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Friday, October 03, 2008
Laura Hollis :: Townhall.com Columnist
And Then What?
by Laura Hollis
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Most people can remember when they read something that was life-changing; an epiphany or “aha!” moment.  One such moment for me was the first time I read Thomas Sowell

Dr. Sowell, who is one of the greatest minds of our time, has written a number of books that are breathtaking in their ability to cut through rhetoric and spin, and clearly explain economic, social, and political realities.  All of his books are worth reading (and I’m working on it).  But the one that comes to mind right now is Applied Economics.  In it, Sowell describes what he calls, “one stage thinking” – decision-making based on immediate (and often politically-calculated) impulses, but with little or no thought to what will happen thereafter.

I’ve come to call this the “And then what?” analysis.  And I’ve been asking this question a lot over the past few days, as we have watched the financial meltdown on Wall Street unfold.  In all the discussion about the now $800 billion bailout, I have heard virtually no discussion about what decisions will be made, what policies will be adopted (or abandoned) to ensure that this will not happen again.

The current financial crisis reminds me of the heated debate we saw last year over the proper legislative response to illegal immigration.  Once it was revealed that the U.S. was home to perhaps 12 million illegal immigrants, some politicians called for immediate deportation.  Others protested that that was impossible, discriminatory, or prohibitively expensive.  My personal thought was that while we could probably absorb 12 million new citizens, no one was addressing the real question: even if we granted the 12 million who are here amnesty, then what?  Conversely, even if we somehow managed to deport all those who are here illegally, then what?

In other words, it doesn’t make a damn bit of difference what we do about those individuals who are here now, unless we take steps to ensure that 12 million more – or 20 million – or 35 million – don’t descend on our doorstep.  Because even if it is true that we can absorb those who are already here, it is also true that we cannot do that indefinitely.  But what have we done to remedy the situation?  Nothing.  And so people pour across our borders.

So it is with the proposed $800 billion bailout plan.  It is riddled with uncertainty.  It may salvage the economy, or it may not.  Perhaps the economy could survive and rebound without it.  And perhaps not.  What is certain, however, is that we cannot continue to bail out failing institutions.  And as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have made clear, this is especially true when the institution we are being asked to bail out is our own government.  So, let’s say we somehow manage to come up with $800 billion.  This time.  Then what?

The real issue is not how we spend our money today, but what we will allow our government to do tomorrow.  Without a change in government’s attitude about spending, not only will this situation repeat itself; it will be much, much worse.

For proof, one need only read the report issued by the Government Accountability Office this past June.  In it, the GAO states that the federal government is “on an unsustainable long-term fiscal path,” driven in part by Social Security, but especially Medicare and Medicaid spending.  The report also warns that the federal government “faces increasing pressures” and yet “a shrinking window of opportunity” in which to solve the problem.  GAO Acting Comptroller General Gene Dodaro tells Congress what they already know: that the government has been borrowing from the Social Security surplus to pay for these increases, but that that surplus will soon be gone (he estimates by 2017– just nine years from now), while the Medicare and Medicaid expenditures will be increasing.  The report says, ominously, “…the challenge is to take action before being forced to do so by some sort of crisis.

Sound familiar?

The United States is already borrowing staggering amounts from foreign countries to support our debt.  When Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid collapse, they will make last week’s bankruptcies of a few investment banks and insurance companies look like a failed bake sale. Continued...

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About The Author

Laura Hirschfeld Hollis is a Clinical Professor of Business Administration at the University of Illinois.

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Hollis alarm
This commentary should bring us all of out a lethargic state because its true. I say vote,be involved,work hard and throw the bums out of office. The bailout is an affront and an insult to me as a taxpayer just the same as the cowardly inaction on the illegal immigration issue.

gene
If you think "an Obama administration, guided by the Clintons" is going to cut spending, you're dreaming.
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