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What should be clear to all Americans is that the need to grow the economy
has never been more critical. But what constitutes real growth and the pathway
to achieve it, has never before been more confused.
The need for above trend growth in GDP was made even more pressing last week
when the Treasury announced that the budget deficit for fiscal 2009 breached
$1.1 trillion. The excess spending over revenue for June was $94.3 billion,
the first deficit for that month since 1991 (fiscal 2010 will begin on October
1st). In addition, the national debt now stands at a record $11.6 trillion
with trillion dollar annual deficit projections as far as the eye can see.
While we continue to pile up a record amount of debt, the revenue outlook continues
to decline, as the Administration's growth projections remain overly optimistic.
So it is absolutely critical -- unless our long term strategy is to hyper
inflate or default on our debt -- that we dramatically expand the tax base.
So I thought I should write a few brief words explaining what viable, long
lasting growth really is and how it is best achieved.
Real growth comes from empowering the private sector. The best way to achieve
this is to allow the private sector to control more of their own money. Cutting
taxes and reducing public spending serves to shrink the size and scope of government
while at the same time increasing the power of individuals. It should be obvious
why it is most important for individuals to have control over the allocation
of their resources. Only you (the private consumer) know best what needs to
be produced and what needs to be consumed. That's because the individual risks
his or her own capital, whereas the government risks other people's money.
Since government spending originates from a central planning authority, it
is not subject to the vetting process of those who have the most to profit
or lose from that decision. The result is an inefficient distribution of resources
and a misallocation of capital.
Likewise, only the private sector is best at creating job growth. Government
created job growth exists by fiat and is not subject to the profit and loss
analysis of the private sector. The jobs that are created by private sources
(those who have the most skin in the game) have a predilection to be economically
viable, sustainable by the free market and are accretive to economic growth.
A government dictated source of employment is not subject to market forces.
Therefore, the relevant question is not asked; can the job exist without government
support or does it add to the creation of new capital?
True growth does not come from a stimulus package or from a doubling of the
monetary base. Placing the economy further into debt or expanding the money
supply beyond its capacity for growth only assures future tax increases and
inflation.
That is why all this talk about how many jobs the government will create or
save is nonsense. Job growth has been anemic for the past decade because it
has been based on the servicing of asset bubbles. What we need is a stable
currency and low inflation so that economic growth is balanced. It is also
inane to speak about how the public sector must increase spending because the
private sector is deleveraging. The private sector is deleveraging because
market forces necessitate that debt levels contract.
The recent government actions are constructed to interfere with the cathartic
reconciliation process of markets. And that is why talk of a viable and healthy
recovery in the economy is not probable until our government assets to the
belief that markets are the solution, not the source of our infirmity.
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