Anybody who has been lending money to
the US
federal government by buying T-Bills and
its other debt instruments received a
brutal one-two punch last week. It was
hopefully a sobering experience, causing
them to question why they would want to
hold any
US
government paper.
The
Washington Post landed the first punch
with the following report on March 6th.
“WASHINGTON -- Treasury Secretary John
Snow notified Congress on Monday that
the administration has now taken “all
prudent and legal actions,” including
tapping certain government retirement
funds, to keep from hitting the $8.2
trillion national debt limit…Treasury
officials, briefing congressional aides
last week, said that the government will
run out of maneuvering room to keep from
exceeding the current limit sometime
during the week of March 20.”
The
second punch was delivered a couple of
days later by this Dow Jones Newswires
dispatch: “WASHINGTON (Dow Jones) -- The
U.S.
government ran a monthly budget deficit
of $119.20 billion in February, an
all-time monthly record that was still
slightly less than forecast, according
to a Treasury report Friday. The
February federal government deficit was
5% greater than a year earlier,
according to the Treasury Department's
monthly budget statement.”
These two reports make clear the dire
financial straits the federal government
is facing, but its financial position is
even worse than it appears. The $8.2
trillion debt limit -- that has proven
inadequate to meet the federal
government’s borrowing needs -- covers
only its direct liabilities. In other
words, this $8.2 trillion is the total
amount of dollars owed to all the
holders of US government debt
instruments. Excluded from this total
debt are all of the federal government’s
other liabilities, which total another
$38 trillion. In “The 2005 Financial
Report of the United States Government”,
US Comptroller General David Walker
reported that “the federal government’s
fiscal exposures now total more than $46
trillion, up from $20 trillion in 2000.”
Yes,
it’s insane. But it’s even more insane
that people buy the
US
government’s T-Bonds and T-Bills
thinking that they are a safe, low-risk
investment. Maybe they used to be that,
but things change. US government debt
instruments are no longer a safe place
to park your dollars. To substantiate
this assertion, here are some shocking
facts to mull over.
1)
REVENUE -- Federal revenue peaked at
$2.03 trillion in 2000, and then
declined for three years, bottoming in
2003 at $1.78 trillion. That’s never
happened before. Revenue typically
declines during a recession, but the
most it has ever declined before was two
years in a row, during the severe
recession of 1958 and 1959. Revenue has
rebounded the last two years and reached
$2.15 trillion in 2005, but in constant
2000-dollars (i.e., adjusted for
inflation), revenue remains 6.3% below
that received in 2000.
2)
EXPENDITURES -- While the federal
government’s revenue has been
constrained, not so with expenditures,
which have continued to soar. They were
$2.47 trillion in 2005, an alarming
38.2% above the federal government’s
expenditures in 2000. Expenditures
soared even in constant 2000-dollars,
scoring a shocking 21.8% increase over
the five years from 2000 to 2005.
3)
RELIANCE UPON DEBT -- As a consequence
of constrained revenue and uncontrolled
spending, the federal government has
come to increasingly rely upon debt in
order to obtain the dollars it spends
with gay abandon. In 2000, 1.1% of the
federal government’s cash flow (revenue
plus the annual increase in debt) came
from new debt. This reliance on debt
grew to 20.4% in 2005. In other words,
for every $100 spent by the federal
government in 2005, $20.40 came from
borrowed money, compared to only $1.10
in 2000.
4)
INTEREST RATES -- Of all the major
expenditure categories of the federal
government, only one declined from 2000
to 2005 -- interest expense. It paid
$361.9 billion in interest in 2000, and
its interest expense burden fell to
$352.3 billion in 2005. During this
period, the federal debt climbed 40.5%
from $5.63 trillion to $7.91 trillion.
So given this increase in debt, it is
obvious that the federal government’s
interest expense burden declined for
only one reason -- interest rates fell.
In fact, the average interest rate paid
by the federal government on its debt in
2000 was 6.4%; it was only 4.6% in both
2004 and 2005.
5)
INTEREST EXPENSE BURDEN -- During the
1990’s, 24.0% of the federal
government’s revenue on average was used
to pay interest on its debt. During the
Bush administration that burden has
declined to only 17.5% on average. The
reason is that the 5.2% average interest
rate paid by the federal government
during the Bush administration so far is
significantly less than the 7.2% rate it
paid on average in the 1990’s. It is
clear that the lower interest rates
engineered by the Federal Reserve after
the 2000 stock market peak have
favorably impacted the federal
government’s budget. Lower interest
rates reduced its interest expense
burden, thereby making the deficits
incurred so far during the Bush
administration much smaller than they
would have been if higher interest rates
prevailed.
The
above facts are indeed shocking as they
clearly highlight that both the runaway
growth in federal spending during the
Bush administration and the resulting
deterioration in the financial position
of the federal government have been
cloaked and little noticed because
interest rates have been falling in
recent years. So the above facts
therefore make the immediate future
frightening because as we all know, the
Federal Reserve has been raising
interest rates.
What
will happen to the federal government’s
financial condition now that the Federal
Reserve is raising rates in order to try
suppressing the growing inflationary
pressures in the economy? The federal
government faces a potentially toxic mix
of constrained revenue, soaring
expenditures, ballooning debt and rising
interest rates.
The
federal government desperately needs
strong economic activity in order to
generate the highest possible tax
revenue to decrease its reliance on
debt. But rising interest rates work
against this objective. Rising interest
rates dampen economic activity. We have
already seen what has happened to the
housing market since the Federal Reserve
began raising interest rates.
In
addition to adversely impacting revenue,
rising interest rates also have an
unfavorable impact on expenditures.
This impact is purely mathematical. A
6% average interest rate on $8.2
trillion of debt results in a higher
interest expense burden than a 4.6%
rate.
Thus, higher interest rates restrain tax
revenue while increasing the level of
expenditures. Together these factors
worsen the budget deficit, which then
causes the federal government to borrow
even more money. The resulting higher
level of debt leads to a greater
interest expense burden, further
worsening the deficit. Consequently,
the federal government is rapidly moving
to the point where its borrowing becomes
an increasingly important source of the
dollars that it needs to meet its
interest expense obligations.
It
is clear that these circumstances create
a vicious circle where the federal
government borrows money to obtain the
dollars needed to meet its debt
obligations. This condition is not
sustainable, and it will end in one of
two alternatives -- either the dollar is
saved or it isn’t. If the vicious
circle is not addressed and corrected,
it will turn into a death spiral in
which the dollar is destroyed.
To
explain this point, the federal
government will never default on its
debt. With the ever-helping hand of the
Federal Reserve and the banking system,
the federal government will always come
up with the dollars it needs to meet its
interest expense and other debt
obligations. But if the vicious circle
described above is not addressed, the
federal government will repay its debt
obligations with dollars that are worth
less and less until they become
worthless when the death spiral occurs.
The
vicious circle does two things. First,
it increases the supply of dollars by
creating ‘out of thin air’ the dollars
needed by the federal government to meet
its debt obligations. The second point
is less obvious but just as pernicious.
The vicious circle lessens the demand
for the dollar as people over time come
to understand the ruinous, underlying
dynamics of what’s happening to the
currency. Higher supply and lower
demand mean only one thing -- the
purchasing power of the dollar is being
inflated away.
These circumstances are not new. They
are experienced by every fiat currency
sooner or later when the discipline of
the gold standard is removed. The
discipline of the gold standard is
needed to constrain government
spending. In the absence of that
discipline, a fiat currency inevitably
reaches the vicious circle. In fact,
it’s even happened before with the
dollar.
The
dollar was in a vicious circle during
the waning years of the Carter
administration. Paul Volcker was
appointed Federal Reserve chairman to
break the vicious circle, and he did it
by raising interest rates. He kept
raising interest rates until real rates
(nominal interest rates less the
inflation rate) soared to greater than
6%, historically a phenomenally high
rate. It was not surprising therefore
that the demand for the dollar started
rising, thereby breaking the vicious
circle and saving the dollar from a
death spiral. But Mr. Volcker had an
advantage not available today to Mr.
Bernanke.
Back
then the federal debt was not the burden
it is today. Recall that the
US was
the largest creditor nation in the world
back then. The total level of dollar
debt was not only much less, but
manageable in the environment of rapidly
rising interest rates and the high real
interest rates ushered in by Mr. Volcker.
Today the
US is
the world’s largest debtor. The
US
savings rate is negative. American home
owners have consumed most of the equity
in their houses. In short, the federal
government and many consumers are
borrowing just to try keeping their head
above water. What’s worse, there is all
the uncertainty arising from trillions
of dollars of outstanding financial
derivatives, essentially none of which
existed during Mr. Volcker’s era.
In
short, Mr. Bernanke cannot raise
interest rates the way Volcker did,
which I believe is well understood by
both Mr. Bernanke and Mr. Greenspan.
After all, look at what happened during
the last year of so of Mr. Greenspan’s
tenure at the Fed. He raised interest
rates, but throughout this period, real
interest rates remained close to zero
and at times were negative, which is a
condition that creates a highly
inflationary framework for the dollar.
In other words, there was a lot of
jawboning from Mr. Greenspan to save the
dollar from inflation by raising
interest rates, but he did not even come
close to following in the footsteps of
Mr. Volcker. Mr. Bernanke won’t
either.
Today’s monetary system is not only
broken, it’s completely crazy. For this
reason I found the following quote in
the current issue of Barron’s to be of
interest. It’s by Richard Daughty, from
the March 8th issue of his newsletter,
The Mogambo Guru (9241
54th St. N.,
Pinellas Park,
Fla. 33782):
“What a scam! The week [before last],
the Fed snaps its fingers and creates
$2.2 billion, and then uses it to buy
$2.2 billion in government debt! What in
the hell can you do but laugh at the
sheer audacity! Somehow, a government
creating more and more money and
spending it is not, for the first time
in history, going to turn out to be a
bad thing? And especially one where the
money is just paper and computer blips
that they can create on a whim? Of
course, I sigh wearily as I note that
the banks themselves are in on the scam,
and they bought up another $13 billion
in government debt [the week before
last]. Foreign central banks continue to
soak up government debt, and they
swallowed another $7.6 billion [that]
week, too. The government sells debt to
get money to spend on its deficits, and
the bank creates the money to buy the
debt. Debt and money supply both expand,
and it expands to create a bigger and
more expensive government! And higher
prices. This is economic suicide!”
Indeed, it truly is “economic suicide”,
but it’s even worse than that. It’s
also monetary homicide. The dollar as
we know it is being killed, poisoned by
debt from the hand of the federal
government with its accomplices in the
Federal Reserve and the banking system.
So far it’s been a slow death, with few
people watching, but that’s about to
change. With the horrific new amounts
of debt being injected into the dollar’s
weary remains, its death is not far off.
James Turk writes The Freemarket Gold &
Money Report. He is also the Founder &
Chairman of GoldMoney.com.