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POLITICAL ECONOMY
Outside View: Debt-ceiling morass
by Peter Morici
College Park, Md. (UPI) Jul 28, 2011

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

Cognitive dissonance -- a refusal to accept objective facts that define rational behavior -- is at the root of impending disaster in Washington.

House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., and her colleagues simply won't accept that the two wars, Bush tax cuts and prescription drug benefit for seniors didn't cause the deficit. To point: in 2007, the last year before the financial crisis and with all the aforementioned in play, the deficit was a manageable $161 billion -- that's a fact the left simply won't address.

In 2011, in the second year of the economic recovery, government spending is up $1.1 trillion, even though only $200 billion was needed to accommodate inflation. Federal spending is up from 19.6 percent of gross domestic product to nearly 26 percent.

Mostly caused by additional regulatory costs; newly legislated additions to Medicare and Medicaid benefits and rising healthcare prices accelerated by "healthcare reforms" championed by U.S. President Barack Obama and congressional Democrats; and a population that lives longer while politicians refuse to further raise the retirement age.

Congressional Democrats and the president cannot accept that more taxes aren't the answer. Even if every tax and fee the government collected were raised by 50 percent -- something that isn't possible because many activities would leave the country and some folks would choose to work less -- the deficit would still exceed $600 billion.

Obama's taxes on families earning more than $250,000 would raise a paltry $80 billion and even if all Americans and businesses were taxed more aggressively, the deficit couldn't be lowered to less than $1 trillion. At that, the nation would be cast into a permanent recession, akin to the 1930s.

Simply, the national budget cannot afford the additional programs and benefits Pelosi and Obama have created and they won't even entertain a discussion of those facts.

Over on the Republican side, the Tea Party, lead by House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., refuses to understand that the 2010 election victory gave Republicans control of one-half of one of the two political branches of government. Control of one-quarter of law-making gives Republicans a veto over changes in national policy -- including raising the deficit ceiling -- but it doesn't put them in a position to impose systemic change.

Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, perhaps the only adult playing the game, has come up with a modest plan to keep the country from diving into the abyss next Tuesday, while cooler heads might prevail this fall. But Republican conservatives and Obama are refusing to even discuss it.

Both the president and the Tea Party, protestations to the contrary notwithstanding, demonstrate by their deeds they are willing to risk a default on U.S. debt to get their way.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner is running around telling everyone the United States will be out of money and default on Aug. 2 when it will still have lots of cash and only will default if he and the president so decide.

The federal government still will collect taxes and other fees exceeding $180 billion per month and interest payments on the national debt eat up less than $30 billion. If the Treasury prioritizes expenditures -- as did the state of Minnesota during its partial shutdown -- it could pay interest on bonds, roll over bonds coming due and pay Social Security recipients and many other obligations.

Standard and Poor's may downgrade the United States -- but the fact is, it is threatening to do that next year no matter what deal is reached now to raise the debt ceiling. Even though the ability to print dollars means the United States will never truly be compelled to default, it applies the same analysis to big countries printing international reserve currencies as it does small ones without reserve currencies.

For example, bond rating agencies ludicrously downgraded Japan because of its large debt when the Japanese owe the money to themselves. The Japanese save too much, the government sells them bonds and spends the money for them. They don't have the big external debt like the United States, the Bank of Japan controls a reserve currency, and Japan is a net creditor country.

The markets simply didn't validate the downgrade. The Japanese aren't paying higher interest rates for their debt, as prophesized will now happen to the United States.

Simply, there are no good substitutes available to global capital markets in sufficient quantities for the U.S. dollar and dollar-denominated sovereign debt. After the melodrama of Friday through Sunday, Asian markets were supposed to crash Monday morning but didn't.

In the short term, though, panic may ensue Tuesday, because Geithner hasn't presented a backup plan. But, if the interest is paid on U.S. bonds, after a time, the markets should adjust to the fact that the United States is in a political crisis, which it eventually will resolve, and isn't fundamentally insolvent -- or even near so -- in the manner of Greece or developing countries that occasionally get into similar messes.

(Peter Morici is a professor at the Smith School of Business, University of Maryland School, and former chief economist at the U.S. International Trade Commission.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)




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ADB warns inflation still 'major risk' to Asia
Beijing (AFP) July 27, 2011 - Rapidly rising inflation remains a "major risk" in Asia and could trigger a potentially damaging wage-price spiral, the Asian Development Bank warned Thursday.

The Manila-based lender said strong domestic demand and surging commodity prices had pushed inflation above 10-year averages in some East Asian countries and was being exacerbated by speculative money flowing into the region.

Higher interest rates and tighter restrictions on bank lending as well as faster appreciation in exchange rates could help policymakers rein in prices, the ADB said, in an apparent reference to China, which controls its currency.

"Higher-than-expected inflation could lead to wage-price spirals, threatening macroeconomic stability and constraining policy options," the ADB said in its latest Asia Economic Monitor report, released in Beijing.

A wage-price spiral is when rising prices leads to workers demanding higher wages, which drives up production costs and puts further upward pressure on prices.

Inflation around the region was hovering around 3-6 percent but in some places, such as Vietnam, it had hit 20 percent by the end of June, the lender said.

China, the world's second-largest economy and key driver of regional growth, saw inflation reach a three-year high of 6.4 percent in June despite persistent government efforts to bring prices under control.

The ADB forecast that East Asia -- which includes China, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Vietnam, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia, Philippines, Cambodia and Laos -- would grow at 7.9 percent this year.

The predicted growth is higher than its previous forecast, made in December, for 7.3 percent.

It warned the deepening eurozone debt crisis, sluggish growth in the United States and the downturn in Japan triggered by the March earthquake and tsunami could hurt demand for the export-dependent region's overseas shipments.

But policymakers should be careful not to "over-react to the slowdown in advanced economies as regional growth remains resilient and inflation a continuing problem", the ADB said.





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