Whilst everyone is understandably worried about Europe'an PIIGS debt, it's also timely to examine what is happening with America's federal government debt, the grand-daddy of them all.
In a word, it's horrible. The debt-to-revenue ratio for the federal government is the highest since right after WWII, soaring to 396% in 2009 and projected to rise further to 424% this year (see chart below).
Data: FRB, US Dept. of Treasury
What is most worrisome is how fast debt rose, literally exploding from 2005 when it stood at $4.7 trillion and 205% of revenue, to nearly $10 trillion in 2010. Such debt dynamics beg for explanations.
Apart from "keynesian" deficit spending, the most glaring dynamic at play is converting debt of the failed financial sector into public debt, i.e. massive bailouts. In 2009 alone, financial sector debt dropped by $1.75 trillion while federal debt increased by $1.44 trillion (see chart below).
Data: FRB
Drawing an analogy with WWII, we the people of the United States went to war against Finance, lost and are now obliged to go deeply into debt in order to pay reparations.
There are a number of logical, if problematic, extensions that can be drawn from this analogy:
There are a number of logical, if problematic, extensions that can be drawn from this analogy:
- Why are we still bailing out Finance? The financial domino theory may be valid, but only during a crisis lasting a few days or weeks, at most. Too big to fail? Fine, but does this still apply to the likes of Morgan or Goldman?
- Why are we not demanding our money back? It is insane to provide hundreds of billions to an industry that operates as a set of communicating vessels, taking "bailout" money from the multitudes on one end and giving it out as bonuses to the very few at the other. That's Robin Hood in reverse, with the government's blessing! At the very least, top marginal corporate and payroll tax rates for the entire finance industry should rise to war-time levels (90%).
- Why are we still allowing Finance to shoot rockets at us, i.e. to engage in gross speculation for their own account - with our money?
- What is the sense of bailing out financial institutions instead of people? Why go into more debt to the tune of trillions (the people's trillions, mind) and - at the same time - have families thrown out of their homes?
- Weren't all of us supposed to win in this "war"? Wasn't Finance supposed to be a servant of the Real Economy, instead of its task-master? Because it increasingly looks like Finance is building a bunch of huge forced-labor concentration camps to ring the economy. And guess who the inmates are...?