Redstate...
The
Debt Rises, The Economy Sinks
Not even a debt increase cheered by
Wall Street can override the debt-induced economic stagnation.
Posted by Daniel Horowitz
Thursday,
August 4th
Despite
being dispirited by the one-sided
nature of the debt ceiling deal, most of us were looking forward to
reaping the
rewards from its only ancillary benefit; the impending stock market
rally. Much to our
chagrin, the Dow dropped
precipitously, losing over 800 points since the opening bell on Monday. After the initial euphoria
from the debt
ceiling hangover began to subside, people have been forced to confront
an
inconvenient reality. The
problem with
the economy is not the debt ceiling; it is the debt – and all that it
represents; overbearing and job-killing government.
Late
Sunday night, Republican leaders
forged a bipartisan deal with the president to raise the debt ceiling
another
$2.4 trillion without any preconditions for the second tranche. Despite pretentious claims
that we were
entering a new era of austerity, the debt deal has charted us on a
trajectory
to incur $7.8 trillion more in debt, even considering the unrealistic
baseline
projections of economic growth and revenue.
Well,
the Treasury wasted no time
utilizing its new credit card and devouring the spoils like the starved
beast
that it has been for the past few months.
On Tuesday, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner
issued $239 billion in new
debt, almost 60% of the entire $400 billion increase in borrowing
authority that
Congress granted for the first round of the debt limit hike. To put that in perspective
with the
“austerity side of the debt deal,” it will take 4.5 years to achieve a
commensurate degree of savings from the discretionary caps imposed in
the
bill. I guess that
is one way of
measuring dollar-for-dollar cuts.
Our
total cumulative debt (including
the intragovernmental share) now stands at $14.58 trillion, approaching
100% of
out GDP for the first time. We
have
joined the failed socialist experiments of Europe in this ominous
distinction.
Nevertheless,
at the very least, we
should have enjoyed the inevitable market rally that was so eagerly
anticipated
by the bipartisan cheerleaders on Wall Street.
After all, our borrowing authority is
inviolable, as we are slated to
borrow trillions more over the next few years.
Hey, a few billion dollars of debt a day keeps
the default away – and
will forestall the greatest market crash ever.
Won’t it?
As
it turned out, there is more to
growing an economy, and even the stock market, than issuing more debt. In fact, the debt, along
with the very
entities and institutions that it purveys, is the primary culprit of
the
economic stagnation and the “unexpected” market decline.
How
ironic that following the spike in
market futures, as a result of the debt deal, the market tanked from
the news
of a terrible manufacturing report.
There is perhaps no other sector of the
economy that has been so
negatively affected by taxation, regulation, litigation, and Big Labor
– the crown
jewels of big government serviced by debt – than manufacturing.
In
addition to the abysmal
manufacturing report, the market suffered from record low consumer
spending, 17
weeks of jobless claims above 400,000, unprecedented stagnation in GDP
growth, higher
gas prices (despite, or, because of the meretricious SPR release) and
the worst
housing market since the Great Depression.
These vices are all self-inflicted wounds that
have been perpetrated by
the inveterate forces of big government, and its gargantuan boot that
is placed
on the necks of our job-creators daily.
Aside
for the economic malaise that we
are experiencing as a result of previous big government policies, we
now have
to contend with more portentous issues resulting from the debt deal. Since the deal failed to
impel our government
to balance the budget, and worse, actually issued trillions more in
debt, the
markets will suffer under a perennial cloud of uncertainty regarding
the
security of our credit rating.
Additionally, because of the egregious cuts
that the sequestration will
extract from healthcare providers (and dump into Medicaid and
Obamacare),
healthcare stocks lost as much as 50% of their value on Tuesday. That was some market rally
the debt ceiling
deal produced. I’m sure glad we didn’t traverse the Aug. 2 deadline
without a
bipartisan deal.
As
we head into the September budget
battle, we must remind the American people that the problems with the
economy
are not merely the result of profligate spending alone; they are the
result of
overbearing government. In
other words,
even if we had all the money in the world, we should never fund
government
agencies and programs that promulgate job-killing, income-destroying,
price-hiking, market-distorting regulations on the economy. The amount of wealth that
these agencies cost
our economy dwarfs the price tag of their own appropriations. According to a new report
circulated by
Senator Barrasso, Obama has added 608 new regulations just in the month
of
July, costing our economy $9.5 billion.
We must begin to fight specific government
agencies and regulations –
and let the Democrats defend them in the face of insurmountable
government-induced economic stagnation.
As
a result of the debt deal, we won’t
have much to fight for in the September Continuing Resolution, in terms
of
topline spending caps. All
the
discretionary spending caps were established in the deal, while the
mandatory
spending reforms were punted to the super duper committee. Nonetheless, we must be
ready to ensure that
these cuts, as minuscule as they may seem, are incurred by the biggest
offenders. Departments,
agencies, and
programs such as the Department of Energy, Department of Interior, EPA,
NLRB,
Obamacare, Dodd-Frank, and Sarbanes-Oxley are among the worst offenders. Not all spending cuts are
created equal; we
should choose wisely. We
should link the
debt crisis to the jobs crisis, by identifying the consummate problem
as a
big/overbearing government crisis.
The
great market decline this week
should serve as an enduring lesson for our focus headed into 2012. The economy will never
improve, unless we
vitiate those governmental entities and behemoths that were originally
responsible for the decline, and the ones that are currently
responsible for
the stagnation. This
week’s
unprecedented issuance of debt will only augment those perpetrators of
economic
misery and joblessness – even if it was the best we could do.
Read
it at Redstate
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