Saturday, November 17, 2018

The Big Lie of Economics Is Now Completely Unsustainable At This Point, So Let's End It Now

Earlier this year, we at the TSAP have exposed the Big Lie of Economics, a lie so massive and specious that even WE partially fell for prior to 2018.  The Big Lie consists of the following statement and its corollaries:
  • Federal taxes pay for federal spending, and any shortfall in revenues (i.e. "deficit spending") must be made up by the federal government borrowing money to cover the deficit.
  • It must be this way, because otherwise the federal government will run short of dollars, which are finite.
  • The federal government is literally bankrupt and can no longer afford to keep paying for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, let alone anything more ambitious and progressive.
  • Things like Universal Basic Income (UBI), tuition-free public college for all, state-of-the-art infrastructure, a Green New Deal, and single-payer Medicare For All sound like good ideas on paper, but we literally can't get the numbers to add up.  Sorry.  Oh well.
  • If the national debt as a percentage of GDP rises above some arbitrarily high level, the federal government will have no choice but to default.
  • Thus, we will have no choice but to accept an austerity "menu of pain" at this point, with both large tax hikes and/or deep spending cuts. (Austerity for the bottom 99%, that is.)
Do you still believe these statements? Well, guess what?  Each and every one of those specious statements is absolutely FALSE.  Period.  Not even a kernel of truth in there, except for the completely contrived self-fulfilling prophecy that believing such lies leads to, starting with the very first statement on that list, and it goes downhill from there. Federal taxes DO NOT pay for federal spending, because our federal government is Monetarily Sovereign and creates all the dollars they need to spend into existence on an ad hoc basis.  Tax dollars merely disappear into infinity, and the so-called "National Debt" is literally nothing more than a National Savings Account consisting of deposits in Treasury securities.  Yes, really.   And the only reason why we must currently match spending with taxes and/or "borrowing" is due to the arcane and archaic rules left over from when we actually had the gold standard.

So having established that, we must now note that sustaining the Big Lie, a lie that really only benefits the oligarchs and their sycophantic lackeys of both corporate duopoly parties in government, is now physically and metaphysically untenable.  Especially given the many converging real and contrived crises now facing our nation and world.  Make no mistake, we absolutely must end this Big Lie YESTERDAY or else face extremely painful austerity, recession, depression, or worse in the very near future.

Thus, we should all write letters to our Congresscritters based on the following sample letter written by the ever-insightful Dr. Joseph M. Firestone and disseminated by the ever-insightful Rodger Malcolm Mitchell:

Dear __________________
At one time or another you and nearly every one of your fellow Representatives (or Senators) have expressed great concern, even alarm, at the size of the national debt and the often increasing debt-to-GDP ratio.
Many of you have pointed out that if the national debt were broken down into how much each American owed that would add more than $50,000 to our individual debts, even though the national debt is not an obligation of each American citizen, but of our government.
You and your political allies have also pointed out that in view of the size of the national debt it is important for the Government to either reduce spending, raise taxes or both.
You have said doing this is necessary to be “fiscally responsible”, and, at least, to reduce the annual deficit, and the debt-to-GDP ratio.
You have voted for and supported legislation in order to be “fiscally responsible” in this way, and in doing so you have cut many programs of long standing that were delivering great benefits to people, harming them and their families.
Some of you have expressed regret and sorrow about this, while insisting on the need for sacrifice in order to be fiscally responsible.
I, your constituent, have heard this fiscal responsibility story from you for many years now, including your sentiments about how much you hate “the national debt,” what an evil it is, and how much we have to lighten its burden on our grandchildren.
In view of all this from you, it surprised me greatly to learn recently, that the very existence of the national debt is Congress’s fault, including your own and your colleagues. I say this for a very simple reason.
That reason is that you and your colleagues can, in an afternoon, make it standard legislative practice to include the following clause, or an alternative formulation meaning the same thing, in every appropriations bill or continuing resolution for Federal Spending. The clause is:
Now here comes the key part:
“Upon passage of this appropriations bill, the Federal Reserve is directed to fill the Treasury’s spending account at the New York Federal Reserve with the addition to its Reserve Balance necessary to spend the appropriation.
“In addition, the Federal Reserve is directed to fill the Treasury spending account with the additions to the Treasury Reserve balances necessary to repay all outstanding debt instruments including principal and interest as they fall due for the fiscal year of this appropriation.”
In short, the Federal Reserve would pay off T-securities, making the so-called “debt” disappear.
The Fed simply would create U.S. dollars from thin air, just as it always has been authorized to do, and just as it does when it buys federal bonds with its Quantitative Easing (QE) programs.
The first sentence provides the reserves necessary for the Treasury to spend its mandate from Congress without issuing new debt.
And the second provides the reserves necessary for the Treasury to pay down the existing outstanding Treasury debt instruments as they fall due within the time period of the appropriation or continuing resolution bill.
If this or similar language were included in every such bill it would mean that (1) deficit spending by Congress would no longer involve issuing new debt instruments, so the debt would no longer grow and (2) that all outstanding debt instruments would be paid off as they fall due as long as Congress continues to include the new language in all its appropriations bills and continuing resolutions.
So, it seems to me that the sole reason why the national debt exists at all in 2017 is that when President Nixon took the United States off the gold standard in 1971, the Congress did not adjust to the new reality of fiat monetary sovereignty by funding Federal spending using language like the above.
I believe that Congress made a grievous mistake in not changing its funding language immediately after the change to a fiat currency in 1971, and mandating the Federal Reserve to fill Treasury’s spending account with the reserves needed to spend its appropriations.
That mistake has led to the whole situation of debt terrorism we see around us now, and to all the damaging propaganda and horrible legislative outcomes we have suffered at the hands of Republicans and Democrats alike.
You have all been very wrong about the need to sacrifice. There was no need to sacrifice!
You have been all wrong about all of that for 40 years now, and you should all wear sackcloth and ashes and hang your heads for the damage you have done to America.
Since the Administration of President Carter we have been treated to these meaningless harangues about a faux financial problem that is purely one of politics and messaging and not one of public financing at all.
And this faux problem, solely of Congress’s own making has led to much suffering among most of the American people, including decades of less than full employment, the denial of universal health care coverage, deteriorating public spaces and infrastructure, refusal to deal with a life-threatening climate change problem, increasing economic inequality, a declining educational system, decreasing life expectancy, and a host of other problems too numerous to mention.
Well, I have had enough of all this, and especially of the pretense that the Federal Government doesn’t have enough money to buy any goods or services for sale using US currency.
I know that using the words above or words very like them, you and a majority of your colleagues in Congress can appropriate funds for anything you want to spend on.
So, never let me hear from you ever again that we can’t afford this good program or that good program or any other program that will benefit a majority of the people of the United States.
I now know that is a lie. And I insist that you never tell that lie again in public, and that from now on you advocate for and insist on legislative language similar to the above, being included in all appropriation bills and continuing resolutions passed by Congress.
I demand, that as my representative, you vote against any bill that lacks that language.
And I tell you now that if you fail to comply with this demand of mine, I will do all I can to defeat you in the next election and will work for and vote to elect any opponent of yours who is willing to promise that she or he will include such language in all appropriations bills or continuing resolutions.
In closing, I hope I have made myself abundantly clear. I insist that the lies and propaganda advancing faux fiscal responsibility stop immediately.
I insist that the issue of the national debt be taken off the table by including the language suggested above or a similar formulation, followed by gradual pay-off of all outstanding Treasury debt instruments. And I insist that you represent me in this way going forward and for as long as you serve.
I want Job 1 for you to be seeing to it to the best of your ability that this language is in all appropriation bills or continuing resolutions coming out of Congress. I will want other things from you too.
But, as I say, this is Job 1, and if you want my vote in the future you will see to it that it is well done, so that the various lies and fables surrounding Federal spending are at last ended, and so our nation may move forward to true fiscal responsibility, which is Government spending for public purpose.
Sincerely Yours, Your Constituent,
Granted, this letter is probably TL;DR and should perhaps be more concise, but the part in blue is really the heart and soul of the letter.  As Rodger Mitchell further explains:
The above letter is way too long to send as is. Further, I disagree with two of the points it makes: 
  1. I disagree that all “debt” (i.e. T-securities) should be allowed to expire...and not [be] replaced. T-securities serve useful purposes. They help the Fed control interest rates and they provide a safe place to hold large amounts of money.
  2. I disagree that “. . . Treasury Reserve balances (are)necessary to repay all outstanding debt.” Maturing Treasuries are repaid by transferring existing dollars from the T-security accounts back to the checking accounts of the T-security holders.  [Only the interest needs to be created anew.]
That said, the fundamental idea of having the Fed buy enough T-securities to reduce the outstanding “debt” would change the dialog, and ease the drive to cut social benefit spending.
And there you have it.  A bit more nuanced, but the same basic idea.  It would probably also be useful to add that there is a federal statute on the books that codifies the aforementioned arcane and archaic rules left over from when we actually had the gold standard.  That statute is codifed as 2 USC Ch. 20, most notably Section 902. Once one gets through the legalese mumbo-jumbo, one can plainly see that this requirement for "sequestration" upon "falling short" of federal budgetary dollars to pay bills is an outmoded contrivance that no longer serves any useful purpose at all.  Amending or repealing this obsolete section, or even the entire Chapter 20, is not just a good idea, but a matter of grave necessity to save our country at this point.  The same goes for 31 USC section 3101, which is the statute that imposes that other outmoded contrivance, the so-called "debt ceiling" as well.  Repealing both of these obsolete laws will permanently make it so the text in blue in the aforementioned letter will no longer need to be every spending bill as a formality to work around such laws each time going forward after the first one--especially if that text in blue were to be inserted in whatever remains of the repealed/amended 2 USC Ch. 20.

And instead of so-called "debt ceiling", which almost no other nation in the world has, we could simply have a spending limit that would be deemed automatically raised each time a new budget, continuing resolution, or appropriations bill is passed and signed into law, NOT by a separate vote. And that limit will only apply to spending on any new obligations taken on going forward, not on outstanding obligations.  The only functional reason for this at all would be as a "safety valve" or "circuit breaker" that would stop feeding the beast of inflation in the (unlikely) event of truly excessive inflation.

In the meantime, if Congress refuses to act, the executive branch does still have one powerful "ace in the hole":  the trillion-dollar coin.  While a pure "Treasury Warrant" idea is of very questionable legality and would likely be struck down by SCOTUS, under current law the Department of the Treasury has the explicit legal authority to mint platinum coins in literally any denomination.  Thus, they can easily mint one or two (or twenty!) trillion-dollar coins as a workaround for the time being and use the resulting seigniorage to pay any bills and preclude default even if Congress plays "chicken" with the debt ceiling as a cudgel to force a default if they don't get their way.

It's long past time to end the Big Lie already, period.  The very best time to do so was in 1971-1973 when we functionally got off the gold standard and/or 1975-1976 when all remaining nominal ties between gold and the dollar were formally severed for good.  The second best time is NOW.

17 comments:

  1. Hello again Ajax,

    I've looked through your political party platform and the issues you raise.

    I find myself agreeing with you on many issues, such that endless economic growth is indeed unsustainable.

    Anyway, keep up the good work. Your posts are well-worded and informative.


    Regards,

    Wayland

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  2. Hello, and thanks again for your interest in my ideas. It is great to see more people than I thought actually agreeing with such ideas. Keep up the great work as well. By the way, do you happen to have any blogs yourself?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Here is my blog. https://notochallenge25.weebly.com/blog

    And also check out my Twitter feed. https://twitter.com/NoToChallenge25

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  4. Ajax, do you really want to help save the environment?

    It's simple: Stop buying alcohol from the shops.

    Ideally, you shouldn't drink alcohol. But if you have to, you should make your own alcohol. And you must encourage other people to do the same.

    Making your own beer or wine is very easy. You just need water, yeast, grapes, and sugar for wine, or water, yeast, hops, and sugar for beer.

    Check out these ready-packaged ingredients: I'm sure you can find some stuff that you can buy in your country.

    https://www.the-home-brew-shop.co.uk/acatalog/Simply-Bitter-Beer-Kit.html

    https://www.brewbitz.com/p/120-winebuddy-chardonnay-7-day-wine-making-refill-kit-30-bottles.html

    We need to stop going through so many glass bottles. If you drink, say, a bottle of wine a week, you go through 52 bottles in a year. If you drink two bottles of wine a week, you go through 104 bottles.

    And you know that shops support the drinking age law. These people hate you, and hate your freedom. Don't give them the pleasure of ID'ing you.

    Also, you should give them a letter, explaining why you are not buying alcohol from them.

    I know I seem preachy, but if we are to make real change happen, people have to start actually doing things.


    Regards,

    Wayland

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. With all due respect, I agree in part, though given how only a tiny percentage of the population is likely to actually do so, it is basically a drop in the proverbial bucket. And at least glass is less damaging and more readily recycled than the ubiquitous plastic that is literally killing our oceans. Also, while beer and wine are indeed fairly easy to make oneself (albeit with some trade-off in quality perhaps), distilled spirits like whiskey are more challenging, not to mention very, very illegal to make oneself in the USA. Just my $0.02.

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  5. Maybe if you raise the prices, more people will brew their own alcohol, like they do in Turkey.

    https://www.dw.com/en/turkeys-beer-lovers-turn-to-home-brewing-amid-soaring-alcohol-taxes/a-42073801

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    Replies
    1. Most likely. For the record, I support higher alcohol taxes/prices, if only because it has been proven to be the single most effective public policy measure in terms of reducing alcohol-related harms, by far. Plus, I think it can also help triangulate the prohibitionists into grudgingly supporting a lower drinking age if paired with higher alcohol taxes/prices.

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    2. Yes, it would be a good idea. But on another point, as I stated before, the 'prohibitionists' aren't really prohibitionists, they're just statists. You must understand that they're not really against alcohol, they just like power. For example, how many people from MADD or similar organisations do you think are actually non-drinkers?

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    3. Good point, there is a lot of hypocrisy among power-hungry statists, and tyranny is always whimiscal. Even when Prohibition in the 1920s was first passed, its supporters actually celebrated by--wait for it--drinking. Seriously.

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    4. The same goes for the War on (people who use a few particular) Drugs as well, at least in the USA. In that case, it is motivated more by racism and classism than anything else, but there are parallels with alcohol prohibition and the 21 drinking age nonetheless. From Harry Anslinger to Tricky Dick Nixon to Ronnie Raygun to Bill "I never inhaled" Clinton to Dubya to Barry and the Choom Gang to Mr. Sniffles himself, it was about power regardless of whether they actually indulged themselves, to one degree or another.

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    5. And at the end of the day, these people would rather the masses drink and use drugs than start to think for themselves, question things, and fight for change.

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  6. Oh, and I want to apologise if my tone has been a little rash sometimes. I need to do maybe a bit less talking and a bit more listening.

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    Replies
    1. No problem. Sometimes my tone can be a bit rash as well. Given how what passes for an alcohol policy debate is typically dominated by hysterics in popular discourse, it is fully understandable IMHO.

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    2. At least the drinking age is 18 in the UK.

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    3. Indeed. Not only that, there are also no private possession laws, internal possession laws, use and lose laws, dram shop laws, social host laws, or similarly oppressive ancillary laws in the UK like we have in much of the USA to prop up our ageist abomination that is the 21 drinking age. And while underage drinking is decriminalized in the UK, in contrast in many US states (though not NY or DC), it is a criminal offense (for which one is tried as an adult, no less) that can haunt you for the rest of your life.

      But hey, at least we don't have those ghastly "Challenge 25" signs over here, right? Oh wait, we do, we just call them "We Card" instead, and have a bit fewer of them so they are not quite in your face. So we need to see the forest for the trees. Though it is a pitifully low bar to clear to say that a country has a somewhat saner alcohol policy than the USA.

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