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November 21, 2010 KUFM / KGPR T. M. Power Resisting the Deficit Hysteria Magical thinking and fear mongering have managed to whip up a political hysteria that focuses on current federal deficits as the greatest threat to the American economy and way of life. From the Tea Party’s agenda to Obama’s National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform to the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Debt Reduction Task Force, the drum beat is the same: The most important economic policy we need now is one that slashes government programs across the board, so that we can quickly bring government spending drastically down and into alignment with current shrinking tax revenues. The chief economic objections to deficit spending are two-fold: When the federal government prints money to purchase goods and services, it puts upward pressure on prices, potentially triggering rounds of inflation that reduce the value of the dollar. “Too much money chasing too few goods.” The second is that the government, in borrowing the money, competes with private businesses, squeezing out productive private investment and driving up interest rates. That slows the growth of the economy. In evaluating these objections as current threats to the economy, simply ask yourself whether there is currently too much money chasing too few goods or, in fact, the opposite: Consumers not willing to buy what businesses are producing? Also ask yourself: Are interest rates rising? Is it government borrowing that is keeping private business firms from investing? Or is it that businesses are not investing because consumers are not buying and because banks and other financial institutions are not 1 lending to businesses because they still have toxic assets on their books from the speculative excesses of that past that makes them fear for their solvency? Inflation as measured by the consumer price index was actually negative, that is, prices actually fell, from 2008 to 2009, for the first time in over a half a century. So far this year, prices have risen by less than one percent, far below the 3 to 4 percent annual increase in prices that have characterized inflation for the last 30 years. The fear of most economists and bankers is deflation and depression, not inflation. Of course interest rates also are not being driven up by federal deficits: Short term interest rates are near zero and longer term interest rates are at low levels not seen for more than half a century. Clearly the current federal deficits are neither driving up prices nor driving up interest rates. There is little likelihood that anything of that sort will happen until the millions of unemployed Americans are put to work along with the rest of the productive capacity of our economy that is also sitting idle. Large federal deficits are economically corrosive when the economy is expanding, when the nation’s private productive capacity is approaching its limits, and the nation’s workforce is nearly fully employed. Then those deficits can cause accelerating inflation that wreaks havoc on all of us and drive interest rates ever higher, squeezing out the investment that is needed to allow the economy to continue to expand. The deficits run by Republican Administrations even while the economy was expanding briskly could be faulted on these grounds and the surplus the Clinton administration generated at the end of the economic boom of the late 1990s could be praised as the appropriate fiscal policy for boom times. But to slash government 2 spending at the same time demand destruction has swept the private economy would be to amplify a negative economic feed-back loop. Our dominant economic problem right now and for the foreseeable future is high unemployment, reduced worker earnings, economic insecurity, and the accompanying inability of households to support the nation’s factories and businesses. That, of course, discourages businesses from rehiring and banks from lending. And so we sit with the economy largely stalled. The economy is slowly expanding but not at a rate that is putting people back to work or, even, absorbing the new entrants into the workforce. That is what we need to be focused on. Much of the current federal deficit is not tied to out-of-control federal spending but to declines in federal tax revenues as household incomes and business profits have tumbled downward while demands for government services to support those out of work and plunged into poverty have increased. If we cannot recreate the demand that puts people back to work at decent wages, we are unlikely to be able to do anything serious about the deficit. That is why the current focus on the deficit rather than on unemployment is economically perverse. Cut-backs and lay-offs by state and local governments who cannot run deficits have already offset a substantial part of federal stimulus spending and those state and local governments will continue to do so as they wrestle with falling tax revenues. For the federal government to join the deficit hysteria and, in the name of “austerity,” layoff hundreds of thousands of its own workers while slashing spending and forcing the layoff of even more people in private businesses, schools, and other non-federal government operations will just add to the downward economic spiral. 3 A substantial portion of our work force is out of work not because of the federal deficit. Rather, we have federal, as well as state and local, government deficits, because people are out of work, families are hurting, and the demand for the goods and services our businesses stand ready to produce has disappeared. We have got to stay focused on job creation and not get lured off into tilting at the latest ideological windmills. 4