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A History of U.S. Debt Limits George J. Hall Thomas J. Sargent Brandeis University New York University November 2015 Debt Design and Management Constitution assigns Congress authority to issue and manage debt. ◮ Article 1 The Congress shall have Power To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States; ... To borrow money on the credit of the United States; ◮ Today Congress has delegated this authority almost entirely to the Treasury. ◮ It has retained one tool – a debt ceiling. Debt Limit a Sideshow? In my brief time in Washington, I’ve found the worst myth to be the belief that the debt ceiling imposes any control on government spending. The plain truth is that the debt limit does not affect the deficits or surpluses; Assistant Secretary for Financial Markets, U.S. Treasury, Brian C. Roseboro, 2003 Questions 1. Has the debt limit usually increased over time? 2. Has the debt limit been an upper bound on total debt to be anticipated over medium to long horizons during peace? 3. Has the debt limit actually constrained anyone? 4. Why did Congress delegate security design and management of the debt to the Treasury during the 1920s and 30s? 5. Has the debt limit been unambiguous in terms of units of account? 6. How is the debt limit measured? Is it “marked to market” or is it in terms of “face value”? Limit or Limits? ◮ Congress has imposed an aggregate limit only since 1939 ◮ Before WWI, Congress imposed limits on each bond ◮ We construct an implied limit before 1939 4000 200 180 3500 160 millions of dollars old millions of nominal dollars ← Civil War 1500 → 1000 nic Pa M ← Accumulating Unpaid Interest → 57 18 of 500 an ← Consolidation of Revolutionary Debt → ar W 20 ic ex 40 0 1775 1785 1795 1805 1815 1825 0 1840 1835 1850 1860 1776-1835 20 50 18 45 trillions of nominal dollars billions of nominal dollars ← Fourth Liberty Loan Act 20 10 1890 1900 1910 14 ← Victory Loan Act 25 15 1880 16 40 30 1870 1840-1917 55 35 l→ na Ca a m na Pa → ar W an → 60 fG so se ha se ha rc ← War of 1812 ← Assumption of State Debts 2000 rc Pu Pu 80 ic er a an si ui 100 2500 m Lo 120 −A i sh an Sp g→ ci n an fin Re 3000 140 ← Third Liberty Loan Act 12 10 8 6 4 ← Second Liberty Loan Act 2 5 ← First Liberty Loan Act 0 1920 1925 1930 0 1935 1917-1939 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 1939-2014 Figure 1: Nominal Federal Debt and the Aggregate Statutory Limit Nominal debt is the dotted line. The statutory limit is the solid line. Prior to 1939, the limit is constructed by summing individual limits on securities. After 1939, the limit is the official debt ceiling. 4 U.S. Treasury Debt Prior to World War I Between 1776 and 1916 Congress authorized and designed 200 securities ◮ maturity ◮ coupon rate ◮ call and exchange features ◮ projects on which proceeds could be spent No standardization limited liquidity and thinned markets Federal Debt by Type Loan 250 specie value (in millions of dollars) 200 ← Continental Dollars 150 100 ← ns oa rL he Ot 3 per cent State Debts → deferred 6 per cent 50 Domestic Principal 6 per cent s p Loan ← Tem Domestic Interest Foreign Loans + Interest 0 1775 1777 1780 1782 1785 1787 1790 1792 1795 1797 1800 1802 1805 Federal Debt by Type Loan 250 specie value (in millions of dollars) 200 150 ← Continental Dollars 100 ← ns oa rL he Ot 3 per cent State Debts → deferred 6 per cent 50 Domestic Principal 6 per cent s p Loan ← Tem Domestic Interest Foreign Loans + Interest 0 1775 1777 1780 1782 1785 1787 1790 1792 1795 1797 1800 1802 1805 Federal Debt by Type of Loan from 1791 to 1830 200 180 ← Aggregate Debt Limit par value in millions of nominal dollars 160 140 120 100 Other Long−term Loans 80 ry → pora Tem 60 ← Unfunded Debt 40 Louisiana Purchase → ← Treasury Notes Act of August 4, 1790 20 Foreign Loans 0 1795 1800 1805 1810 1815 1820 1825 1830 Loan Office Certificates Loan From Farmers−General of France French Loan of Eighteen Million Livres Loan from Spain in 1781 Certificates of Indebtedness Domestic Interest in Arrears French Loan of Ten Million Livres Temporary Loans From Banks Holland Loan of 1782 French Loan of Six Million Livres Holland Loan of 1784 Debt Due Foreign Officers Holland Loan of 1787 Holland Loan of 1788 Temporary Loan of 1789 Holland Loan of 1790 Temporary Loan of 1790 C <= 2 2 < C <= 4 4 < C <= 5 5 < C <= 6 C>6 1780 1790 Six Per Cent Stock of 1790 Defer Six Per Cent Stock of 1790 Three Per Cent Stock of 1790 Holland Loan of March, 1791 Holland Loan of September, 1791 Antwerp Loan of 1791 Holland Loan of December, 1791 Holland Loan of 1792 Subscription Loan of 1791 Temporary Loan of 1792 Temporary Loan From Bank of North America Holland Loan of 1793 Temporary Loan of 1793 Temporary Loan of March, 1794 Holland Loan of 1794 Temporary Loan of June, 1794 Temporary Loan from Bank of New York Temporary Loan of December, 1794 Temporary Loan of February, 1795 Temporary Loan of March, 1795, B. Five and One−Half Per Cent. Stock of 1795 Four and One−Half Per Cent. Stock of 1795 Temporary Loan of March, 1795, C. Temporary Loan of March, 1795, A. Temporary Loan from Bank of New York Six Per Cent. Stock of 1796 Navy Six Per Cent. Stock Temporary Loan of 1798 Eight Per Cent. Loan of 1798 Eight Per Cent. Loan of 1800 Louisiana Six Per Cent. Stock Exchanged Six Per Cent. Stock of 1807 Converted Six Per Cent. Stock of 1807 Six Per Cent. Loan of 1810 Six Per Cent. Loan of 1812 Temporary Loan of 1812 Treasury Notes of 1812 Exchanged Six Per Cent. Stock of 1812 Sixteen Million Loan of 1813 Treasury Notes of 1813 Seven and One−Half Million Loan of 1813 Treasury Notes of March, 1814 Ten Million Loan of 1814 Six Million Loan of 1814 Undesignated Loan of 1814 Temporary Loan of 1814 Treasury Notes of December, 1814 Small Treasury Notes of 1815 Temporary Loan of February 1815 Seven Per Cent. Stock of 1815 Temporary Loan of March, 1815 Six Per Cent. Loan of 1815 Mississippi Stock Treasury Notes of 1815 Treasury Note Stock of 1815 Five Per Cent. Loan of 1816 Five Per Cent. Loan of 1820 Six Per Cent. Loan of 1820 Five Per Cent. Loan of 1821 Exchanged 5 % Stock of 1822 4.5 % Loan of 1824 Exchanged 4.5 % Stock of 1824 4.5 % Loan of 1824 Exchanged 4.5 % Stock of 1825 Treasury Notes Prior to 1846 1800 1810 1820 1830 1840 Figure 24: Debt Issues Outstanding: 1775 to 1840 40 Treasury Notes Prior to 1846 Loan of 1841 Loan of 1842 Loan of 1843 Treasury Notes of 1846 Mexican Indemnity Stock Loan of 1846 Treasury Notes of 1847 Loan of 1847 Bounty Land Script Loan of 1848 Texas Indemnity Stock Texas Debt Treasury Notes of 1857 Loan of 1858 Loan of 1860 Treasury Notes of 1860 Loan of February 1861 Treasury Notes of 1861 Oregon War Debt Seven−Thirties of 1861 Old Demand Notes Loan of July and August 1861 Temporary Loan Certificates of Indebtedness Five−Twenties of 1862 Legal Tender Notes Fractional Currency Two Year Notes of 1863 One Year Notes of 1863 Loan of 1863 Compound Interest Notes Ten−Forties of 1864 Seven−Thirties of 1864 and 1865 Five−Twenties of June 1864 Navy Pension Fund Five−Twenties of 1865 Coin Certificates Five−Twenties of March 1864 Consols of 1865 Consols of 1867 Three Percent Certificates Consols of 1868 Certificates of Indebtedness of 1870 Five Percent Loan of 1881 Certificates of Deposit Four and One−Half Percent Loan of 1891 Four Percent Loan of 1907 Silver Certificates Refunding Certificates Funded Loan of 1881 con’t 3.5% (Loan of July and August 1861) Funded Loan of 1881 con’t 3.5% (Loan of 1863) Funded Loan of 1881 con’t 3.5% (Five Percent Loan of 1881) Loan of July 12, 1882 Bonds issued to Pacific Railroad National Bank Notes Treasury Notes of 1890 Funded Loan of 1891, con’t at 2% Loan of 1904 Loan of 1925 Ten−Twenty Loan of 1898 Gold Reserve Fund Consols of 1930 Panama Canal Loan (Series 1906) Certificates of Indebtedness (6/13/1898) Panama Canal Loan (Series 1908) Panama Canal Loan (Series 1911) Postal Savings Bonds (1−15th Series) Conversion Bonds One Year Treasury Notes Certificates of Indebtedness (3/3/1917) Certificates of Indebtedness (4/24/1917) Certificates of Indebtedness (4/24/1917) 1st Liberty Loan of 1917 (3.5%) Certificates of Indebtedness (4/24/1917) Certificates of Indebtedness (4/24/1917) Certificates of Indebtedness (9/24/1917) 2nd Liberty Loan of 1917 (4%) War Savings and Thrift Stamps Certificates of Indebtedness (9/24/1917) 3rd Liberty Loan Certificates of Indebtedness (9/24/1917) 4th Liberty Loan 1st Liberty Loan Converted to 4% 1st Liberty Loan Converted to 4.25% 2nd Liberty Loan Converted to 4.25% C <= 2 2 < C <= 4 4 < C <= 5 5 < C <= 6 C>6 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 Figure 25: Debt Issues Outstanding: 1840 to 1918 41 Sources of Statutory Debt limits ◮ Before World War I, Congress imposed limits on individual securities ◮ For most securities, Congress limited quantities to be issued ◮ ◮ ◮ Limits were not on quantities outstanding After a security was redeemed, it could not be re-issued We construct implied limits on aggregate limit by keeping track of unexpired limits on each individual security Details For each security and date, keep track of ◮ amount originally authorized ◮ amount issued up to now ◮ amount redeemed Deduce implied limit on additional amounts that can still be issued Example: The Temporary Loan of 1793 0.9 0.9 0.8 ed a es u s l is statutory balance tota millions of dollars 0.6 ← cumulative sum of issues 0.5 0.4 ← quantity outstanding 0.3 0.5 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.1 1793:Q2 1793:Q3 1793:Q4 1794:Q1 1794:Q2 1794:Q3 ← implied debt limit statutory balance 0.4 0.2 0 ↑ 0.7 ↓ 0.6 millions of dollars 0.8 ↑ → oriz uth 0.7 1794:Q4 0 ↓ quantity outstanding → 1793:Q2 1793:Q3 1793:Q4 1794:Q1 1794:Q2 1794:Q3 1794:Q4 Authorization, Issuance Quantity Outstanding and and Quantity Outstanding Implied Limit Treasury Notes of 1812 to 1815: Quantities Outstanding, the Cumulative Sum of Issues, and Authorizations 60 ←M ← Ac ar. 1 t of F eb. 2 4, 18 50 15 a llowe d for 817 all au thori zatio ns re peale reiss ues d millions of dollars 40 ← cumulative sum of issues 30 sum of authorized issues→ ← Act of February 24, 1815, small notes 20 ← Act of February 24, 1815, large notes Act of December 26, 1814 10 ← s issue 15, re 4, 18 eb. 2 fF Act o Act of March 4, 1814 Act of June 30, 1812 0 1813 1814 Act of February 25, 1813 1815 1816 1817 1818 1819 Project Finance vs. General Finance ◮ Project finance: before WWI ◮ Undifferentiated finance: after 1917 Before WWI: Project Finance 140 3000 120 2500 80 millions of nominal dollars millions of nominal dollars 100 Civil 60 Military 2000 Gold & Silver Certificates 1500 1000 Buy Gold/Silver 40 Military 500 Refinanced Debt 20 Refinance Debt Civ il → 0 1780 1790 1800 1810 1776-1840 1820 1830 0 1840 1850 Non−Interest Bearing Notes 1860 1870 1880 1890 1840 - 1915 Debt Decomposed by Statutory Purpose 1900 1910 Second Liberty Bond Act The Second Liberty Bond Act of 1917 granted the Secretary of the Treasury to borrow from time to time, on the credit of the United States for the purposes of this Act, and to meet expenditures authorized for the national security and defense and other public purposes authorized by law not to exceed $7,538,945,460 End of Project Finance ◮ Second Liberty Bond Act differed from all previous statues by including the phrase “and other public purposes authorized by law.” ◮ That broad language broke the tight connection between borrowing and spending for specific purposes that had characterized Congress’s policy since 1776. Objects being limited ◮ Limits cast in terms of par values ◮ Time limits? ◮ Units of account? Official accounts versus macroeconomists’ ◮ Issues apply to recent discussions of threat to Fed’s solvency Prices ◮ t qt+j = 1 (1+ρjt )j ◮ t qt+j−1 t−1 qt+j−1 j = (1 + rt−1,t ) is the one-period gross nominal return on a j-period zero coupon bond ◮ j rt−1,t is the net nominal rate of return Quantities ◮ t Gt+j ∼ federal government expenditures ◮ t Tt+j ∼ federal tax revenues ◮ t σt+j ∼ federal surplus Fiscal Policy t t ∞ {{Gt+j , Tt+j }∞ j=0 }t=0 Budget Constraints P.V. of surplus = value of government debt ∞ X j=0 t t qt+j σt+j = ∞ X j=0 t t qt+j st+j Quantities ◮ t ct+j ∼ coupon ◮ t bt+j ∼ par or principal (occasionally a strike price) ◮ t t t st+j ≡ ct+j + bt+j Two measures of government debt U.S. government accounts: nt X t bt+j j=1 Macroeconomics: nt X j=1 t t qt+j st+j = nt X j=1 t t t qt+j (bt+j + ct+j ) Two measures of “interest payments” US government accounts: before 1929: ctt−1 after 1929: 1 t−1 ctt−1 + rt−1,t b1,t Macroeconomics: nt−1 X j=1 j t−1 t−1 st+j−1 rt−1,t qt+j−1 Promised Principal and Coupon Payments 150 promised principal payments promised principal + coupon payments 125 percent of GDP 100 75 50 25 0 1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 Conceptual Differences Pnt t j=1 bt+j ◮ differs from Pnt t t j=1 qt+j (bt+j t ) because + ct+j It neglects the government’s outstanding promises to pay coupons nt X t ct+j ; j=1 and ◮ The book value doesn’t discount future payments of principal t t . bt+j by multiplying them by the market prices qt+j Discrepancies have been positive and negative Ratio of Market Value to Par Value of Debt 120 110 100 100 × market value/par value 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 1775 1800 1825 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 2025 Debt to GDP Ratio, Market and Par Value, 1776-2014 140 market value par value 120 World War II → percent of GDP 100 G.W.Bush/Obama → 80 60 40 ← Reagan ← 1790 Civil War → 20 World War I → ← War of 1812 ← Revolutionary War 0 1775 1800 1825 1850 1875 1900 1925 1950 1975 2000 2025 Debt Limit is on Face Values The debt ceiling is an upper bound on Pnt t t t j=1 qt+j (bt+j + ct+j ) ◮ Pn t j=1 bt+j not on Promises labeled “principal” are recorded as debt and count against the limit ◮ Promises labeled “coupons” or “interest” do not. Government budget constraint nt X j=1 nt−1 t t qt+j st+j = X t t−1 − σtt qt+j−1 st+j−1 j=1 σtt = Ttt − Gtt Government budget constraint nt X nt−1 t t qt+j st+j = j=1 X j=1 nt−1 = X j=1 t qt+j−1 t−1 qt+j−1 ! t−1 t−1 − σtt st+j−1 qt+j−1 nt−1 t−1 t−1 st+j−1 qt+j−1 + X j=1 j t−1 t−1 − σtt st+j−1 rt−1,t qt+j−1 Economic interest on government debt The second term on the right side of the second line measures time t nominal interest payments on the time t − 1 nominal government debt: nt X j=1 |{z} sum over maturities j rt−1,t | {z } net returns t−1 t−1 st+j−1 qt+j−1 {z } | values Interest reported by government 1. Before 1929: ctt−1 2. After 1929: t−1 1 ctt−1 + rt−1,t b1,t t−1 where b1,t is the par value of pure discount one-period treasury bills issued at t − 1. Government Budget Constraint Again nt X nt−1 t t st+j qt+j = j=1 nt−1 X j r j=2 t−1 ct | X 1 t−1 t−1 t−1 − σtt + [ctt−1 + rt−1,t b1,t ]+ st+j−1 qt+j−1 j=2 t−1 t−1 t−1,t qt+j−1 st+j−1 1 t−1 + rt−1,t b1,t {z } official interest t−1 t−1 1 + [(1 − rt−1,t )b1,t + b−1,t ] nt−1 + X j t−1 t−1 rt−1,t qt+j −1 st+j −1 j =2 | {z capital gains } + 1 t−1 t−1 (1 − rt−1,t )b1,t + b−1,t | {z } pay or roll over Two “interest payments” series The nominal one-period holding period return paid by the government debt (in black) Pnt−1 j t−1 t−1 j=1 rt−1,t qt+j−1 st+j−1 Pnt−1 t−1 t−1 j=1 qt+j−1 st+j−1 Official net interest payments as a percentage of the debt (in blue): before 1929 and after 1929: c t−1 Pnt−1t t−1 j=1 bt+j−1 t−1 1 ctt−1 + rt−1,t b1,t . Pnt−1 t−1 j=1 bt+j−1 Nominal Holding Period Return and Official Net Interest Payments as Percent of the Debt, Annual by Fiscal Year 40 35 30 25 percent 20 15 10 5 0 −5 −10 1780 1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 Congressional Control of the Debt Prior to WW-I ◮ Except during the War of 1812 and the Civil War, Congress retained tight control on the debt. ◮ Limits increase and decrease ◮ On multiple occasions, Treasury Secretaries asked for more freedom to manage the debt. They were denied. ◮ Question: Has the debt limit constrained anyone? ◮ Prior to WW-I, Yes. Natural Log of the GDP Deflator 5 ln of GDP price deflator (2009 = ln(100)) 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 1780 1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 Total Debt and the Limit: Nominal, 1776-1835 200 180 160 Lo 120 a an si ui Pu 100 se ha rc → millions of nominal dollars 140 80 ← War of 1812 ← Assumption of State Debts 60 40 ← Accumulating Unpaid Interest ← Consolidation of Revolutionary Debt 20 0 1775 1785 1795 1805 1815 1825 1835 Debt and Debt Limit Divided by the Price Level: 1790-1835 3000 millions of real (2009) dollars 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 1775 1785 1795 1805 1815 1825 1835 Total Debt and the Limit: Nominal, 1840-1916 4000 80 60 3500 40 20 0 1840 1845 1850 1855 1860 m Ca old fG l→ so na se → a ar W ha rc ← Civil War 1500 na n Pa ica er 2000 Pu millions of dollars → 2500 m −A ish an Sp g cin an fin Re 3000 → 1000 Pa of ica ex nic M → → ar 57 W 18 n 500 0 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 Debt and Debt Limit Divided by the Price Level: 1840-1916 55 50 45 billions of real (2009) dollars 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 Total Debt and the Limit: Nominal, 1917-1939 55 May 26, 1938 → 50 45 February 4, 1935 → billions of nominal dollars 40 ← Victory Loan Act 35 ← March 3, 1931 30 ← Fourth Liberty Loan Act 25 20 ← Third Liberty Loan Act 15 10 ← Second Liberty Loan Act 5 ← First Liberty Loan Act 0 1918 1920 1922 1924 1926 1928 1930 1932 1934 1936 1938 Debt and Debt Limit Divided by the Price Level: 1917-1939 700 600 billions of real (2009) dollars 500 400 300 200 100 0 1916 1918 1920 1922 1924 1926 1928 1930 1932 1934 1936 1938 1940 Total Debt and the Limit: Nominal, 1939-2014 20 18 16 trillions of nominal dollars 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Statutory Debt Limit and Debt Subject to it Divided by Price Level 1.6 real debt and limit (trillions of 2009 dollars) 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 US monetary units ◮ 1790-1834: gold/silver gold and silver mint ratio of 15 to 1. Free coinage (sale) of both gold and silver. ◮ 1834-1873: gold/silver mint ratio of 16 to 1. ◮ 1862-1868: green backs inconvertible legal tender. ◮ 1873-1900: free coinage of gold only. Limited silver coinage. ◮ 1792-1900: “coin” means gold or silver. ◮ 1900-1933: free coinage of gold. “Coin” now means gold. ◮ 1933- : Federal Reserve notes. Has the debt limit been unambiguous in terms of units of account? Usually Important exceptions: ◮ War of 1812 ◮ Civil War ◮ Silver agitation of the 1890s? ◮ Gold abandoned in 1933? Units of account graphs, I How much of currency X , if purchased at market prices, would it have taken to purchase the entire stock of debt? (X being gold, silver, greenbacks) Par and Market Value of the Debt By Unit of Account: 1860 - 1885 40 par value market value (lawful money) market value (gold) market value (silver) 35 30 percent of GDP 25 20 15 10 5 0 1860 1862 1865 1867 1870 1872 1875 1877 1880 1882 1885 Par and Market Value of the Debt By Unit of Account: 1885 - 1900 20 18 16 percent of GDP 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1884 par value market value (gold) market value (silver) 1886 1888 1890 1892 1894 1896 1898 1900 1902 Units of account graphs, II How much in gold would the debt have been worth if it had been paid back in silver dollars? Par and Market Value of the Debt By Unit of Account: 1860 - 1885 60 par value market value (lawful money) market value (gold) market value (silver) 50 percent of GDP 40 30 20 10 0 1860 1862 1865 1867 1870 1872 1875 1877 1880 1882 1885 Par and Market Value of the Debt By Unit of Account: 1885 - 1900 20 par value market value (gold) market value (silver) 18 16 percent of GDP 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1884 1886 1888 1890 1892 1894 1896 1898 1900 1902 Have debt limits constrained subsequent authorities? Classic example J.P. Morgan and Grover Cleveland We start with some background ... An Act to Authorize the Purchase of Coin, and for other Purposes ◮ March 17, 1862 the Secretary of the Treasury may purchase coin with any of the bonds or notes of the United States, authorized by law, at such rates and upon such terms as he may deem most advantageous to the public interest; 1870 Refinancing of the Civil War Debt Two quotes from the legislation The Secretary of the Treasury is hereby authorized to issue ... in the aggregate two hundred million dollars, coupon or registered, in such form as he may prescribe ... ◮ placed limits on each of three types of bonds ◮ In 1871, the limit on the 5% bond was increased But nothing in this act, or in any law now in force, shall be construed to authorize any increase whatever of the bonded debt of the United States. ◮ Ultimately issued ◮ ◮ ◮ 5%: $518 million 4.5%: $250 million 4%: $740 million ◮ So about $500 million in unused authority Resumption Act of 1875 Section 3: And to enable the Secretary of the Treasury to prepare and provide for the redemption in this act authorized or required, he is authorized to use any surplus revenues, from time to time, in the Treasury not otherwise appropriated, and to issue, sell, and dispose of, at not less than par, in coin, either of the descriptions of bonds of the United States described in the [ Refunding Act of 1870 ]. J.P. Morgan and the Gold Standard ◮ In 1894-1895, there was a run on U.S. gold reserves ◮ ◮ ◮ U.S. gold reserves fell from $100 million to $60 million Treasury sought Congressional authority to borrow to buy gold ◮ Congress refused ◮ Battle between advocates and opponents of free coinage of silver J.P. Morgan proposed using the 1862 statue that gave the Treasury authority to purchase gold with bonds. ◮ The Cleveland Administration carried out this recommendation ◮ sold 30 year, 4% bonds ◮ current interest rates were 3% The Legality of the 1895 Bond Sales ◮ Did the Adminstration have the authority to sell bonds to buy gold? ◮ ◮ ◮ 1862 Act – can sell bonds for gold 1870 Act – can not increase the bonded debt of the U.S. 1875 Act – can borrow to prepare and provide for the redemption ◮ Cleveland Adminstration issued the debt ◮ argued that bond sales were only for buying gold ◮ not for ordinary expenditures From Project to Aggregated Finance With a tight connection between spending and borrowing ◮ Treasury constrained to issue debt sequentially ◮ Echo effects ◮ ◮ lumpy debt service events ◮ confront future Treasury Secretaries with liquidity and roll-over risks Modest efforts to match security design with investor preferences Debt Service Profiles, 1866 and 1920 8 10 9 7 ← 7−30s of 1864 and 1865 8 ← Victory Liberty Loan 6 ← Fourth Liberty Loan 5 ← 5−20s of 1862 & Loan of 1863 6 percent of GDP percent of GDP 7 5 4 Loan of July−Aug 1861 → ← Third Liberty Loan 4 ← Second Liberty Loan 3 3 ← 5−20s of 1865 & Consols of 1865 2 2 10−40s of 1864 → ←−−−− 5−20s of March & June 1864 ← First Liberty Loan 1 1 0 0 5 10 15 20 maturity (years) 1866 25 30 35 40 0 0 5 10 15 20 maturity (years) 1920 25 30 35 40 Limits on Notes Outstanding: 1917 to 1939 20 on C T es + es → Not icat ertif it Lim 16 billions of nominal dollars ls + −Bil 18 14 Certificates + T−Bills + Notes Outstanding → Lim 12 it o nN Lim 10 ote sO it o nN uts ote sI 8 tan din ssu ed g→ → 6 ← Notes Issued Notes Outstanding → 4 2 0 1917 1920 1922 1925 1927 1930 1932 1935 1937 1940 Limits on Certificates of Indebtedness, Treasury Bills, and Treasury Notes Outstanding: 1917 to 1939 20 it on 16 billions of nominal dollars ls + −Bil 18 es → Not at tific Cer T es + Lim 14 Certificates + T−Bills + Notes Outstanding → Lim it on 12 Cer tific ates 10 → ates 8 it on ls → −Bil +T tific Cer Lim 6 Cer tific ← Certificates Outstanding 4 ates +T −Bil ls → 2 0 1918 1920 1922 1924 1926 1928 1930 1932 1934 1936 1938 1940 Limits on Bond Issuance and Outstanding: 1917 to 1939 30 Limit on Outstanding → Limit on Issues → billions of nominal dollars 25 20 ←B ond 15 s Is sue d Bonds Outstanding → 10 5 0 1918 1920 1922 1924 1926 1928 1930 1932 1934 1936 1938 1940 Post WW-I Evolution of the Debt Ceiling ◮ In 1929, Secretary Mellon wanted to issue $8 billion in new bonds ◮ to refinance existing debt ◮ but threatened to put the Treasury over the limit on issues ◮ He wrote to Congress [I]t is obvious that the orderly and economical management of the public debt requires that the Treasury Department have complete freedom in determining the character of securities to be issued and should not be confronted with any arbitrary limitation which was not intended to apply to these circumstances. ◮ Congress raised the limit on bonds to $25 billion. ◮ By 1939, the Congress moves to an aggregate debt limit Debt Service Profiles, 1946 and 1974 40 18 35 16 14 30 12 percent of GDP percent of GDP 25 20 10 8 15 6 10 4 5 0 2 0 5 10 15 20 maturity (years) 1946 25 30 35 40 0 0 5 10 15 20 maturity (years) 1974 25 30 35 40 Causes and Coincidents ◮ Keynesian economics? ◮ Reagonomics gone awry? Total Debt and the Limit: Nominal, 1939-2014 20 18 16 trillions of nominal dollars 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Statutory Debt Limit and Debt Subject to it Divided by Price Level 1.6 real debt and limit (trillions of 2009 dollars) 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 1940 1945 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 2015 Slides In Reserve 1. Inflation and GDP Growth Rates 2. Details on Computing the Pre-1939 Aggregate Debt Limit 3. Real Debt and Debt Limits Annual Inflation co nt ro l s 25 tio fla s in of 70 n: 1. 44 % ← 10 19 ← en d ← War of 1812 m ea 5 ← annual inflation rate (percent) n ← World War I W W ← Civil War 15 II pr ic e 20 0 −5 ← Great Depression −10 −15 −20 1780 1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 Growth Rate of Real GDP 20 15 annual growth rate (percent) 10 5 0 −5 −10 −15 1780 1800 1820 1840 1860 1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020 Constructing the Pre-1939 Aggregate Limit ◮ b(ℓ)t denotes the par value of security ℓ outstanding at t. ◮ The law of motion b(ℓ)t = b(ℓ)t−1 + i (ℓ)t − r (ℓ)t where ◮ ◮ ◮ i(ℓ)t new issues r (ℓ)t redemptions Often Congress placed constraints on total issues X t i (ℓ)t ≤ i (ℓ)∗ . Constructing the Pre-1939 Aggregate Limit (con’t) ◮ i¯t denote the statutory balance that could be issued. i¯t = i (ℓ)∗ − n X i (ℓ)t−j , j=1 ◮ Implied limit on the quantity outstanding: ¯ t − r˜(ℓ)t . b̄(ℓ)t = b(ℓ)t−1 + i(ℓ) ◮ The aggregate debt limit B̄t : B̄t = Nt X ℓ=1 b̄(ℓ)t .