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Why
Hasn’t the Day of Financial Armageddon Occurred Yet?
by
Bill Sardi
Recently
by Bill Sardi: India
Needs a Ron Paul
In a household,
what would force a family to file for bankruptcy? Of course, it
would be the day when a family couldn’t pay the interest on their
credit cards. Using this example, when would the day of financial
Armageddon occur for the US federal government? Answer: the day
it can’t meet the interest payments on the national debt. Until
then, the US government keeps racking up bills on its imaginary
credit card, largely by borrowing money from foreign countries that
do business with the US, or if these trading partners no longer
want to lend the US money in the form of IOUs (US Treasury Bills),
then the US can just print money to pay for its debts, a counterfeiting
privilege a household obviously does not have.
For some time
now, economic prognosticators have predicted a day when the financial
world plunges into an abyss that it cannot save itself from. Various
dooms-dayers have suggested that the public buy precious metals
like gold based upon a predicted but nebulous future day of financial
Armageddon. But over recent decades, people listening to dire prognostications
have been so bombarded that they have become desensitized to them,
given that massive bank runs, an official devaluation of the dollar
and insolvency of the federal government never occurred.
Why buy gold,
betting on an imagined future day when the paper money becomes worth
less, when I can spend by money to buy something practical that
I can use, like an I-pod, I-phone or I-pad, rather than store a
shiny gold bar in a home safe?
Lower interest
rates delayed financial Armageddon
In 1993 Harry
E Figgie and Gerald J Swanson wrote a book
that predicted America would financially collapse in 1995. This
prediction heavily relied upon prevailing interest rates the US
government would pay to borrow money.
One
analyst shows us why that day of financial Armageddon never occurred.
Interest rates of borrowed money, which were said to be 21% in 1993
and 30% in 1994, took a plunge. Interest rates on long-term bonds
declined to under 5% by the year 2000. Due to declining interest
rates, the percentage of taxes that were apportioned to interest
payments on the national debt dived from over 18% in 1991 to only
8.5% in 2003 and interest payments went from 3.3% of GDP in the
early 1990s to a mere 1.4% in 2003. America was saved by cheap money.
Notice in the
chart below the US Federal Reserve reveals a progressive decline
in interest rates on US Treasury bills that are used as the vehicle
for the government to cover its debts. Also notice in the second
graph the steep plunge in interest rates at the height of the financial
collapse in 2008-2009.


Declining
tax revenues
But just like
a household that barely makes minimum payment on its debts and then
faces a sudden unexpected loss of a job in a two-income family,
America now collects less income tax due to high rates of unemployment
and declining capital gains among the wealthy, so that in 2007 it
had tax revenues of $2.568 trillion and $2.828 trillion in outlays,
for a –$160.7 billion that it had to lend.
In 2009 the
federal government started to suffer a steep decline in tax revenues
to $2.105 trillion versus $3.517 trillion in outlays, for a –$1.412
trillion deficit. In 2010 the federal government’s tax revenues
were not much better, $2.162 trillion, and government failed to
significantly cut expenses, which were $3.456 trillion, for another
–$1.293 it had to borrow or print into existence to meet its obligations.
In 2011, with
political rhetoric of budget neutral spending and pressure to cut
military spending, the US government took in $2.173 trillion in
taxes and spent $3.818 trillion, for a –$1.645 trillion increase
in its accumulated debt, which now stands over $16 trillion total.
Government
predicts a rosier future than reality
What you see
in the following chart is that the federal government apparently
predicts it will be able to grow the economy and cut the growing
budget deficit from –$1.412 trillion (2009) to –$644 billion (2014)
in just 5 short years. Notice there is no significant reduction
in federal spending planned. Federal spending grows from $3.8 trillion
to $4.189 trillion from 2011 to 2015. The problem with the following
chart is that it presents an overly rosy picture where the nation
grows its economy out of trouble and finally cuts the annual debt
nearly in half, to –$606.7 billion in 2015. There is no substantiation
for this scenario.
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Summary
Of Receipts, Outlays, Surpluses & Deficits: US Government
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|
In
current dollars (billions)
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As
percent of GDP
|
|
Year
|
Receipts
|
Outlays
|
+
or 1
|
Receipts
|
Outlays
|
+
or –
|
|
2007
|
2,568.0
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2,728.7
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–160.7
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18.5%
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19.6%
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–1.2%
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|
2008
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2,524.0
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2,982.5
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–458.6
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17.5%
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20.7%
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–3.2%
|
|
2009
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2,105.0
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3,517.7
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–1,412.7
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14.9%
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23.8%
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–10.0%
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|
2010
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2,162.7
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3,456.2
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–1,293.5
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14.9%
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23.8%
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–8.9%
|
|
2011
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2,173.7
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3,818.8
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–1,645.1
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14.4%
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25.3%
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–10.9%
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|
2012
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2,627.4
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3,728.7
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–1,101.2
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16.6%
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23.6%
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–7.0%
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2013
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3,003.3
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3,770.9
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–767.5
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17.9%
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22.5%
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–4.6%
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2014
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3,332.6
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3,977.1
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–644.6
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18.7%
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22.4%
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–3.6%
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2015
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3,583.0
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4,189.8
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–606.7
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19.1%
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22.3%
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–3.2%
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Source:
Tax
Policy Center
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Just when
IS that day of financial Armageddon going to occur?
Is there a
way of knowing the day, not necessarily a calendar day but an event
day, such as when the US can’t pay the interest on its accumulated
debt?
I’ve said that
day of infamy is when the US can’t make interest payments on its
accumulated national debt. While the US has larger financial obligations
that extend into the future, such as some $60 trillion to provide
social security and Medicare health coverage, it doesn’t pay interest
on these obligations (though it has borrowed from these funds and
owes interest to itself).
Last year,
one online source, calculating the accumulated national debt at
$16 trillion, surmised interest rates would rise on this debt and
that the "game
over" point would occur some time mid-2012.
A CNN
Money report assumes foreign and other lenders to the US who
buy up US Treasury bills, seeing there is increasing risk in holding
US IOUs, will demand higher interest rates on borrowed money, and
if interest rates rise gradually that will mean about $5.5 trillion
will need to be allocated to pay off the interest on existing debt
over the next decade; if interest rates rise 1 percentage point
more than anticipated then interest payments will be ~$6.8 trillion
over the coming decade; and if they rise more than expected and
tax cuts are implemented, about $7.5 trillion (about $750 billion
a year) will need to be directed towards interest payments on the
accumulated national debt.
The Washington
Post displays a graphic which projects that interest on the
national debt rises to almost $800 billion a year in this decade,
making it the top financial priority over providing services to
the American people.
The Economic
Collapse Blog says it is now mathematically impossible for the
U.S. government to pay off the U.S. national debt since the US government
now owes more dollars than actually exist.
An article
in The
New American says every American will be paying $2500 a year
to meet the interest payment (not the principal) on the national
debt. That would be about $7500 for a family of three.
A chart at
Casey
Research projects annual interest on the national debt will
rise above $1 trillion a year by 2014 and soar beyond $1.8 trillion
annually by 2018 if interest rates rise 1% per year on borrowed
money.
|
Year
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Interest
on accumulated national debt
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2018
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$800,000,000,000.00
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2011
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$454,393,280,417.03
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2010
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$413,954,825,362.17
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2009
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$383,071,060,815.42
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2008
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$451,154,049,950.63
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2007
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$429,977,998,108.20
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|
2006
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$405,872,109,315.83
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|
2005
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$352,350,252,507.90
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|
2004
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$321,566,323,971.29
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|
2003
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$318,148,529,151.51
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|
2002
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$332,536,958,599.42
|
|
2001
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$359,507,635,242.41
|
|
2000
|
$361,997,734,302.36
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Sleight
of hand averts a cataclysmic day
So why hasn’t
the day of financial Armageddon occurred in America?
There are many
reasons why an economic doomsday has been delayed. For one, other
countries prop up the US dollar knowing its demise will drag them
into the financial abyss too.
Second, the
US has the financial advantage of being the world’s reserve currency,
so it is always in demand, though that status is being challenged
now as China, Russia and India are beginning to trade directly in
yuan, rubles and rupees respectively.
Third, the
US Federal Reserve has been able to create false demand for buying
up its debt by funneling money through American banks to overseas
companies that then buy US Treasury Bills (IOUs), or the Fed conducts
covert operations such as urging oil companies to raise their prices,
which profits countries like Saudi Arabia, who then agree to buy
US T-bills in exchange for the US providing military defense.
Fourth, the
US Federal Reserve is conducting
gold swaps with overseas banks to put a damper on alternative
currencies, such as gold.
Fifth, not
willing to face the political risks associated with massive tax
increases or an official devaluation of its money, the US elects
to steal money out of the back door of American’s wallets via inflation.
This is what is called monetizing its debt – printing new money
(paper or electronic) which then causes inflation as consumers spend
it, resulting in increased demand for goods and services and eventually
rising prices.
The US officially
says inflation is ~3%. But when using 1980 or 1990 methods of determining
the consumer price index, the
real rate of inflation is 7-10%. Five more years of inflation
and the $8.5 trillion that Americans have in interest-bearing banks
accounts will only be worth, in purchasing power, about half that
much.
Sixth, the
US government "cooks its books." The federal government
does not use generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). For
example, the government reports a 2010 budget deficit of –$1.294
trillion that was actually –$2.080 trillion (source: ShadowStats).
As John
Williams of ShadowStats says, the federal government does this
by excluding unfunded obligations for Security and Medicare. According
to Williams, the 2010 federal deficit was likely near $5 trillion.
Furthermore, Williams notes that the federal government still does
tabulate the securities issued by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, the
two quasi-government mortgage backstop organizations.
Williams says
the US government kept "$12.4 trillion in the net present value
of Medicare unfunded liabilities" off its 2010 accounting books.
Recognize, as John Williams notes, "the federal government
cannot cover such an annual shortfall by raising taxes, as there
are not enough untaxed wages and salaries or corporate profits to
do so."
The Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (actually a private insurance agent
of US banks) currently estimates there are 800-plus US banks in
dire condition, but actually, if you (a) put back the $1.3 trillion
of toxic non-performing home mortgages the Federal Reserve shifted
from banks to its accounting books, (b) demanded banks report all
of their other non-performing loans, (c) required lenders to use
true market value of home mortgages (mark-to-market accounting)
and (d) did not allow banks to temporarily loan money onto their
ledgers to make their quarterly financial reports look rosier than
they really are, nearly all of the nation’s 7400 lending banks (excluding
credit unions and commercial banks which did not offer ALT-A and
sub-prime low-interest "teaser" home loans) would be insolvent.
Financial
Armageddon: sorry you missed it
The financial
sky is falling but if you don’t report it, it never happened. Like
the famine that
resulted in the deaths of 14-26 million Chinese in 1958-61,
which represents the worst modern day human tragedy, natural or
man-made, yet it escapes your awareness because TV evening network
news simply didn’t report it. Most people, if asked what was the
greatest human calamity in their lifetime would likely mention the
9-11 terrorist attack on New York. If you missed the great famine
in China, you may have easily missed the day when the world economies
collapsed.
John Mauldin,
in his book ENDGAME, reports that the nation's private GDP ceased
to grow 14 years ago (another factoid the news media doesn’t report,
after all, news sources are sponsored by advertisers who want consumers
to buy stuff). Government then stepped in and grew a false
economy based upon contrived wars and debt. (You can listen to more
of John Mauldin here.)
Chicken
Little comes to mind
Bring up the
topic of a day of financial Armageddon and you are likely to be
ridiculed and likened to Chicken
Little, a fable about a chicken that thought the end of the
world was near. I’ve had so many friends tell me they don’t want
to hear what I have to say about the economy. Yes, it is too unsettling.
But it is something much deeper rooted than the troublesome numbers,
it is their misplaced faith in the US government, inculcated in
them from their grade-school days, that is being shaken. Mass denial
makes it easier for government to pull the wool over everyone’s
eyes.
What government
is doing behind the scene
The US Treasury
Department has
printed new money that is being stored in a warehouse, possibly
for the day when the US dollar is officially devalued (maybe at
the conversion of rate of 6 or 7 new dollars for every 10 old dollars).
Federal officials say these 100-dollar bills were misprinted, but
why don’t they burn them instead of store them?
Governments
usually conjure-up phony wars or terrorist attacks to cover for
their financial sins. Patriotic Americans will respond to a foreign
threat without hesitation, never recognizing a ruse is underway.
Lay blame for a devalued dollar on the towel heads.
The next
generation will repudiate all this debt
On a more positive
note, Gary North says the current generation will repudiate all
this debt. If we are all broke, how are they going to get everyone
to make their mortgage payment, pay their taxes, etc.?
Recognize the
goal of the elites is to transfer their losses onto the masses.
But maybe not this time. We see lenders
to Greece maybe facing a 90% write down in their loans. But
don’t forget, lending banks also hold our saved money and 401k plans.
Our banked money is likely to get swept away in a day of reckoning.
The smart investor
will be holding property, artwork, precious metals, equities (I
prefer stock in private companies, not the manipulated stocks in
the markets) rather than banked money. Recognize 401k plans (which
the government will likely confiscate under the guise of protection),
or tax-free municipal bonds (which municipalities cannot possibly
pay and meet underfunded pension obligations), are risky, not secure
as advertised. Don’t forget, the stock markets can tank stock prices
and make them appear very under-valued in a massive effort to dump
risk onto naïve investors.
Keep a little
cash on hand should ATM machines not be functioning because of natural
calamities or a banking holiday. And if you can find one of those
commercial banks that didn’t offer those ALT-A and subprime home
mortgage loans, this would be more desirable than the name-brand
bank where you currently store your money.
Noah and his
family warned of a coming flood. He was likely ridiculed for building
a boat in his front yard and driving everyone else’s property value
down. Flood? What flood?
You can’t hide
a flood but you can hide a financial implosion. The financial day
of Armageddon occurred some time in the recent past and it is government’s
job to keep the suicide rate down and to calm the masses and act
like everything is normal. The goal is to keep the women shopping.
The Super Bowl serves as an excellent distraction. It’s just a temporary
recession, right? No, it’s the financial collapse of modern civilization
and it is being papered over. If you blinked your eyes, you probably
missed it. But then you probably sleep better than I do.
January
23, 2012
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is a frequent writer on health and political
topics. His health writings can be found at www.naturalhealthlibrarian.com.
His
latest book is Downsizing
Your Body.
Copyright
© 2012 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
This article has been written exclusively for www.LewRockwell.com
and other parties who wish to refer to it should link rather than
post at other URLs.
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