THE
REAL CRISIS IS NOT THE GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN: JOBS OFFSHORING, DWINDLING CONSUMER
SPENDING AND A WIDENING BUDGET DEFICIT
Global Research, October 03, 2013
The inability of the media and politicians to focus on the real issues never ceases to amaze.
The
real crisis is not the “debt ceiling crisis.” The government shutdown is merely
a result of the Republicans using the debt limit ceiling to attempt to block
the implementation of Obamacare. If the shutdown persists and becomes a
problem, Obama has enough power under the various “war on terror” rulings to
declare a national emergency and raise the debt ceiling by executive order. An
executive branch that has the
power to inter citizens indefinitely and to murder them without due process of
law, can certainly set aside a ceiling on debt that jeopardizes the government.
The
real crisis is that jobs offshoring by US corporations has permanently lowered
US tax revenues by shifting what would have been consumer income, US GDP, and
tax base to China, India, and other countries where wages and the cost of
living are relatively low. On the spending side, twelve years of wars have
inflated annual expenditures. The consequence is a wide deficit gap
between revenues and expenditures.
Under the present circumstances, the
deficit is too large to be closed. The Federal Reserve covers the deficit by
printing $1,000 billion annually with which to purchase Treasury debt and
mortgage-backed financial instruments. The use of the printing press on such a
large scale undermines the US dollar’s role as reserve currency, the basis for
US power. Raising the debt limit simply allows the real crisis to
continue. More money will be printed with which to purchase more new debt
issues needed to close the gap between revenues and expenditures.
The
supply of dollars or dollar denominated assets in foreign hands is vast. (The
Social Security system’s large surplus accumulated over a quarter century was
borrowed by the Treasury and spent. In its place are non-marketable Treasury
IOUs. Consequently, Social Security is one of the largest creditors to the US
government.)
If foreigners lose confidence in the dollar, the drop in the dollar’s exchange value would mean high inflation and the Federal Reserve’s loss of control over interest rates. It is possible that a drop in the dollar’s exchange value could initiate hyperinflation in the US.
The real crisis is the absence of intelligence among economists and policymakers who told us for 20 years not to worry about the offshoring of US jobs, because we were going to have a “New Economy” with better jobs.
Among his regurgitations was the “solution” of cutting Social Security. The chief financial editor of a major UK newspaper did not know that for the past quarter of a century Social Security revenues exceeded Social Security payments, and that the Treasury spent the surplus to fund the annual operating expenses of the government, issuing non-marketable IOUs to the Social Security Trust Funds.
The chief financial editor also did not comprehend that cutting Social Security payments also cuts consumer spending or aggregate demand, and sends the economy down further, thus magnifying the deficit/debt problem.
The
only reasons that Social Security is in trouble is that jobs offshoring and
wars have constrained the US Treasury’s ability to make good on its debts
except by having the Federal Reserve print money. Every job that is sent abroad
does not contribute payroll taxes to Social Security and Medicare.
It is difficult to imagine a more
discouraging situation.
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