Read a Venezuelan Guard's 'Chilling' Account About the Delta Force Raid That Nabbed...
Watch What Happens When This Leftist Protester Accosts a CNN Reporter in Minneapolis
Is This Why the Media Isn't Covering the Iran Protests?
Trump Is Minnesota's President, Too
Here's How Much Commie Mamdani's 'Affordable' Government Housing Will Cost You
Knoxville Orchestra Plays Sour Notes of Racial Preference over Talent
ICE Stories They Don’t Tell You
They Can Hate Israel All They Want
Miami Jury Convicts Two Executives in $34M Medicare Advantage Brace Fraud Scheme
Chinese National With Overstayed Visa Charged as Ringleader in Firearms Conspiracy
CNN Panel Sparks Firestorm After Abby Phillip Calls Somali Families 'Victims' of Minnesota...
Syrian Man Pleads Guilty to Stealing Nearly $191K in U.S. Social Security Benefits
Leftist Agitators Stalk and Threaten to Kill Journalist Covering Minneapolis Unrest
Minneapolis Radicals Begin Distributing Devices to Disable ICE Vehicles
Sons of Liberty, Sons of Legacy: Forming the Men Who Will Shape America’s...
OPINION

Time to Stop the Debt Charade

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.

The crisis du jour in Washington now dominating the news, the so-called “fiscal cliff”, is but the latest in seemingly endless political crises that we shouldn’t be having.

Advertisement

We get two different kinds of problems in life. The real ones – the struggle to work and improve the quality of our lives – and the ones we bring on ourselves through poor behavior.

The more time we must deal with the latter type, the less time and energy we have to deal with life’s real problems and challenges.

The political crises which emanate from Washington are invariably problems of the type that result from poor behavior. And this latest, the “fiscal cliff”, is no exception.

Let’s recall that the automatic tax hikes and spending cuts that are scheduled to occur January – the “fiscal cliff” – are the result of the failure of Republicans and President Obama to agree on a budget deal as condition for raising the debt ceiling last year.

Why do we have to keep raising the debt ceiling? Because politicians are afraid to be honest with the American people and immediately raise taxes to pay for all their new spending. So instead of raising taxes and paying for our new bills when we incur them, they just borrow the money.

Anybody who doesn’t pay the full balance on their credit card bill each month knows what this is about.

Except there’s one big difference. You run up your credit card bill on your own account. You are the one that is on the line for your own bills.

Advertisement

Politicians run up bills on our account. We’re on the line for what they spend.

They could be honest. When they have their wonderful ideas about what they want to spend our money on, they could go right to taxpayers and say we are going to spend X for Y so we will raise your taxes Z to pay for it. OK?

They don’t do this because they know it is not okay. Politicians know that the money they are spending ultimately will come out of every American household. And if they go to those households, to those actually responsible to pay the bills, and the heads of those households know they don’t have the money, they will say “NO”. Don’t spend the money and don’t raise my taxes.

So politicians don’t ask.

And our constitution, which originally was supposed protect the property of citizens, is now so degraded that they can do this.

They just spend the money and borrow, on our behalf – often from those overseas like the Chinese – to pay the bills.

Then they tell the American people about all the great ideas they are spending money on. Bail out companies that have failed. Green energy. Extend unemployment benefits so you can collect for four years. And so on.

It all sounds so wonderful and innovative and compassionate. And even better – somebody else is paying for it all. We think.

Advertisement

Now our debt, at over $16 trillion, is bigger than our whole economy. More than 100% of our GDP.

Investment guru Bill Gross, of PIMCO in Newport Beach, California, has been writing that the “new normal” for economic growth in the US will be below its historic average.

What is one of the major reasons why? He cites research by Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff which shows that “for the past 200 years, once a country exceeded 90 percent debt/GDP ratio, economic growth slowed by nearly 2 percent….for an average duration of nearly a decade.”

Part of President Obama’s proposal to bypass the “fiscal cliff” is to get rid of the requirement that Congress must approve increases in the debt limit. I wonder why?

It’s time for responsible behavior and hard choices. If we can’t just cut spending, let the “fiscal cliff” kick in.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement