12 October 2013 –
What
About Going Broke Don’t We Understand?
Should
we worry hugely about the ongoing government shutdown and the looming deadline
for raising the debt ceiling? I suggest
that we should look past the screaming and sniping by politicians, bureaucrats,
and media. They divert our focus to the
secondary issues, such as a specific sidelined government program or who was
hurt by partisan exploitation. They want
us to avoid thinking about how the government—elected officials and agency bureaucrats—have
spent us into a strategic crisis that only heroic means can resolve.
The
single biggest threat to the United States is that we the people, represented
by our elected and bureaucratic officials, are spending ourselves into
bankruptcy. Self-absorbed economists
natter bankruptcy into incomprehensible silliness; but, a simple presentation of
the numbers should scare all sensible Americans.
The
federal government’s debt rose above one trillion dollars in the Reagan
administration and has been rising at a geometric rate with each new generation
of government. If a family financial advisor
were counseling today’s Uncle Sam, she would assess that he is a pander of expensive
things to family members in exchange for docile perpetuation of family addictions. The advisor then would search for a family member
who has enough individual strength and maturity to take over the family
finances.
How
bad is our problem? Our government
spends at about 25% more than it collects in taxes and has been doing so for
several years. The US government now
owes more in unsecured debt—credit card debt to us every day people—than all
317 million Americans make every year.
Seventeen trillion dollars. That
is 17 with 12 zeroes behind it: $17,000,000,000,000. The tipping point to national insolvency
approaches.
In
the meantime, our elected officials hiss at each other across partisan ramparts. They bemoan the uselessness and profligacy of
Obamacare, the blatantly unconstitutional budgetary processes of the last five
years, and who is the meanest in their governance. However, they collectively are the uncle who
blames anything and everybody but himself for his addiction. The real and present danger to the United
States is our national debt and the refusal of our elected officials to put on
their big boy pants to stop the madness.
Progressives
ignore the importance of individual property rights and government thrift. But these principles were important to our
Founders. To paraphrase the essayist John
Jay Chapman’s famous quote about slavery, “There was never any moment in our
history when slavery [to a large national debt] was not a sleeping serpent. It
lay coiled up under the table during the deliberations of the Constitutional
Convention [about government budgetary processes]. “ Alas, today, the Executive Branch and
Congress have abandoned almost all constitutionally mandated budgetary
processes. The Executive Branch and its gargantuan
regulatory agencies increasingly obligate and deny monies by fiat, and Congress
allows them to do so. The President has ignored
his constitutional obligation to present a budget to Congress for consideration
in the budgetary process, and Congress has allowed him to do so. The Senate has refused to consider the myriad
budget bills passed by the House, enabling the Executive Branch to rule by
continuing resolution. Continuing
resolutions and executive fiat are sure-fire formula for wasting of vast
amounts of our money.
Does
this self-induced mess really threaten our nation’s security? I posit that our increasing federal debt is the
greatest threat the United States has faced since the Civil War. US government debt to other nations and to
their financial institutions lessens our ability to make independent decisions in
both domestic and international arena. My
years of working civil-military issues with allies, friends, and enemies, have
taught me that durable sovereignty is the result of the deliberate use of all a
nation’s instruments of national power. Economic,
military, internal political, and diplomatic power work together to sustain a
nation’s sovereignty in the world. The
most important of these instruments, however, is economic power. The other three instruments are effective
only if they are sustained by a vibrant economy and an unencumbered
government. All national power collapses
if a country loses control of its finances.
The Soviet Union’s economic collapse, quickly followed by its military
and diplomatic collapse in 1989, should be a sobering example of what can
happen to a corrupt “superpower.”
We are
on a similar road to ruin if we don’t revert to wisely established constitutional
principles of economic governance: present
yearly budgets, debate them, balance them, enact them, and hold to them. Anyone on either side of the aisle who is not
faithful to that process is part of the problem and not part of the
solution.
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