Townhall...
5
American Economic Statistics That
Will Blow Your Mind
By John Hawkins
7/19/2011
“Space
is big. You just won’t believe
how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think
it’s a
long way down the road to the drug store, but that’s just peanuts to
space.” --
Douglas Adams
Like
Douglas Adams’ description of
space, the economic issues in this country have become quite big. In
fact, most
people are, in a very real way, unable to comprehend how “vastly,
hugely,
mind-bogglingly big” our problems have become. It’s all “trillions”
this,
default that, Apoco-bankruptcy-Armagedde-debt-alipse. That’s why so
many people
look at you like a cat peering at a calculus book when you try to
explain the
scope of issues we’re facing.
Unfortunately,
once people get to that
point, their brains usually turn off and they tend to conclude things
aren’t
really so bad because they don’t see members of Congress running around
in
circles, wetting themselves in terror on television. This is a mistake
because
most members of Congress are wealthy, influential, and assume that even
if the
rest of us are sleeping in cardboard boxes and eating cat food, they’ll
be
dining on steak in some plush, gated villa. Sadly, they’re probably
right about
that.
With
all that in mind, since there’s
unlikely to be a “Members Of Congress And The President Have To Live
Like The
Rest Of Us If We Go Bankrupt” bill that’s passed in the near future, it
seems
prudent to offer up some statistics that may, if you’re open to it,
cause you
to look at America’s economic situation in a new way -- sort of like a
goose
that realizes it’s about to be chopped open by a greedy farmer for its
golden
egg and flies off to find a nice swallow in Capistrano instead.
1)
“How do you ‘invest in the future’?
By borrowing $188 million every hour. That’s what the government of the
United
States is doing. It’s spending one-fifth of a billion dollars it
doesn’t have
every hour of every day of every week — all for your future!” -- Mark
Steyn
One
hesitates to start off with a
statistic that hints at the almost infinite amount of money we’re
spending
right now because it’s nearly too big to comprehend. That being said,
we do
need to give people a sense of how far beyond our means we’re living
right now.
Remember
the Judgment Day style
theatrics that surrounded the threat of a government shutdown back in
April?
That sliced $350 million from this year’s budget. That’s about as much
as we
borrow in two hours. Now, they’re at it again in Congress, but this
time
they’re talking about cutting $2 billion from this year’s budget. We’ll
cover
that in 11 hours time. Not that the “future budget cuts” aren’t
appreciated, if
they ever come, but the extraordinary amounts we’re borrowing and the
miniscule
amounts we’re able to cut in the here and now don’t suggest we’re even
remotely
serious about dealing with this issue yet.
2)
“The typical husband and wife who
reach age 66 and qualify for Social Security -- Starting next year,
this
typical couple, receiving the average benefit, will begin collecting a
combination of cash and health-care entitlement benefits that will
total $1
million over their remaining expected lifetime.
According
to my calculations based on
government data, such married couples will begin receiving monthly
Social
Security checks that will, on average, total about $550,000 after
inflation.
They will receive health-care services paid for by Medicare that, on
average,
will total another $450,000 after inflation. The benefactors will be a
generation of younger workers who are trying to support themselves and
their
families while paying taxes to finance the rest of government spending.
...Medicare
premiums paid by senior
citizens once covered half of the cost of physician and related
services. They
now cover one-fourth. Copayments once covered nearly 40% of these
services’
costs. They now cover only 20%.” -- Joe Cogan
The
reason we have such out-of-control
spending and such difficulty dealing with it is because of what Al Gore
would probably
call an “Inconvenient Truth,” one that may very well upset many of the
people
reading this article. The biggest reason we have such a huge deficit is
because
so many middle-class Americans are, or are about to, receive Social
Security/Medicare benefits that cost much more than they’ve paid into
the
programs in taxes.
The
fix for that problem, which would
be about as popular as hiring Casey Anthony as a nanny, is to find a
way to
dramatically reduce how much we’re paying out in Social
Security/Medicare
benefits or to dramatically increase the amount people are paying for
those
benefits. Neither option would be popular, but we can be sure that one,
the
other, or both will eventually happen because that’s what’s going to
have to
happen if we’d like to stave off bankruptcy as a nation.
Since
that’s such an unpleasant idea,
many people prefer to offer up a pleasing fantasy instead. “Tax the
rich” and
all will be well! You are about to see why that is not going to be the
hair of
the dog that bit America after a long, drunken spending bender.
3)
“In fact, in 2006, the Census
Bureau found only 2.2 million households earning more than $250,000.
And most
of those are closer to the Lubbock city manager than to Carlos Slim,
income-wise. To jump from the 50th to the 51st percentile isn’t that
tough;
jumping from the 96th to the 97th takes a lot of schmundo. It’s lonely
at the
top.
But
say we wanted to balance the
budget by jacking up taxes on Club 250K. That’s a problem: The 2012
deficit is
forecast to hit $1.1 trillion under Obama’s budget. (Thanks, Mr.
President!)
Spread that deficit over all the households in Club 250K and you have
to jack
up their taxes by an average of $500,000 -- which you simply can’t do,
since a
lot of them don’t have $500,000 in income to seize. Most of them are
making
$250,000 to $450,000 and paying about half in taxes already. You can
squeeze
that goose all day, but that’s not going to make it push out a golden
egg.
....Every
time you raise the threshold
for eating the rich, you get a much, much smaller serving of meat on
the plate
— but the deficit stays the same. The long division gets pretty ugly.
You end
up chasing a revenue will-o’-the-wisp.” -- Kevin Williamson
Can
we get more revenue out of the
rich? It seems likely that we can, but that’s not to say it would be
easy. Rich
people have lots of options. They can put their money in tax shelters,
they can
move overseas, they can pay lobbyists to get loopholes, they can decide
they
have enough money and stop working, etc., etc. Still, even if those
existing
options magically disappeared somehow, we still couldn’t fix our
spending
problems by taxing the rich because they simply don’t have enough
money. Even
if we were the old Soviet Union and Vladimir Lenin were our President,
we couldn’t
fix our problems by confiscating everything the rich own.
This
is one of the reasons why the
American people are always being warned that “taxing the rich” isn’t
the
solution to our problems because the biggest revenue source is the
middle
class, not the rich. Once the Left has finished picking the bones of
the rich,
it will move on from the appetizer to the main course, which is the
middle
class. That being said, even if the Republicans were to join the
Democrats in
their lust for higher taxes, as you’re about to see, it probably
wouldn’t fix
our problem.
4)
“Over the decades, tax rates have
varied quite a bit. They’ve even gone up as high as 90% in some
brackets. Yet,
the actual amount of revenue coming in doesn’t change very much in
relation to
GDP.
...The
key thing to take away from
this is that the amount of revenue the government can bring in via the
income
tax is, for whatever reason, more inelastic than most people think.
That’s yet
another reason to put more emphasis on balancing the budget via
spending cuts
as opposed to trying to fix the problem with tax increases.
Now,
if Hauser’s law is as spot-on as
it has been in the past and it’s going to be difficult to raise the
government’s revenue level much beyond the 20% of GDP mark...” -- John
Hawkins
Welcome
to Hauser’s Law, a piece of
economic theory that could turn out to be quite relevant in the next
few
decades. Long story short, tax rates go up and down, but the amount of
revenue
the government brings in has turned out to be fairly static.
The
reason this is so relevant is that
the Democrats, although they loathe to publicly admit it, want America
to look
much more like Western Europe: They want much bigger government and
they want
the populace paying a significantly higher tax rate to pay for it.
They’ve been
quite successful at getting the bigger government part implemented, but
Republicans have managed to block the higher taxes. Hauser’s Law
suggests that
even if Democrats got their hearts’ desire and dramatically raised
taxes, it
wouldn’t generate the revenues liberals expect. In other words, big
government
may be even more financially unfeasible in this country over the long
term than
it is in places like Greece or Spain -- which would hardly be a shocker
given
that our Founding Fathers were highly individualistic, tax-hating,
small
government fanatics who clung to their guns and religion.
5)
“In FY2010, we spent $164 billion
just on interest payments on the debt — up 18 percent from the year
before. And
that’s at historically low interest rates. If rates should go back up
to their
1970s or 1980s levels, we could easily end up spending more on debt
service
than we spend today on big-ticket items like Medicare or national
defense.” --
Kevin Williamson
All
too often when we’re discussing this
dilemma, there’s a sense that we have all the time in the world to work
it out.
Not
so.
Unless
we make some astonishing
changes in the way our government works, or rather doesn’t, one of two
things
is going to happen -- and probably within a decade or two.
We
may continue to go further down the
current path the Fed is on, by printing truly humongous amounts of our
currency, and it’s going to cause rampant inflation that will
eviscerate the
value of the dollar. In other words, prices for everything would
skyrocket and
you’d wonder why you’d feel so poor, despite making the same amount of
money.
We’re actually already starting to see this effect with food and gas,
although
it’s fairly insignificant compared to what will likely happen in the
next few years.
The
other possibility is that we’ll
lose our AAA credit rating, which realistically could happen in the
next two
years even if we get a debt ceiling deal. If that were to happen, then
it would
cost much more for us to borrow the colossal sums the government uses
to pay
its bills. What happens when the government can’t afford to send out
Social
Security checks and pay the interest on our debt? Well, if you’ve ever
seen Mad
Max Beyond Thunderdome and thought, “Wow, I’d love to live in that
world,” you’ll
have some good news when that day comes.
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it at Townhall
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