsense that the deficit is the major economic problem of 2013 despite the obvious facts and a growing consensus from economists that such a claim is utterly absurd. Incredibly, they do it even after the faulty work they relied on to make their case – a paper produced by two Harvard economists, Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff – was discredited by a mere grad student in one of the great academic revelations of our time. Even conservative economists are bowing to reality. The folks over at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, for example, have come to the conclusion that austerity is a terrible idea and that without proper stimulus, the U.S. economy would look a lot more like Europe’s, where individual countries without sovereign currency have been forced to go the austerity route. It’s getting increasingly hard to deny that things have gotten pretty ugly over there because of deficit hawks and their ilk.


But deficit hawks are paid well to misinform the public. They write reports. They get corporate honchos to help them run campaigns with innocent-sounding names like “Fix the Debt.” They build websites. They write articles. They hold conferences. They pay off think tanks – even progressive ones – to play ball with them.  And the corporate dominated major media frequently is happy to play along.On it goes, until the lies repeated to the public take on the ring of truth.


So it’s no surprise that the public is not aware of the important news that the deficit is shrinking. Or that it is shrinking precisely for the reason progressive economists have been saying all along. When you have a recession, you have to juice the economy through government investment. That, in turn, reaps you the benefit of more money in people’s pockets, which leads to more jobs, more tax revenue for the government, and less reliance on social safety net programs like unemployment insurance or food stamps. If the original stimulus package had been bigger, the deficit would have shrunk even faster.


The deficit hawks have been more than spectacularly wrong. They have impacted policy in a way that turned the attention of Washington away from what it should have been focused on all along – jobs. Instead of a deficit commission, Obama should have called for a jobs commission to address the fact that hard-working people have not been able to find jobs to feed their families because of a Wall Street-driven financial crisis.


One might hope that the reality emerging will help squelch the calls to recklessly cut government investment in the economy. But there’s a big problem: Deficit lies benefit the 1 percent in the short-run. Rather than shrinking the deficit, what the short-sighted, greedy rich in America really want to shrink is their tax liabilities, which is why they don’t want to pay for things like education, infrastructure, and social safety net programs that benefit the population and ultimately help keep the economy humming.  The financiers among them would also dearly like to privatize things like Social Security so that they can collect fees on American retirement accounts. The corporate honchos like the way austerity drives up unemployment and drives down wages because they hold the mistaken view that keeping workers stressed and vulnerable is good for their bottom line. They want people like Larry Summers to head the Federal Reserve, who, while in the White House as the president’s chief economic adviser , famously presided over a stimulus program many economists warned was way too small.


In the fall, will deficit hawks in Congress manage once again to hold the American economy hostage? Or will reality finally rear its head? Facts have a tough time competing with well-funded mythology.


 

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Did You Know the Deficit Is Shrinking? Most Americans Don"t, Thanks to Shameless Deficit Hawk Propaganda

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Reid: Immigration Reform Will Reduce The Deficit By $1 Trillion Over Two Decades


REID: Regardless of how they got here or why they lack the proper documents, these 11 million people play a crucial role in our economy and a vital role in our communities. Mr. President, that was proven last night at 5:00 when the Congressional Budget Office –this non-partisan arm that we look to for what things cost and don’t cost here on Capitol Hill with our legislation – they issued a statement yesterday that this bill certainly, it’s on the floor today, is good for the economy, as I will say a couple of times during my brief remarks here. Its going, over the next two decades, what’s left in this one and the next one, reduce the deficit in America by almost a trillion dollars.




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Reid: Immigration Reform Will Reduce The Deficit By $1 Trillion Over Two Decades

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Budget Deficit Exploding Out of Control -John Williams

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3 April 2013 No Comment



By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.comWILLIAMS_092_wade.JPG 


Economist John Williams says don’t be fooled by the new highs on the Dow.  Williams contends, “The economy is still in serious trouble.  The banking system is still in serious trouble.  The budget deficit is exploding out of control.”  Williams thinks the ongoing banking crisis in Cyprus has global implications.  Williams says, “You have a precedence set in Cyprus that they can seize the funds.  They will not guarantee all deposits.  If that’s the case, you may have a much worse crisis than you had back in 2008.”  Williams adds, “The big problem is the government is insolvent in the long term.”  Williams says the U.S. dollar could start selling off in May because of a deadlock in Congress on the budget.  Williams predicts, “The global markets are looking for the U.S. to address its long term sovereign solvency issues.  That’s not going to happen. . . .  In response, it’s going to be off to the races with a dollar sell-off.  That could be the trigger for the early stages of hyperinflation.”  Join Greg Hunter as he goes One-on-One with John Williams of Shadowstats.com.      


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Budget Deficit Exploding Out of Control -John Williams