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Thursday, April 30, 2009
Paul Greenberg :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Last Optimist
by Paul Greenberg
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It makes a fellow lonely, not to see the disaster everybody tells me is upon us. It's not easy, being the Last Optimist of the Western World. I do my best, honest I do, to share the pervasive pessimism about the American economy and where it's headed in a handbasket. I feel it's expected of anyone who wants to retain his credentials as a Serious Thinker.

But every time I peer around, sincerely in search of the economic apocalypse that's upon us, all I can discern is just a classic 19th-century financial panic.

Yes, this 21st-century panic will strut and fret its hour (or even year or two) upon the stage, but then it will subside. Like the bust that follows every boom. Though the whole, familiar process would go a lot faster if we had a Federal Reserve System as competent as J. P. Morgan's one-man equivalent thereof in 1907.

What I'm starting to worry about isn't the great worldwide deflation that's supposed to be the big threat on the horizon, but the great inflation sure to come if government keeps spending money it doesn't have, and using the printing press to finance its mounting debt. Or maybe we'll get the worst of both worlds: another Carter Era stagflation, which brought us a two-fer: both stagnant growth and a depreciating currency.

The American economy may have seized up, but the engine is still there. It's not dead, just cooling off. What it may need most just now is a good leaving alone.

This isn't the Great Depression all over again, in large part because of the New Deal reforms that were adopted to deal with it, like federal deposit insurance, Social Security, unemployment insurance and one safeguard after another. If only we had stuck to that wall the New Dealers erected between commercial and investment banking! That way, some banks' speculative investments wouldn't have infected the whole system.

If the New Deal had its failures (see the late and unconstitutional NRA with its price controls and other economic diktats), it also had its successes, which still protect us from the results of our own excesses. Continued...

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refatsew-CA
Dr. I,m Not Sufficiently knowlegable in the Medical Services to say anything other than BRAVO!! I have relatives who are HealthCare providers of various persuations and I know they agree with you..One of these people has been engagd in the Consolidation/Automation end of Medical Records with the DOD in DC for Years.. Much progress is being made but the "Privacy" thing seems to be a major obstacle..I guess I'm the only Retired GI in the world who thinks the VA is an even *Mediocre* Service, but for 25+ years the Local VA has done an excellent Job in my case and the Automation of MedRecs is Fantastic..I hope for the best from the CONGRESS but don't expect much..A GOOD DAY TO U, SIR!!

Misplaced optimism
You are wrong, Mr. Greenberg, and your error lies in your looking at one tree, rather than the forest.

Consider that in just three or four years the Social Security system will become insolvent, whipsawed between the Baby Boomers retiring and their drawing benefits. This will necessitate a significant tax increase.

Consider also the Medicare program, which will be in much more trouble than Social Security, as Boomers sign up and receive benefits. This will require an even greater tax increase, added to the above.

And then there is the trillion-dollar stimulus burden, payment for which will involve an enormous tax increase, added to both the above.

And the Administration is pushing a 3-trillion dollar budget for next year, which, of course, will require yet another huge tax increase, added to the three above.

Nor should we neglect the cap-and-trade scheme wending its way through the legislature, since this would be an immense tax (although mislabelled) added to the four above. It would have the further effect of slowing the economy, so that all tax revenues would be less than anticipated.

Since tax increases, even at confiscatory levels, cannot meet these gargantuan obligations, government will resort to printing money, rendering savings and investments worthless. This is a replay of Weimar Germany, and spells the end of America as we know it.

Do you now see, Mr. Greenberg, why optimism here is utterly misplaced?

A
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