In this simulation you have to make choices to bring debt to 100% of GDP by 2034. For the most part you learn that discretionary spending is largely irrelevant though has modest room for improvement in military/federal employee benefits, payroll tax rate needs to go up and probably apply to all income, most of the TCJA needs to expire, and Medicare needs to be more efficient. Which all hit politically important constituencies in different ways so nothing will get done. Obama should have done the deal with Boehner and there would have been fewer hard choices to make!
Or you can apply taxes to corporations and the ultra-wealthy and drop the debt easily while expanding medicare, social security benefits, college, etc. The counter-point of "then all the companies will leave" seems unlikely considering the wealth of natural resources and high quality of living that the US offers.
We haven't really tried fixing the wealth gap since the Great Depression, so maybe it's time to give it another go.
I know this is in jest, but it might be the root of the problem; a lot of folks don't have a good grasp on basic math, especially with large numbers, and fall victim to this kind of thinking.
One way to think about this silly math in reverse:
Split-adjusted, Amazon IPO’d at $0.075 a share. If instead of raiding my $3 piece of Jeff’s billion, I had the good sense to give him that pittance 25 years ago, it’d be worth $7,400 today.
> The counter-point of "then all the companies will leave"
I don’t know why people don’t apply the same logic to people. The US is a highly competitive economy because of immigrants because it is a nice place to live. If that changes because of declines in living standards, it will be harder for those big companies to attract top talent in the US.
You can do that exactly once. Because after that - you won’t have any new startups, new companies, new wealthy people, nothing. Nobody will start any venture knowing the government is greedily waiting to confiscate it all.
Investors will redirect their funds to friendlier jurisdictions. And entrepreneurs will go there too.
One the reasons European entrepreneurs go to the USA to start startups is exactly because the USA did not try this kind of shenanigans, while their native countries did.
As Margaret Thatcher said: “The problem with socialism is that at some point you run out of other people's money”.
Always odd when people quote Thatcher as if she was some kind of economic genius, rather than the architect of record unemployment, decline in manufacturing, record inequality and homelessness - all of which ought to sound familiar to Americans.
Socialism still failed everywhere it was tried while free markets are invariably lifting nations out of poverty. Mrs Thatcher was smart enough to recognize that, no matter what her other failings were.
It would be nice if people were more embarrassed at not knowing what the words they use actually mean.
Countries with strong social safety nets, like Scandinavia, have some of the highest standards of living, longest life expectancies, and happiest populations in the world. That's Democratic socialism.
Neoliberalism hasn't "lifted nations out of poverty", it's increased inequality and instability for decades. If you remove China from the stats this is startlingly clear - and China is hardly pure capitalism/a free market.
And meanwhile, the planet is burning, we're losing species at extinction rates not far off asteroid levels, we've put plastic and PFAS into the entire biosphere making even rainwater unsafe to drink, etc.
Which country exactly? Oil-rich Norway has about 5 million people and is basically a democratic Saudi Arabia. Sweden has more billionaires per capita than the USA - quite far from the egalitarian society socialists dream about. And they all have strong capitalist economies, with multinational corporations and such.
> China
China enjoyed unprecedented growth when they decided to allow capitalism and free markets. Conversely that growth slowed and problems starting to appear when scared of the entrepreneurs success, Xi decided to reign them in.
Other A/B tests abound: Venezuela, North Korea, Cuba, etc. My favorite is where I live, Eastern Europe. We were starving until we got rid of our socialist economies in the 90s and how we enjoy what is basically a luxury lifestyle: flights, cars, iPhones, city breaks and vacations in Greece.
> planet is burning
Do you think communist countries cared about the environment? They polluted even more. Read up on the Aral sea sometimes. Mao killed all the sparrows to such an extent they had to import new ones. Caring about nature is a luxury only rich people can afford. And only under capitalism people are allowed to create value and enrich themselves.
> some people really just buy anything.. This is tiresome. Believe what you like.
I actually lived under both systems so at least I can speak from my experience. I learned on my own skin which one I'd "buy". I am willing to bet you've never lived in any of those socialist paradises you admire. Give it a try please and then come back and give us economy lessons.
Yeah, it's quite funny that people think the corporations will just leave if you make them pay tax.
They still want access to our consumers, they still want access to the talent our universities produce, they still want the stability our economy provides, they still want to transact with the currency our military backs.
Tell them that if they want access to all that, they can pay their fair share of what it takes to provide all that.
The actual counter-point is that history shows us the exact opposite of what you propose will happen. "Higher tax = more money for our efficient government" is incredibly simplistic and ignorant thinking.
Lowering corporate tax rates is just a race to the bottom.
Look at Apple paying an effective 1% tax rate on all European profits, just because some sneaky bois in Ireland decided that would be 'good for the economy'.
Was it good for Ireland? A little, though our reputation has suffered.
"lowering" doesn't mean having the lowest rate in a race to the bottom.
Putting it back to 35% would put us as top 5 in the world. And for what? We have the data. This is a settled point. Tax revenue goes down and entire industries die and move away. Because yes, corporations will maximize their profits by any means.
Folks seriously believe having one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world will have a positive effect are dreaming.
Don't strawman with Ireland.
> "lowering" doesn't mean having the lowest rate in a race to the bottom.
The world has seen tax rates lowered in a race to the bottom.
> Putting it back to 35% would put us as top 5 in the world.
See above.
> We have the data. This is a settled point. Tax revenue goes down and entire industries die and move away.
First off, no. Empirical evidence on the impact of lowering corporate tax rates shows mixed results. Implementation is key.
We've been in a well documented race to the bottom for about 50 years. We've been ignoring potential solutions like capital controls, sabotaging tax harmonization and international cooperation, and taking away the ability of the IRS to chase big fish.
American industry died because corporations chose to move their manufacturing to the places that were most willing to exploit their workers, with the backing of the same corporate-sponsored politicians cutting tax rates.
'The problem with neoliberalism is that sooner or later you run out of public goods to strip mine for temporary profits.'
> Folks seriously believe having one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world will have a positive effect are dreaming.
From 1952 to 1963 the corporate tax rate in the US was 52%, with the highest tax band set at 91%. The period and the years afterward were characterized by massive growth and decreases in inequality.
You could call it the heyday of the American Dream, when upward mobility was at a peak.
> Don't strawman with Ireland.
Ireland illustrates the point perfectly. Apple moved there so they could pay <1% tax across all Europe in a secretive sweetheart deal, and Ireland didn't even benefit all that much. Tax harmonization put an end to it. All very relevant and not at all straw, unless you're coming in with a hard bias...
I think it's more that you will have no economic growth. The 1% already pay nearly 50% of taxes, while making around 25% of the income, and raising the corporation tax lowers the income tax by a lesser amount since they often tax the same money.
> We haven't really tried fixing the wealth gap since the Great Depression, so maybe it's time to give it another go.
If you look at a graph of the percent of wealth held by the 1%, most of them start in 1979 to show an ever increasing trend. But if you look at a longer graph, you will see a larger U shape over the last century, with a higher peak pre-great depression than today.
No, they don't. There are enough mechanisms in the tax code that many of the ultra wealthy pay nothing close to this, or anything at all. Buffet has famously complained about this.
The top 1% also 'earn' >20% of all income, and hold over 30% of all wealth.
The bottom 50% of Americans own less than 3% of all wealth.
I really think that these figures need to start taking into account disposable income, so we can see just how fucking evil this situation really is. There's over 8 million hungry kids in the wealthiest country on the planet. Half a million families file for bankruptcy every year due to medical debt. Etc.
And people are arguing in all seriousness that we need to tax corporations and the wealthy even less, quoting Thatcher and cherry-picking misleading stats. Ugh.
Also, 25% of federal expenditures are funded by printing money, which is just a tax more like fica than income tax.
Of course the other way of looking at it is that fica ultimately just comes out of the pocket of the rich. If there were no payroll taxes, fica would just stay in the employers pockets. Employers are mostly the rich. Or may be it would get embezzled by the middle management due to increased principal agent problem without the payroll tax paper trail…
FICA is capped. Past about $160k, you pay no additional Social Security; past about $180k you pay no additional Medicare tax. So if you earn $1 million a year, you pay a lower percentage of your income in FICA than if you earn $100k.
So if I understood you correctly, yes, the rich pay a higher percentage of taxes if you ignore FICA, because the poor and middle class pay a much higher percentage of FICA.
Pedantically, only the social security part of FICA is capped. Medicare you still pay 1.45-2.35%, uncapped. But the 6.2% for social security is capped, and thus for the top end of the 1% ends up being a miniscule tax.
If you get rid of the social security cap, get rid of mortgage interest deduction, and add a wealth tax, that more or less solves the 2034 debt to <100% of GDP right there.
Huh. I thought that Medicare had a cap, too, just a higher one.
Also note that FICA is only on "earned income" (not interest, dividends, capital gains, rental income...), and is not subject to the standard deductions.
It's funny. If you had 100 people in a room, there's one guy paying for about 45 people. And the next 4 people are paying for about 5 people each (20 total). And the lowest paid 50 people combined are paying for about 2 people total.
I think we should just not have the bottom half of income earners in the US pay any taxes. It wouldn't change the numbers much, and then it would be one less thing for them to complain about.
However, I don't expect anyone to put down their torches and pitch forks any time soon. It's too easy to use this to get people spun up, even above average educated people as in this forum.
That data is not adjusted for wealth transfers and other social programs. If you do make the adjustment, you will find that a majority of Americans are not net taxpayers at all. That number may be as high as 60%. The data on this is obfuscated by having 10000 different programs partly so you can't see what the real distribution of federal revenue is like.
Those 50 under-paid and exploited people own just ~3% of all the wealth in the room, even though they're doing about 30% of the work.
Where does the vast, vast majority of the value of their work go? It goes to the asset class - the top 1 or 2 people.
And you call the top guy generous because he pays ~40% tax on the money the bottom 90% made for him.
Even as he buys politicians, runs monopolies, subsidizes fossil fuel, and strip mines the planet for even more.
Don't make out like the 50% of people making 2 or 3% of income are just ungrateful, or bad at math. The insane level of inequality in America is literally an existential threat to humanity.
I think the classic example is people taking out loans against their paper wealth. No taxes paid on the loan of course, and no capital gains as nothing was realized as a gain.
The fact that he pays a lower tax rate than his secretary means nothing about his share of total tax revenue. A lot of people in the US who want Euro-style benefits don't realize that means extending our highest tax rates down to the actual middle class (which is what happens in Europe). Despite the loopholes, the lion's share of total tax revenue still comes from the top.
They should let you draw a line: the federal income tax rate as a function of income. I saw some options for repealing recent tax cuts, but I want to go back to the tax rates of the 1950s.
Actually it would be neat to make something like that - anyone know where to get very detailed data on distribution of incomes? A quick search and I only see fairly course bins. I think this would need a lot of detail, especially at the high outliers.
Almost no one paid these predatory marginal rates. People respond to incentives.
> Data from the White House’s Office of Management and Budget show that federal income tax receipts as a percentage of GDP have fluctuated between 5.6 percent and 9.9 percent since 1950, despite dramatic changes in the top marginal income tax rate.
"almost no one" is consistent with the ultra-high income earners (e.g. top 10,000).
This article sites Piketty and Saez, "the top 0.01 percent paid an average total federal tax rate of 71.4 percent in 1960 compared to 34.7 percent in 2004".
This was significantly more informative than the video.
It really depends how good the forecasts on a wealth tax will be. After all, that stuff is based on inflated asset values that are unusual compared to the rest of the world.
If you believe that our medical spending is unusual here, then you should also believe that our asset values are unusual. You can't pick and choose what is unusual, if all you're doing is comparing to the rest of the world.
Without that wealth tax, does it make sense to limit the mission of many of these programs? For example, the military has a constantly expanding mission, and much of that mission is domestic welfare, do we want to cap that?
Overall it is very enlightening. You will never be the CEO of a giant corporation, and you are basically never the beneficiary of its wealth. You don't need to give a big tax handout to Apple and Google. Seems easy to deal with.
The funny thing is that if the US actually reduced its debt by that much it would be a big problem for financial markets because investors like to hold US securities. The interest rate would go down because supply would be less then demand. The US has too much debt but cutting the debt drastically would have knock on effects on our financial system. Maybe create an asset bubble? I don't know.
This is a fun game. Thank you for linking it. I just did one run-through to see what it’s like but now that I know what some of the later choices are I might adjust some of my earlier answers.
I fixed the budget by saving $13,350B dollars relative to current law. Debt would be down to 84% of GDP by 2034 and 35% in 2050.
Honestly, this game didn't let me make as deep of cuts to social security and medicare as I would have liked. The reason this game has you make difficult choices in other areas is because you can't do things like "raise retirement age for unconditional benefits to 80" or "means-test all retirement benefits." The class of people that is drawing money out of social security and Medicare (old Americans) is the richest group of people ever in history. I have no interest in continuing to funnel money from the poor to the rich.
It seems to be limited to actual proposals made under the last two Presidential administrations. Even under that criteria I couldn’t tell you if it grabbed everything, but I feel you. There’s no granularity like privatizing Social Security, eliminating tax incentives for employer-based health plans, reclassifying specific pharmaceuticals so you don’t need to go through a doctor who sends you through a behind-the-counter pharmacy, etc.
It has a scope, but I think within that scope it offers enough granularity with just actual proposals and laws that were proposed or passed under the last two administrations to give you some clue into what’s possible; which is why I like it because even with that, it is possible to achieve the goal.
Hm, I'm wondering why "paid family leave" is listed as if anyone is suggesting the government pay for it.
When I have heard discussion of paid leave, it's always been "mandate companies provide it", not "federal government pays a stipend".
In "Build and support affordable housing", it lists a large increase in debt. Does that calculation take into account likely savings for local and state entities and hospitals?
I get it's a federal calculator, but it feels somewhat myopic.
I guess the same could be said by a military hawk, who may assert "Sure, cut spending by $450B in ten years, but World War 3 will cost $10T!"
> Hm, I'm wondering why "paid family leave" is listed as if anyone is suggesting the government pay for it.
This vaguely reminds me of that classic "Americans will eventually do the right thing after thoroughly exploring all the alternatives" quote. The issue, at the highest level, is that the political process has agreed how much redistribution needs to happen and how much taxation is reasonable. The two numbers don't match, the situation is impossible to sustain and needs to be renegotiated - either more taxation or less redistributing.
It doesn't really matter if the redistributing is officially handled via the government or forced to happen as a direct payment from taxee to welfare recipient. That is still settling the negotiation by saying that the taxpayers need to pay more.
It is a little less administratively efficient to officially route it through the government but frankly I think that is a better idea. The US political consensus seems to be heading towards "we'll settle this by raising taxes, but we'll do it through payroll, inflation and corporate tax to try and disguise who is paying". That is a lousy strategy that will result in people getting poorer, not understanding why and lashing out randomly because they can sense at some level that they are worse off.
> It is a little less administratively efficient to officially route it through the government but frankly I think that is a better idea.
It is massively more efficient at a macro level for the government to handle it, than to make every single employer manage it redundantly and often poorly. The SSA already handles payments to millions of Americans monthly with low operational overhead. Have them send out these and other safety net checks, and if you want to means test it, claw it back from high earners after the fact at tax return time.
This struck me from two angles: First, it's beautiful, well produced, clear, and concise representation of the federal budget including key areas like the deficit and spending breakdowns. However, it also struck me as "useless", in the sense of "I found it difficult to take away any useful, new, or actionable information". I'm not sure what Ballmer's intended audience or result was, but it must not've been me ...
Personally I would have benefited from less "moving flashy graphs" / "Steve explaining each node in moderate detail", and more "Here's one clean boring way to look at the data", "here's what X means for us / here's what people are considering because of X."
That said I respect what's being done and hope he continues to produce more informational content!
It gives people a baseline for where to start in any discussions regarding the Federal budget, whether that’s immediately actionable, it is useful to have the vocabulary to discuss the budget if you’re going to talk about it at all.
I’m occasionally having to correct people who believe and are insistent that our largest ticket spending item is the Military. It’s certainly the largest part of our discretionary budget, but if you’re going to talk about the Federal budget, it is unhelpful to disregard the non-discretionary budget that goes mostly into Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid and giving people an education on discretionary vs non-discretionary spending drags out conversations; then it’s a coin toss if that person retains any of that the next time you talk politics, or if it got muddled up in their minds by poor news reporting in-between, the news they follow to “stay informed”.
It’s because he presented what could have been a single chart and did so by basically just reading the data. There was no analysis other than the tidbits about debt to GDP being at a high point. That said, great production and I hope it reaches people less familiar with these budgetary line items. If you’re aware what they are, like I am, it landed pretty flat but if you’re not familiar with them I could see it being quite informative. It’s good to build a baseline of financial literacy that I think we also have a general deficit of too.
At first I was hopeful about the "just facts" content, but once he started making comparisons between government budgets and household budgets, I had to roll my eyes. This is a very misleading way to represent the US government's financial standing. The US government doesn't have to save for retirement, it doesn't doesn't have a lifespan, and it is in a unique position to manipulate economic markets (and ultimately even the use of force) regarding its own debt. The insinuation that government deficit spending is analogous to household deficit spending is misleading. A typical response it elicits is "well how are we ever going to pay that off?!" because people compare it to their own debt. But we're not talking about credit card debt or a car note here, we're talking about issuing treasury bonds.
There's also the situation that if a household's finances are tight, they can often rectify the situation by not spending money on things that aren't essential.
If a government imposes austerity measures during a recession, it can make the recession a lot worse, because that government spending was used directly or indirectly on goods and services, creating economic activity.
As I mentioned in other comments, debt-to-GDP does matter in as much as it loosely reflects the ability of the US to pay those obligations. So taxes+debt will always be able to fund the governments ability to do more than either of those individually.
There's some concern that the US is playing with fire at the current ratio.
However, Japan is now over 200% has been over 100% for 23 years. Despite their debt, investors aren't too worried about not getting paid.
There's not really a hard and fast rule at which it becomes a problem, it is up to investors to decide. The total economic situation, monetary policy, and geopolitical situation will matter more than just the debt-to-GDP ratio. That ratio is mostly useful for comparing a country to itself over time.
I would not suggest using the Japanese bond market as an example: Japanese bonds are pretty much exclusively owned by the BoJ and private Japanese banks, and they generally do this for mechanistic reasons. Basically everyone who can choose not to buy Japanese bonds is not buying Japanese bonds.
US bonds are not currently in the same place because it's hard to figure out who is in a much better position. The US has the guns and the petrodollar (although that is ending), and many other countries are in a more precarious economic and political position (thanks to Russia). However, there is no question that position would be better if the US had half its national debt.
Debt and GDP are measured in different units (dollars, and dollars per year) so talking about a "debt-to-GDP ratio of 100%" is misleading because it sounds like there's some kind of threshold there.
In fact a debt-to-GDP of 12 months or 14 months has no more special significance than the debt reaching 50 trillion dollars or your car reaching 100,000 miles.
Do you see the $35 trillion in debt as a problem? How do you think it's going to be resolved?
When I see folks habitually complaining about how much the US spend on their military, and then I look at the actual budget and see that they are actually spending more to service their debt than they do on the military, I wonder what the end game is.
My entire comment above was to argue that "resolving" the debt is nonsensical. The answer to when the debt needs to be paid off is: never. The government can issue more debt indefinitely. In fact, "paying off the debt" implies the government would stop selling treasuries, which is entirely more scary than the debt.
> I wonder what the end game is.
There is no end game, ideally, the US wants the US to continue to exist, and continue to fund the things that improve conditions for their citizens.
Believe it or not, the single largest holder of US government debt is... the US government itself. And 77.1% of the entire debt is owed to domestic US entities. The US debt is mostly Americans voluntarily financing their own government. This situation isn't something to "resolve", it is entirely okay.
Debt to GDP does need to be within some reasonable bounds, but as long as our economy can support the debt, there's no reason to get rid of it, and many reasons not to.
> My entire comment above was to argue that "resolving" the debt is nonsensical. The answer to when the debt needs to be paid off is: never. The government can issue more debt indefinitely.
Then why do governments place a large importance on minimizing deficit?
This isn't a rhetorical question, I'm ignorant about economics and government mechanisms.
> Debt to GDP does need to be within some reasonable bounds, but as long as our economy can support the debt, there's no reason to get rid of it, and many reasons not to.
What is reasonable and why? What does it mean to support a debt, and why wouldn't that burden be a reason to get rid of it?
If your country's debt-to-GDP gets too out of control, markets might doubt that you'll be able to pay on your obligations, and then you've got problems. The debt is made up of many tiny obligations (treasury bills, bonds, and notes) that get paid on a regular basis every day, and the US government has always paid every one of them. When these individual obligations are due, they need to be paid, and investors need to be very confident they will be. The point at which this becomes a problem is not a hard and fast rule, but it depends on a lot of situational factors that go even beyond the realm of math and into geopolitics.
I don't think you really answered my questions, or at least I'm not smart enough to understand.
What would out of control mean, and why? What are these problems? I struggle to understand what exactly it is that is entirely not a problem until this difficult to define point where it can become a problem, and what that problem is.
The US is only able to borrow tens of trillions of dollars for very low interest rates is because investors, big and small, both in the US and around the world, see the US as essentially a risk-free way to store value. People (or investment organizations, or businesses, etc) with many millions or billions of dollars have to put it somewhere. Using vaults to store that much money is expensive to maintain and causes them to lose value to inflation and the cost it entails to run that operation. Basically, the default way to store a lot of money in an extremely safe way (in terms of it being there when you want it, and not losing tons of value) is to buy US treasuries. Financial markets consider them to be zero-risk -- the benchmark by which all other investments are compared.
Now, if this were to change, and financial markets thought that buying US treasuries might not be a guarantee that they can get that money back later, a lot of things would be disrupted. In the immediate term, interest rates would likely increase significantly for everything, as many interest models base their rates on treasury interest rates, and treasury interest rates would skyrocket due to the now non-zero risk. That would in turn mean that the US's interest on their outstanding debt would skyrocket, further compounding the issue. Also, because so much of the world economy is based on the assumption that US treasuries are zero risk, this would upend investor confidence in many other financial markets globally that rely on those instruments for their function. Those who were forking over trillions to the US for safekeeping may look for other places to keep their money instead. This would be bad for the US governments ability to raise money to do the things it needs to do, in likely a significant way. And if a default does happen, creditors could seize assets, and depending on who is stuck holding the bag, war has happened in these situations before, although the UN currently disallows it.
But at a minimum, the global economy would be hit very hard.
Then paying down debt reduces the risk of exposure to interest rates and this lack of confidence situation, and also reduces interest repayments. I would think these are reasons to reduce debt you would weigh along the reasons to keep or increase debt, but apparently not?
You are entirely right.
If the same number was called "private credit" I believe no one would bat an eyelid about it.
Of all the non-issues to spend time on - this is the least worth anyone's time.
“We just owe it to ourselves” is a propaganda line. There must be more productive uses for those funds than paying interest. Being on the creditor side of compound interest is far better than the alternative.
The literal truth can hardly be a "propaganda line". More constructive criticisms are 1) private sector could have done better with the same finance (ultimately - resources); and 2) interest on that is paying basic income to people that already have money. I am sympathetic to both. So - the debt itself is a signal, a symptom. The solution is not to treat the symptom, but the causes. On 1) - you can say the state needs to do less. Just go down the list of things the state does, and propose those be reduced. From that PoV, the federal gov being "insurance company with and army" is basically correct. So to reduce gov spending, need to look at those two top of the list items. On 2) - that's easier imo. The IR rate is a decision, a vote, by a monopolist, controlled ultimately by the legislature. Just reduce the IR if that's an issue. Then fight inflation (if needed) with other means. People have forgotten that - but can relearn quickly.
If a household can keep on borrowing money basically indefinitely to pay for expenditures that exceed revenue, that's basically what the US's (and many others' like Japan's) national budget is.
To put it another way: America can afford to spend more than its revenue because people (Americans and otherwise, see the bond market) and countries (see prior) are (still) willing to lend more and more money. So what happens when that gravy train finally stops?
Note that it is easy to default on our debts, most prominently by just not passing a budget to pay our debts. How we are going to pay all this debt off is a very real question that needs an answer eventually. Brushing it off as "we aren't a household budget" is peak denialism.
> If a household can keep on borrowing money basically indefinitely to pay for expenditures that exceed revenue
If a household had an undefined credit limit and could take out debt to pay for any other debt, arbitrarily, and indefinitely, they'd be dumb to ever work a day in their life. But consumer creditors understand that their customers have essentially zero global power and will die someday, so the world of consumer debt doesn't work that way.
> So what happens when that gravy train finally stops?
You tell me, when is everyone in the world going to stop buying treasuries? I don't think there is a date. As long as the US has a stable and powerful economy, people with money will want somewhere to put it.
> How we are going to pay all this debt off is a very real question that needs an answer eventually.
The literal answer is that it all gets paid off all the time, according to the payment schedule of each individual security, but we continually reissue debt because there is literally zero reason not to.
> so the world of consumer debt doesn't work that way.
Yes, but I laid out how national budgets and household budgets are fundamentally the same thing: The flow of cash coming in must meet or exceed the flow of cashing going out. I'm surprised this detail is completely lost on you.
>I don't think there is a date. As long as the US has a stable and powerful economy, people with money will want somewhere to put it.
That's the thing, isn't it? It's not an absolute guarantee that the US will continue to have a stable and powerful economy ("past performance is not a guarantee of future results", as any good investor will tell you). Lest we forget, US credit ratings were lowered following one of the many recent shutdowns we had, and the world at-large is slowly but certainly shifting from Pax Americana to Pax Sino.
So again, what happens when the gravy train stops? We don't know when that is, we don't know if the train will stop in the first place, but we have to have a plan in hand because debts must be paid.
>The literal answer is that it all gets paid off all the time, according to the payment schedule of each individual security, but we continually reissue debt because there is literally zero reason not to.
Yes, the issue is where do we draw the line between reasonable amounts of debt incurred and unreasonable? Spending more money than we make is fiscal irresponsibility, borrowing money to make up for the shortfall is merely a workaround and borrowing money to pay back borrowed money is disturbing.
Where do we consider we are borrowing too much? This line can and should be constantly reevaluated as necessary and appropriate, but first of all do we even have such a line? I don't think we do, which is why the national deficit is such a hot topic.
> I laid out how national budgets and household budgets are fundamentally the same thing: The flow of cash coming in must meet or exceed the flow of cashing going out. I'm surprised this detail is completely lost on you.
That's absolutely not true. Governments can manipulate the supply of money they have available to themselves in numerous ways. The most obvious counter-example is that governments can simply print physical cash. It is rarely a good idea, but it absolutely a thing that can and has been done.
> the world at-large is slowly but certainly shifting from Pax Americana to Pax Sino.
> So again, what happens when the gravy train stops? We don't know when that is, we don't know if the train will stop in the first place, but we have to have a plan in hand because debts must be paid.
If it goes at the pace it has been going, it'll be a continuous squeeze instead of "stopping". What would happen in that squeeze? Interest rates and taxes will slowly go up and the economy will stagnate.
> Where do we consider we are borrowing too much? This line can and should be constantly reevaluated as necessary and appropriate, but first of all do we even have such a line?
Not really, because lender confidence is more complicated than a number as simple as debt-to-GDP, but it's a good benchmark value. I think the obvious answer is that lenders will indicate with their buying habits when they disapprove of the debt, and that's really the indicator that ultimately matters. But it's a complicated question that economists don't even agree on.
That's still addressing the question of cash flow: Making the cash coming in meet or exceed the cash going out by printing more cash to go out.
The various means to effect cash flow might be different, but national and household budgets are fundamentally the same.
>What would happen in that squeeze? Interest rates and taxes will slowly go up and the economy will stagnate.
Yes, are we prepared? I don't think so. Also, we can probably do something about that to reverse course or at the very least dampen the grief. Are we doing something, though? Again, I don't think so.
>I think the obvious answer is that lenders will indicate with their buying habits when they disapprove of the debt,
In the interests of pre-emptive preventative measures, because those are always cheaper and easier than cleaning the room after the shit has hit the fan, are we doing something better than doing nothing?
Jesus Christ, he does that? One would think someone of his stature had a better intelligence about that sorta thing, but I guess he just wants to do more propaganda for tax cuts. The second I hear someone make that comparison, I tap out... Well I give em a few to explain why it's not accurate. Then I tap out if the explanation of why it's a bad comparison isn't forthcoming. Shame.
So the US borrows annually around $1.6T and pays in interest almost $0.7T. That means that it's burning $0.7T yearly to increase the debt by a trillion? And the entire amount of taxes collected from corporations is less than two thirds of the interest?
I thought Jon Stewart did a good job this week of kindly exposing how he’s (unintentionally?) pushing misleading conclusions hiding behind his “I’m just reporting the numbers” speak.
Yeah, I don’t think it’s even possible to have an objectively unbiased reporting of this. The moment you have to simplify any information, you’re introducing bias. For example, I wasn’t a fan of how the income tax bracket levels were chosen —- $150k doesn’t go that far in a lot of HCOL/VHCOL areas.
That said, I think these videos do a decent high level overview and have led me to search for more information, especially on immigration. I think this project is most effective when used as a starting point for further research.
"Microsoft's stock stagnated for more than a decade after Ballmer got appointed CEO."
Unfair thing to measure him by in my opinion. Steve Ballmer inherited Microsoft when the stock traded at a P/E of 60. When he left it was 14, in line with many other tech stocks during that time. (Even Apple was lower)
He took earnings per share went from $0.70 to $2.63 during his tenure. A CAGR of 10.5% across 13 years in one of the world's biggest companies. He couldn't control multiple compression following the dotcom bust.
Also his huge bet on cloud revolutioned everything and turned Microsoft into a powerhouse.
Also I'm not sure what any of this has to do with the video. He is basically stating indisputable math and government stats. The only thing to disagree with would be that you want a bigger deficit.
Agree - I get very sceptical when someone presents "just the facts". Facts can easily be presented in a way that distorts reality and paints a false narrative. Similar to the age-old issue of correlation vs causation, facts can be presented in a way that implies a narrative, without even needing to spell it out.
(disclaimer - I haven't watched Ballmer's video, I'm just commenting in general about "facts")
Are you disputing something he's saying in this video? It's all just statements of facts, he's not sharing opinions beyond "there's a debt problem" and "we should support veterans".
It's statements of selective facts. He ignores all the tax loopholes people like him get. He focuses just on federal income tax (what rich people pay) and ignores (mostly) payroll tax, sales tax, gas tax, etc, which regular people pay.
He focuses on what the top 1% pay in regard of federal income taxes, and the listener is supposed to ignore that having such a concentration of wealth is crippling to most people (and tax income in general).
Also, he seems to focus highly on SS and Medicaid, which means he's leading the listener in identifying those as what to cut. When he mentions military spending, he minimizes it and hand waves it off as necessary (MS gets a lot of money from military contracts). He neglects to mention that SS tax is hard capped at around $168K or so and he pays relatively nothing into that system.
He doesn't mention tariffs, which would go a long way to fund government. The US government was completely funded by tariffs for quite a long time. Assigning a tariff on, say offshore labor, would fund a lot of government, but it would make Ballmer's portfolio not grow as fast, etc, because MS would have to pay more for offshore talent.
It's largely a propaganda piece trying to lead the listener into agreeing to cut SS and Medicaid, which of course would be even more devastating to anyone not in the top 1 or 2%.
In this simulation you have to make choices to bring debt to 100% of GDP by 2034. For the most part you learn that discretionary spending is largely irrelevant though has modest room for improvement in military/federal employee benefits, payroll tax rate needs to go up and probably apply to all income, most of the TCJA needs to expire, and Medicare needs to be more efficient. Which all hit politically important constituencies in different ways so nothing will get done. Obama should have done the deal with Boehner and there would have been fewer hard choices to make!