The Real Fiscal Cliff
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
Return of the Gold Standard
The media is now fixated on an apparently new feature dominating
the economic landscape: a "fiscal cliff" from which the
United States will fall in January 2013. They see the danger arising
from the simultaneous implementation of the $2 trillion in automatic
spending cuts (spread over 10 years) agreed to in last year's debt
ceiling vote and the expiration of the Bush era tax cuts. The economists
to whom most reporters listen warn that the combined impact of reduced
government spending and higher taxes will slow the "recovery"
and perhaps send the economy back into recession. While there is
indeed much to worry about in our economy, this particular cliff
is not high on the list.
Much of the
fear stems from the false premise that government spending generates
economic growth (for stories of countries experiencing real growth,
see our latest
newsletter). People tend to forget that the government can only
get money from taxing, borrowing, or printing. Nothing the government
spends comes for free. Money taxed or borrowed is taken out of the
private sector, where it could have been used more productively.
Printed money merely creates inflation. So the automatic spending
cuts, to the extent they are actually allowed to go into effect,
will promote economic growth not prevent it. Even most Republicans
fall for the canard that spending can help the economy in general.
But even those who don't will surely do everything to avoid the
political backlash from citizens on the losing end of any specific
cuts.
The only reason
the automatic spending cuts exist at all is that Congress lacked
the integrity to identify specifics. Rest assured that Congress
will likely engineer yet another escape hatch when it finds itself
backed into a corner again. Repealing the cuts before they are even
implemented will render laughable any subsequent deficit reduction
plans. But politicians would always rather face frustration for
inaction than outright anger for actual decisions. In truth though,
only an extremely small portion of the cuts are scheduled to occur
in 2013 anyway. If it comes to pass that Congress cannot even keep
its spending cut promises for one year, how can they be expected
to do so for ten?
The impact
of the expiring Bush era tax cuts is much harder to assess. The
adverse effects of the tax hikes could be offset by the benefits
of reduced government borrowing (provided that the taxes actually
result in increased revenue). But given the negative incentives
created by higher marginal tax rates, particularly as they impact
savings and capital investment, increased rates may actually result
in less revenue, thereby widening the budget deficit.
In reality,
the economy will encounter extremely dangerous terrain whether or
not Congress figures out a way to wriggle out of the 2013 budgetary
straightjacket. The debt burden that the United Stated will face
when interest rates rise presents a much larger "fiscal cliff."
Unfortunately, no one is talking about that one.
The current
national debt is about $16 trillion (this is just the funded portion...the
unfunded liabilities of the Treasury are much, much larger). The
only reason the United States is able to service this staggering
level of debt is that the currently low interest rate on government
debt (now below 2 per cent) keeps debt service payments to a relatively
manageable $300 billion per year.
On the current
trajectory the national debt will likely hit $20 trillion in a few
years. If by that time interest rates were to return to some semblance
of historic normalcy, say 5 per cent, interest payments on the debt
would then run $1 trillion per year. This sum could represent almost
40 per cent of total federal revenues in 2012!
In addition
to making the debt service unmanageable, higher rates would depress
economic activity, thereby slowing tax collection and requiring
increased government spending. This would increase the budget deficits
further, putting even more upward pressure on interest rates. Higher
mortgage rates and increased unemployment will put renewed downward
pressure on home prices, perhaps leading to another large wave of
foreclosures. My guess is that losses on government insured mortgages
alone could add several hundred billion more to annual budget deficits.
When all of these factors are taken into account, I believe that
annual budget deficits could quickly approach, and exceed, $3 trillion.
All this could be in the cards if interest rates were to approach
a modest five per cent.
If the sheer
enormity of the red ink were to finally worry our creditors, five
per cent interest rates could quickly rise to ten. At those rates,
the annual cost to pay the interest on the national debt could equal
all federal tax revenues combined. If that occurs we will have to
either slash federal spending across the board (including cuts to
politically sensitive entitlements), raise taxes significantly on
the poor and middle class (as well as the rich), default on the
debt, or hit everyone with the sustained impact of high inflation.
Now that's a real fiscal cliff!
By foolishly
borrowing so heavily when interest rates are low, our government
is driving us toward this cliff with its eyes firmly glued to the
rear view mirror (much
as the new French regime appears to be doing). For years I have
warned that a financial crisis would be triggered by the popping
of the real estate bubble. My warnings were routinely ignored based
on the near universal assumption that real estate prices would never
fall. My warnings about the real fiscal cliff are also being ignored
because of a similarly false premise that interest rates can never
rise. However, if history can be a guide, we should view the current
period of ultra-low rates as the exception rather than the rule.
July
11, 2012
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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