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US deficits: Real issue, phoney debates The soaring DEFICITS have now risen, yet again, to headline status. Conservatives inside and to the right of the Republican Party frame the national debates by attacking deficits. They want to reduce them by cutting government spending. Liberals respond, as usual, by insisting that overcoming the crisis requires big government spending ('stimulus') and hence big deficits. Most Americans watch the politicians' conflicts with mixtures of confusion, disinterest, and disdain. Yet deficits pose a real issue for everyone, one that the debates among politicians and their economist advisers miss, ignore, or hide. When the federal government raises less in taxes and other revenues than it spends, it must borrow the difference. Such annual borrowing is each year's deficit. The US Treasury borrows that money by selling bonds, federal IOUs, to the lenders. The accumulation of annual deficits comprises the national debt, the total of outstanding US Treasury bonds. So the first and simplest questions about deficits are (1) why does the federal government choose to borrow rather than to raise taxes? and (2) why does it borrow rather than cut its expenditures? The twin answers are profoundly political. Elected officials are afraid to raise taxes on business and the rich because their profits and great personal wealth can then finance the defeat of officials who do that. Cutting government spending that benefits business and the rich is avoided for the same reason. As the tax burden shifted increasingly onto middle- and lower-income people in recent decades, elected officials have faced rising tax revolts coupled with demands for more government services and supports. In the These days, business and the rich want both massive government supports to overcome the current crisis as well as their usual government benefits. The latter include government activities abroad - including wars - that secure export markets and access to crucial imports (e.g., the needed quantities and prices of business inputs and consumer goods not domestically available). They also demand the particular subsidies typically provided to agricultural enterprises, transport companies, defence producers, and so on, as well as tax reductions offered for various kinds of investments. Businesses press government to maintain or expand roads, harbours, airports, schools, mass transportation systems, and research institutes crucial for their enterprises' profits. Wealthy individuals want government spending on the police and judicial systems that protect their wealth. Business and the rich likewise
want the government not to raise their taxes. Businesses seek to keep
in place their legal opportunities to evade taxes on profits (by means
of offshore operations, internal transfer invoicing, etc.). Business
and the rich in the Middle-income and poorer Americans demand government spending for their unemployment insurance, as well as spending to prevent or soften the blow of home foreclosures, to provide low-interest mortgage money for their home purchases or refinancing, and to guarantee low-interest educational loans for their children. They want public schools well financed to function as means of advancement for their children. They support government regulation to guarantee safe and honestly labelled consumer goods and services and likewise health and safety on their jobs. They demand Social Security retirement benefits and Medicare. They share support for Medicaid, food stamps, and welfare, despite some demonisation of those programmes and their recipients. And they oppose both more taxes and higher government deductions from their incomes for these programmes. In all capitalist countries, more or less, the contradiction between these conflicting financial demands on the government's budget has shaped politics. Thus, elected officials have neither raised taxes nor cut spending enough to bring them into balance. Instead they have increasingly resorted to borrowing - running budget deficits. The officials like deficits because they reap immediate political benefits - 'satisfying' business, the rich, and all the rest by holding down taxes and maintaining spending - while shifting the political costs of repaying rising national debt and its rising interest costs onto office-holders coming after them (today's equivalent of Louis XV's remark, 'apr‚s moi le deluge'). Government borrowing also benefits
businesses and the rich by offering them an attractive investment. They
lend money to the government that then repays those sums with interest.
Instead of losing a portion of their wealth by paying taxes, those groups
keep that portion (in the form of a purchased government bond) and earn
more with it. Businesses and the rich are usually major lenders to their
governments; workers rarely are. The same Each country's unique history,
culture, and politics determine how much its government borrows. In
the Because the Consider this example of this
kind of alternative to austerity programmes: Every year, two companies
catering to rich investors survey their clients. Capgemini and Merrill
Lynch Wealth Management's World Wealth Report 2010 counts as High Net
Worth Individuals (HNWIs) everyone with at least $1 million of 'investible
assets' in addition to the values of their primary residence, artworks,
collectibles, etc. HNWIs in the The real debates all along should have been - and now ought to be - about who pays how much in taxes and who benefits in what ways from government spending. Deficits are necessary neither in normal economic times nor when crises hit and government stimulus is required. That business and the rich prefer lending to finance government deficits over being taxed instead is just their understandable self-interest. The rest of us have not only the right to a very different preference, but also a clear basis in economic theory and available empirical studies not to abandon our preference for theirs. We only have deficits because of who pays and who does not pay how much in taxes and who gets how much in government spending. We should be debating the social
acceptability of a capitalist class division between employers and employees
that places dangerously contradictory pressures on government budgets.
Had we had such debates and a democratic process of deciding them in
the Richard D Wolff is Professor
of Economics Emeritus at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst in
the *Third World Resurgence No. 244, December 2010, pp 9-11 |
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