Extend and Pretend
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: When
Infinite Inflation Isn't Enough
Now that President
Obama has been re-elected, the media is finally free to focus on
something besides the clueless undecided voters in Ohio, Florida,
and Colorado. The brightest and shiniest object that has attracted
its attention is the "fiscal cliff" that we are expected
to drive over at the end of the year unless Congress and the President
can agree to turn the wheel or apply the brakes.
Fresh from
his victory, the President took time today to let the nation know
how he proposes to avoid the cliff: to raise taxes on those Americans
who make more than $250,000 per year. He made clear than no one
making less than that will be asked to pay any more. The two percent
of taxpayers that the President is targeting earn 24.1% of all income
and pay 43.6% (as of 2008) of all personal federal income taxes.
Sounds like a fair share to me. But the four or five percent tax
increases on those earners that are being proposed would only yield
around $30 to $40 billion per year in added revenue, a drop in the
federal bucket. Even if they were to double the amount that they
pay our deficit would only be cut by about one third (even if those
increases did not trigger an economic slowdown).
So what exactly
is this looming menace, and why is it so dangerous? Stripped of
its rhetorically charged language the fiscal cliff is simply a legal
trigger that will trim the deficit in 2013 by automatically implementing
spending cuts and tax increases. In other words, the government
will spend less, and more of what it does spend will be paid for
with taxes rather than debt. Isn't this exactly what both parties,
and the public, more or less want? The fiscal cliff means that the
federal budget deficit will be immediately cut in half, shrinking
to approximately $641 billion in 2013 from the approximately $1.1
trillion in 2012. What is so terrible about that? I would argue
that there is a greater danger in avoiding the cliff than driving
over it.
If you recall,
the cliff was created by a deal last year when Congress couldn't
find ways to trim the deficit in exchange for raising the debt ceiling.
When they failed to reach an agreement, Congress knew they had to
raise the debt ceiling anyway. The resulting Budget Control Act
of 2011, signed in August of that year, offered the pretense that
they were dealing with our long-term fiscal crisis and not simply
raising the debt ceiling with no strings attached. This was done
not only to appease some House Republicans, who had threatened to
vote against a debt ceiling increase, but to satisfy the bond rating
agencies that had threatened (I would choose a different word or
provide a source to back this up) a down-grade if Congress failed
to act.
Now the focus
turns to how Congress will dismantle the structure it created just
16 months ago. There can be little doubt that they will as economists
are assuring politicians that driving over the fiscal cliff will
immediately bring on a recession. The expiration of the Bush era
tax cuts for all taxpayers will cost Americans an estimated $423
billion in 2013 alone. Hundreds of billions of across the board
spending cuts, including the military, have been delineated. No
politician would allow that to happen.
It is amazing
that members of Congress can keep a straight face as they claim
to want to address our long-term deficit problem while simultaneously
working to avoid any substantive action. No doubt an agreement will
be reached that will replace the looming fiscal cliff with another
one farther down the road (which they can easily dismantle before
we actually reach the precipice). Will the rating agencies buy this
bill of goods a second time? If we lack the political courage to
go over this fiscal cliff, why should anyone think we will be able
to stomach going over the next one? Especially since each time we
delay going over the cliff, we simply increase its future size,
making it that much harder to actually go over it.
Many currently
believe last year's S&P downgrade resulted from the same congressional
dysfunction that resulted in the fiscal cliff agreement. The truth
is that the downgrade would probably have been much greater, and
more rating agencies would have likely joined S&P in taking
action, had it not been for the fiscal cliff agreement. If further
downgrades fail to be issued when the lame duck Congress inevitably
comes up with another can kicking deal, then the agencies themselves
could lose any remaining credibility. In my opinion, the only explanation
for inaction by the rating agencies would be for fear of regulatory
retaliation by a vindictive U.S government.
I do not think
it is a coincidence that while the banks are suffering a regulatory
backlash as a result of their perceived culpability for the mortgage
crisis, the credit rating agencies have been relatively untouched.
But the credit agencies played a key role in catalyzing the mortgage
crisis by giving questionable ratings to the mortgage backed securities.
My guess is the government simply does not want to open up that
can of worms as similar mistakes are being made with respect to
the agencies' ratings of government debt.
The truth is
that regardless of what you call it, going over the fiscal cliff
is not the problem, it is part of the solution. Our leaders should
construct a cliff that is actually large enough to restore fiscal
balance before a real disaster occurs. That disaster will take the
form of a dollar and/or sovereign debt crisis that will make this
fiscal cliff look like an ant hill.
November
13, 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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