Redstate...
Seven
Reasons Why August 2 Isn’t the
End of the World
Monday, July 18th
by Dean Clancy
Washington
is currently borrowing
about 43 cents out of every dollar it spends, and is close to maxing
out its
credit limit.
Current
law says Uncle Sam cannot
borrow more than $14.3 trillion. A few months back, the Obama
Administration
demanded that Congress increase the national credit line by $2.5
trillion by
May 16, or else, it warned, the United States would default on its
debts, causing
an “economic Armageddon.” ($2.5
trillion
is just enough to aver the need for another debt hike until after the
2012
election.)
When
May 16 came and went, and nothing
happened, the Obama team set a new “Armageddon” date: August 2.
Unfortunately,
a lot of folks in
Washington and Wall Street – including some who should know better —
seem to be
taking this new deadline at face value.
While it’s true that, at some point, the
government will hit the ceiling
and have to reduce spending by about 40 percent, exactly when that day
will
arrive, nobody knows for sure. And
don’t
believe anyone who tells you he does know.
“No man knows the day or the hour.”
Maxed
Out Day could be August 2. It
could be August 22. Or
it could be in
September. The
exact date really
depends on whether the President is willing to tap certain reserves
available
to him, or decides to force a political crisis.
I
cannot tell you when Maxed Out Day
will be. But I can
– and will — prove to
you that August 2 doesn’t have to be it. Before I do so, here are three
key
numbers to remember:
1)
We are projected to take in between
$170 billion and $200 billion in August, in revenues.
2)
We will likely spend about $300
billion in August.
3)
Therefore, we face a gap of
somewhere between $100 billion and $130 billion.
So
what will happen, come the August 2
deadline?
The
U.S. will still be able to pay its
creditors (i.e., it won’t default).
There’s no reason why the government needs to
stop paying its
creditors. Ever. Debt service payments
(interest on the
national debt) will only cost $30 billion in August.
As I’ve noted, we will take in $170-200
billion.
Social
Security checks will still go
out. On July 12, President Obama suggested that, come August 2, he
might not be
able to send out the 50 million Social Security checks slated to go out
in
August. But since those checks only cost $50 billion, compared to
$170-200
billion coming in, there will obviously be sufficient funds to mail
them.
Medicare
and Medicaid payments will go
out as usual. Experts predict we’ll owe about $50 billion to doctors
and
hospitals. Well, with $170-200 billion coming in, granny will get her
health
care, just like always.
Veterans
and active-duty military
personnel will get paid. Paying our veterans will cost about $3 billion. Ditto our soldiers in
uniform. That $6
billion is chump change by DC
standards.
So
that’s a total bill of $136
billion, easily covered by the $170-200 billion we’ll take in. Of course, we won’t be
able to afford
everything the government currently spends on.
The Departments of HUD, Transportation,
Commerce, Energy, and Education,
for example, may have to take a pause while Congress works out a deal
with the
President. But is
that really “the end
of the world”?
Earlier,
I mentioned the reserve funds
the President can tap. As
the Senate
Finance Committee Republican staff helpfully point out:
5.
The Treasury Department has $5
billion sitting idle in an account at the Federal Reserve. It can tap
this
account any time.
6.
Treasury has close to $100 billion
in mortgage-backed securities it can sell.
It bought these securities during the
financial crisis to bail out
housing markets. Just
last month, it
sold $10.6 billion worth.
Finally,
there’s a seventh reason why
August 2 needn’t be anything more than another pleasant summer day in
America.
7.
Congress can pass the Cut Cap
Balance Act (H.R.2560). This bill would give President Obama his $2.5
trillion
debt increase — in exchange for three things: 1) $111 billion in cuts
this
coming year, 2) tight spending caps for the coming decade, and 3)
congressional
approval of a strong Balanced Budget Amendment to the Constitution. By strong, I mean one that
makes it much
harder for Congress to spend more than a fixed share of the economy,
raise
taxes, or add to the debt.
The
Cut Cap Balance Act – which the
House is slated to vote on today — would make this the last debt
ceiling hike,
ever. Unfortunately,
President Obama has
threatened to veto it. If
he does, whose
fault will it be when Maxed Out Day really does arrive?
Dean
Clancy is FreedomWorks’
Legislative Counsel and Vice President, Health Care Policy.
Read
it at Redstate
|