Exchequer

NRO’s eye on debt and deficits . . . by Kevin D. Williamson.

This Is Not the Tax Cut You’re Looking For


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Number of responsible people in the U.S. House of Representatives today: five. The Committee to Reinflate the Bubble is in the house!

With the deadline looming, the House passed 409-5 a bill to give homebuyers an extra three months to take advantage of a federal tax credit. 

Homebuyers who qualified for the credit would have until September 30 — instead of June 30 — to close on their purchases. The tax credit, which required buyers to sign a contract on a home by April 30, provides homebuyers with a tax write-off of as much as $8,000.

The legislation is fully offset. 

Well, hooray for the offsets. They are wonderful and all, but the real problem here is that Washington is acting in a coordinated fashion—409-5!—to repeat the inflationary housing-price policies that kicked off the financial crisis and got us into our present economic straits. Brilliant thinking, geniuses. How about running with some scissors while you’re at it?

As MC Hayek put it, “The place you should study isn’t the bust / It’s the boom that should make you feel leery, that’s the thrust / Of my theory.” The housing boom was the problem, not the fact that it couldn’t last forever. Artificially high housing prices, like any other artificially high price, will come back down, and they will tear a nice wide path of destruction through the economy as they do so. Artificially high housing prices also produce a phony “wealth effect,” encouraging private households to borrow and consume beyond their means, i.e., to act like the government. Washington’s inflation of housing prices is, basically, the root of all evil. So, knock it off, Congress.

The Rahn Curve


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An interesting video, and an interesting question: At what point does government spending start to hinder economic performance?

When I first saw this, I thought  it said “Rahm Curve” — which would be something else entirely.

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Real Tax Cuts, Real Spending Cuts


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Republicans have rotten luck when it comes to timing. Think about the miracle of the “Clinton economy” — Slick Willy took credit for a recovery that was under way well before he was elected and then evaded blame for a recession that began in the final months of his presidency, while two different Republicans, both named Bush, caught absolute hell.

In another case of bad timing, it’s a little bit unfortunate that when the Republicans finally summoned the testicular fortitude to start making a ruckus about spending, they ended up with an extension of unemployment benefits as the nearest issue at hand. For spending hawks, unemployment benefits probably aren’t the highest-value hill to die on. In fact, unemployment benefits are one of the better social safety-net programs we have in the United States. They’re not terribly expensive, in real terms; they reward work; and they have the happy effect of encouraging a dynamic labor market and supporting risk-takers who seek better lives in new jobs. Think about how much harder it would be for a scrappy, underfunded startup to attract good talent from well-established competitors if those workers didn’t know they had unemployment benefits as an emergency backup. Granted, our unemployment-benefit system is not especially well-run and could stand to be improved in a dozen ways — but, compared to Medicaid, student loans, farm subsidies, or a thousand other federal welfare programs, unemployment benefits are a pretty solid deal. (Though not as solid as they’d be if they were a privately run tax-free hybrid insurance/annuity that you begin paying into from your first job and can roll over into your retirement if you don’t tap into it before then. Feel free to pick that idea up and run with it, John Boehner. There’s more where that came from.)

Predictably, the Democrats are howling that the Republicans hate unemployed people and don’t really care about the deficit, that’s it’s all just a political charade. Of course it’s a political charade — but just a political charade? The Democrats’ go-to spokesman, Anonymous Aide, is challenging the GOP to show the same puritanical budgetary resolve when it comes to re-upping the Bush tax cuts, telling The Hill: “I will be curious to see if their newfound fiscal religion that everything must be paid for is something they stick to as long as debt and deficits are a problem. Or is [this] just an election-eve conversion [that] will be dropped as soon as convenient?” (Shame on The Hill, incidentally: Nothing in this cheap, substance-free quotation rises to the level of justifying anonymity. Seriously: Democratic aide talks smack about Republicans and he’s an anonymous source? Rent some self-respect.)

Embedded in Anonymous Aide’s line of attack is a familiar assumption, an article of faith, really, for Democrats: Tax Cuts = Spending. If what we really care about is the bottom line, the argument goes, then isn’t cutting revenue functionally the same thing as increasing spending? It is tempting to dismiss this as a high-school debaters’ trick, a flimsy and facile bit of see-through rhetoric. But never underestimate the Left’s ability to misunderstand (or simply ignore) conservative thinking. Of course conservatives care about something other than the bottom line: Conservatives want both fiscal responsibility and a state that is limited in size and scope, so as to preserve the private sphere of life and citizens’ individual liberties.

Liberals kinda-sorta want the same thing, but you’ll rarely get them to admit it. One of the head-clutchingest things ever written about American politics is this gem, from Jonathan Chait of The New Republic: “If you have no particular a priori preference about the size of government and care only about tangible outcomes, then liberalism’s aversion to dogma makes it superior as a practical governing philosophy.” Now, wipe that incredulous smirk off your face — liberalism’s aversion to dogma, indeed — and consider what it would mean to have “no a priori preference about the size of government.” Surely even the open-minded, dogma-shunning liberals over at The New Republic have an a priori preference that the size of government not equal 100 percent of GDP, or 500 percent of GDP. I’m pretty sure the non-ideologues in the sovereign-debt markets have a robust a priori preference that U.S. government spending not exceed GDP. Arguments over the size and reach of government are partly moral and ideological, but they are not exclusively moral and ideological. Reality intervenes. And reality is the friend of conservatism.

If congressional Republicans are going to argue for a balanced budget (or a less-unbalanced budget) and tax cuts, they are going to have to make — once again, whipping it up from scratch — the case for a limited central government. Americans are fairly receptive to that argument at the moment, but not as eager as some of my fellow conservatives would like to believe: Cut Social Security checks by 20 percent and that limited-government tea-party mob will be the one that comes around to tar and feather your sorry congressional hide. But the case can be made.

And while making the case, Republicans in Congress are going to have to make something else: a big list of things they are actually willing to cut. Otherwise, they will be refusing to recognize the reality in which they should be grounded, and they’ll be confirming Anonymous Aide’s cynical worldview. Instead, Republicans would do well to beat the Democrats at their own game: Offer Nancy Pelosi the extension of unemployment benefits — so long as she produces dollar-for-dollar cuts elsewhere in the budget. And then fight to extend the Bush tax cuts — with dollar-for-dollar spending cuts to match. Steny Hoyer’s out there saying that Democrats are going to be left with no choice but to raise taxes on the middle class, Obama’s campaign promise be damned. No choice? Republicans should give him some options.

– Kevin D. Williamson is deputy managing editor of National Review.

Tags: Balanced Budget , Taxes

Hint: It’s Not China


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What does the chairman of the Joint Chiefs think the biggest national-security threat facing us is? Surprise.

Determined . . . To Do Nothing


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Would you pay $11 million for $10 million worth of junky Greek bonds? Yes, you would: The cost of insuring a $10 million purchase of Greek government bonds (official junk!) for five years is now more than $1 million.

Apparently, the markets are paying attention to today’s debt conference, organized by Bloomberg. Petros Christodoulou, head of the Greek public-debt agency, boasts that his country now enjoys a certain “luxury” when it comes to restructuring  its debt, reports Business Week: “The package we received gives us the luxury not to think about it at this stage,” Christodoulou said at ‘The Sovereign Debt Briefing’ in London hosted by Bloomberg Link, referring to potential future debt sales. “No one at the moment is looking at a restructuring in Greece, no one in Greece, no one outside Greece.”

And the Europeans stand firmly behind him: “You’ll be surprised how determined the European politicians are,” he said. Determined to do nothing.

Can-Kicking toward the Double Dip


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The Federal Reserve made no move to tighten up the loosey-goosey money supply today, keeping the rate at 0.0-0.25 percent. Fed-watchers don’t expect any tightening until the second half of 2011. That’s a lot of cheap money for a long, long time.

But the Fed may have its eye on some other rough news today: Housing is nearly back in meltdown mode. New home sales dropped nearly 33 percent in the new report, down to an annualized rate of 300,000 – the lowest number on record since Commerce starting tracking the figure in the early 1960s. Housing is headed for a double dip; is the rest of the economy?

Uncle Sam has done everything in his power to keep the housing market mobile, from endless support for Fannie and Freddie to that silly $8,000 first-time buyers’ tax credit, which only served to front-load some marginal sales, producing a spike in sales that only makes the fall-off look that much more steep. Housing still has a good long ways to fall before prices get back to their historic trendline. Sir John Templeton, predicting the housing crash back in 2000, offered this advice: “After home prices go down to one-tenth of the highest price homeowners paid, then buy.”

Problem is, Uncle Sam already bought, and the Fed has a lot of mortgage-backed stuff on the balance sheet. Investors have always wondered which way the government will go, but now the government is an investor, and a big one. We’d probably be better off if Washington would just let housing hit bottom, but you can be sure that the Obama administration will go red in tooth and claw fighting to keep whatever’s left of the real-estate bubble inflated, borrowing our way out of stagnation. Where have I heard that idea before?

Tags: Housing , Monetary Policy

Triffin’s Endgame


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We know the dollar is going to depreciate, so we hate you guys, but there is nothing much we can do.” – Luo Ping, director general, China Banking Regulatory Commission

“Triffin’s Paradox,” the subject of a recent paper from the Council on Foreign Relations, holds that the dollar’s role as the world’s reserve currency means that the United States has to run large deficits in order to supply the world with the currency it demands. The dilemma is that this both weakens the dollar in the long run and makes the United States vulnerable to a sudden dump-the-dollar mood in the global markets, meaning that we’re at risk for a huge spike in the interest rates on the borrowing that finances that big deficit. Put simply: The dollar is so safe it’s dangerous. I like to think that this paradox explains the customary uncomfortable look on Hu Jintao’s face:

“Where my money at?”

The CFR paper describes the situation thus:

Thomas Laubach showed that for each percentage point rise in the projected deficit-to-GDP ratio, longer term interest rates increase by about twenty-five basis points (or 0.25 percent); alternatively, each percentage point rise in the public debt-to-GDP ratio increases long rates by three to four basis points. Combining deficit (or debt) projections with the Laubach analysis, one might expect the fiscal situation to lead to a full percentage point (or even much greater) increase in long rates.

The second domestic factor exerting upward pressure on long rates is that demand from one source—the Federal Reserve—is likely to be scaled back. In 2009, the Fed purchased $300 billion in long-dated treasuries. To the extent this put downward pressure on rates, the cessation of the Fed’s credit-easing policy might be expected to lead to higher long rates.

A third factor on the radar screen is inflation expectations. An increase in inflation expectations can have a one-for-one impact on long-term nominal interest rates. Longer-term inflation expectations have been on a post-crisis upward march, putting yet more upward pressure on long rates.

But interest rates haven’t gone up. The reason for that is, in all likelihood, the eurozone’s sovereign-debt crisis. Everything is stacked against Treasuries and the dollar, but the European situation is so spooky that investors are seeking haven in the United States. For now.

About half of U.S. government bonds (and about a fifth of U.S. corporate bonds) are held by central banks and investors overseas. The CFR paper argues that in 2009 we saw the beginning of what would have been a full-on run on Treasuries, prevented only by the shenanigans of our friends in Athens: “By the autumn of 2009 the scene was set for a wholesale abandonment of U.S. debt markets. But then the eurozone’s crisis accelerated. Spreads between Greek and German long rates skyrocketed, and net bond flows into the euro area fell sharply.”

CFR’s worry is this: Because it is precisely during moments of global crisis that capital tends to pour into the United States, Washington always has ample resources on hand to conduct a robust foreign policy during those emergencies. If we are on the verge of Triffin’s end game and the global capital spigot starts to dry up, the United States government is going to have a hard time financing all of the things it likes to finance.

Unfortunately, we’ve been financing a lot of consumption as opposed to making real capital investments, and our private savings rate is currently about 3.5 percent (and that’s high for us!) so there’s not a whole lot to fall back on.

Even with interest rates very low, interest payments on the national debt are expected to be $248,200,649,741.75 during fiscal year 2010. If rates spiked up to, say, 6 percent, we’d be paying nearly $1 trillion a year ($840 billion) in interest payments alone. If rates rose much above that, we’d be making annual interest payments equal to the ten-year estimated cost of Obamacare — every stinkin’ year.

“That’ll never happen,” some will say. Okay: How much of your own money are you willing to bet on that proposition? That’s the question they’re asking themselves in Beijing at the moment, and there’s no reason to think that their answer this year is going to be the same as their answer in 2009.

Where’s My Bailout?


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“Where’s My Bailout?” Right after the great Rick Santelli rant, that slogan had its day in the sun. It was a T-shirt, a bumper sticker, a protest sign, and a really bad song. Where’s your bailout, Joe Average? Funny you should ask.

The public debt of the United States is a terrifying hogzilla of a beast, but the household-debt situation is a big fat ugly ogre, too. The household debt of the United States went from about 30-odd percent of GDP in the post-war era, climbed up to about 50 percent by the 1960s, and held steady until the late 1980s — at which point, the graph looks like a rocket liftoff. U.S. household debt was 100 percent of GDP by 2007, a level it had not hit since 1929, a coincidence that makes financial types faint in their Froot Loops. There’s been some superficially good news on that front: Just like the Wall Street bankers, Americans huddled around the ol’ kitchen table are doing a little financial deleveraging, paring down their mortgages and credit-card debts. Yay, Americans! The down side is that they’re mostly doing it through defaulting on their mortgages and credit cards, rather than paying them off. Boo, Americans!

Here’s the deal: Since 2008, Americans have reduced their total household debt by $372 billion. Banks have written off about $210 billion in defaulted mortgages, delinquent credit-card debt, and other uncollectable loans. But, as the Wall Street Journal points out, that $210 billion doesn’t tell the whole story: Just like mortgages, a lot of credit-card loans and other forms of consumer debt are securitized and sold to investors, and those losses wouldn’t show up on the banks’ write-offs. The Journal’s conservative estimate is that the real losses from charge-offs are about twice what the banks themselves have reported, a total of $420 billion or so. And it could be a lot more than that.

So how can we have $420 billion in household debt written off but only see a $372 billion reduction in household debt? Apparently, somebody’s still burning up the MasterCard. The only way to account for the numbers is that Americans are still borrowing at a pretty steady clip, a fact that is obscured in the data by the fact that so many of them are defaulting on their mortgages and credit cards.

Translation: Yikes.

The credit-card scene is getting worse. Earlier this month, Fitch reported that the charge-off rate for credit cards (which is to say, the portion of delinquent loans they abandon as unrecoverable) climbed to 11.1 percent from 10.9 percent in April. It’s been above 10 percent for more than a year now. The credit-card companies are pretty robust, and their business models assume a pretty high rate of default, one that is much more realistic than, say, what the mortgage banks assumed. (It would almost have to be, no?) But still, there’s about $1 trillion in credit-card debt in the United States, much of it packaged into securities, much as mortgages have been. Nobody wants to see another bond-market meltdown. And that’s why you’re getting a bailout in the form of an interest-rate subsidy.

In spite of the build-up of household debt, Americans are spending less of their paychecks on the mortgage and credit-card bills, currently laying out 12.46 percent of income, down from 13.96 percent in 2007. How is that possible? In short, it’s because the Federal Reserve is keeping interest rates at basically zero, which eases the pressure on mortgages, credit-card interest, and other consumer-debt burdens. That’s your bailout, Mr. American Consumer: Little old ladies who put their money into Treasuries and good old-fashioned savings accounts are getting a return of +/- squat, approximately, partly to subsidize the wicked ways of spendthrift mortgage borrowers and credit-card junkies. Borrowers get bailed out, savers get hosed. It won’t last. In spite of the rather expansive fiscal attitude of the Obama administration and its allies in Congress, there hasn’t been much sign of consumer-price inflation, so the Fed is under pressure to keep interest rates at approximately zilch. But those rates aren’t going to stay low forever — nor should they.

The Fed’s cheap-money policy during the real-estate-boom years was a major contributor to the bubble, and repeating that policy now simply lays the groundwork for another bubble. But when interest rates start going up, it’s reasonable to assume that defaults on mortgages and credit cards are going to go up, too. Those defaults are going to go careering through the markets like Artie Lange in a co-starring role with Jack Daniels — which is to say, it’s going to be a lot of fun to watch for those who don’t get run over. Until then, enjoy your cheap money.

Tags: Bailouts , Household Debt

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