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This old English proverb concisely describes the financial condition of many
Americans. Household debt is rising at an 8.8 percent annual rate, home mortgage
debt at 14.2 percent. Total debt in the United States doubled from 1998 to
2002, from $16 trillion to $32 trillion and may double again in the next five
years. The Federal government, which sets the pace, reported a $555 deficit
for the 2003 fiscal year; its total debt is given at $6.783 trillion. For the
next two years the budget deficits are estimated at $566 billion to $644 billion
each, which should increase its total debt to more than $8 trillion, or some
$27,000 for every man, woman, and child.
Economists make an important distinction between "productive" and "consumptive" debt.
Although the difference may not always be clear and exact and, therefore, may
give rise to much controversy, it is significant as to motive and effect. A
debt incurred for productive purposes, e.g. a commercial or industrial investment
designed to earn future incomes, may cover its interest costs and even yield
entrepreneurial profits. In contrast, new debt in the form of a second mortgage
on a home may finance the purchase of a vacation home, new furniture or another
automobile, or even a luxury cruise around the world. The debtor may call it "productive," but
it surely does not create capital, i.e. build shops or factories or manufacture
tools and dies that enhance the productivity of human labor. Similarly, a debt
incurred for the purpose of expanding Medicare may improve the health and looks
of many elderly and, therefore, be deemed "productive," but it does not create
capital that makes workers more productive and raises the levels of living
of all. It actually may consume capital and thereby depress standards of living.
Private debtors may find it difficult to pay for bread that has been eaten.
It is likely to become ever more difficult in the future as the cost of debt
is likely to double and triple. At the present, interest rates are far below
market rates due to massive monetary and fiscal stimulation by both the U.S.
Treasury and the Federal Reserve System. The basic Fed rate stands at one percent,
three-month money market instruments at 1.11 percent, one-year paper of 1.78
percent, and two-year government notes at 1.77 percent. For a while, government
may ignore and even outlaw market prices, market wages, and market rates of
interest and mandate its own, but price and rate edicts invariably disrupt
the smooth functioning of the market order. They cause business misdirection
and maladjustment that lead to ever more business losses and failures. In economic
disarray, the Fed may have no choice but to raise its rate to market heights
that enable businessmen to readjust to the judgments and wishes of the people.
Public debtors may view their debts in a different light. They may call them "a
national bond" which, in Franklin D. Roosevelts words, is "owed by the nation
to the nation". In reality, it is unlikely that future generations of taxpayers
will willingly bear the bond of debt. Like so many before them, they may choose
currency depreciation which offers the most advantageous escape from a burden
of debt. It depreciates all debt and, in terms of purchasing power, may even
reduce debt faster than new deficits are added. In the end, no matter how large
the budget deficits may be, debt depreciation may outpace the deficits, which
benefits all debtors, public and private, and defrauds all creditors.
Many creditors are exposed to yet another danger. The currency depreciation
may accelerate if foreign creditors should begin to question the quality of
the American dollar and liquidate their dollar claims, seeking refuge in other
countries and other currencies. While many domestic credit institutions are
legally barred from investing in foreign currency claims, foreign creditors
usually have no such limitation; they are free to shed dollar investments at
any time and search for profitable opportunities elsewhere. Every such liquidation
would reduce the demand for dollars and aggravate its depreciation. Moreover,
it would cast doubt on the special position of the American dollar as the world's
primary trade and reserve currency. For many years this special position has
allowed the Federal Reserve System to provide the world with ever more of its
notes in exchange for ever more goods and services. If the world should ever
lose its trust in the U.S. dollar and convert some of its holdings, more than
$7 trillion of American assets and claims, the consequences would be too calamitous
to contemplate.
Our debt generation is a sad generation misguided by false notions and doctrines,
and preoccupied with its own needs and wants. When economic conditions begin
to deteriorate it may grow ever more egocentric and wretched, which tends to
aggravate the social tension and strife. Clinging tenaciously to its transfer
claims and rights, the unhappy society thus may deteriorate into a militant
assembly of diverse pressure groups feuding and fighting each other. When the
political conflict finally explodes into violence, the transfer society urgently
needs a peacemaker who is prepared to suppress violence with superior violence.
In the end, a society that can no longer work together in peace must submit
to the dictates of a strong president armed with an array of emergency powers.
In other places, at other times, he would be called Caesar.
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