People's Democracy
(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India
(Marxist)
|
Vol. XXXV
No.
32
August
07,
2011
|
America’s Debt-Ceiling Crisis
Prabhat Patnaik
THE United
States
has an archaic piece of legislation, passed in 1917, which puts a
ceiling on
the magnitude of the debt of its federal government in
absolute dollar terms. (Since the various state governments in
the US
are not allowed to run fiscal deficits and hence incur debt, the
federal debt
is synonymous with government debt). Fixing a debt ceiling in absolute
dollar
terms is extraordinarily silly for two obvious reasons: first, as the
federal
government incurs fresh fiscal deficits every year which add to its
debt, this
ceiling fixed in absolute terms is naturally bound to get exceeded.
Secondly,
as prices and output rise, the federal government’s revenue and
expenditure
also rise, and so does its fiscal deficit in absolute terms. Any
absolute debt
ceiling therefore must get exceeded for this reason as well. The debt
ceiling
in short needs to be revised upwards every so often. Not surprisingly
there
have been umpteen such revisions, though, strangely, nobody has pushed
for
either repealing this archaic piece of legislation or even amending it
to
convert the ceiling to a percentage of the GDP. (In Europe and in India
the size of the fiscal deficit, which is a flow as distinct from debt
which is
a stock, is fixed as a percentage of the GDP).
The previous
revision in the debt ceiling was on February 12, 2010, which fixed it
at $14.3
trillion. This ceiling, it was known in advance, would have to be
revised
upwards again, but it was expected to be a routine affair to which
nobody paid
much attention. Since the government’s budget had already been approved
by the
legislature, which had given sanction to the various items of federal
expenditure, a revision of the debt ceiling to accommodate the
expenditures
already sanctioned was expected to occur in the normal course. But it
became a
crisis in the US because the Republicans, who of late have moved
further Right,
and without whose consent the revision of any debt ceiling could not be
effected, began demanding their pound of flesh, in the form of cuts in
federal
expenditure, especially on social security and on programmes of benefit
to the
poor such as Medicare.
CLASS
ASPECT
The class aspect of
this insistence should not be missed. The previous Republican
administration
under George Bush had brought about massive tax cuts for the rich,
sharply
accentuating the post-tax income inequalities in the US. In
an effort to appease the
Republicans, Obama in December 2010 had agreed to continue with those
tax cuts,
apparently in the mistaken belief that, since one favour begets
another, the
Republicans would in turn do him the favour of raising the debt
ceiling, a
normally routine affair as we have seen, without much ado. The
Republicans
however insisted upon eating their cake and having it too. Having got
Obama to
continue with the Bush-era tax cuts, they made it a condition that they
would
agree to an increase in the debt ceiling only if severe cuts were
effected in a
range of items of federal expenditure which were of benefit to the
poor. And
Obama has had to bow before them. Under the shadow of a silly piece of
legislation passed in 1917, a further grotesquely regressive shift in
income
distribution has been effected by the far Right in the US
which
currently dominates the Republican Party. In the process the strength
of the
far Right in American politics has increased greatly: it is now
confident that
it can push a pusillanimous Obama in the direction it wants.
Since in the
absence of an increase in the debt ceiling, the US government would
have
defaulted on its payments, which is a matter of great embarrassment for
any
government, many in the US are happy that a solution has been found to
such a
crisis through mutual agreement, no matter what the terms of the
agreement between
Obama and the Republicans might be. But this is a naïve position which
ignores
the great damage that this compromise has done to the US society (in
the form
of a sharp regression in income distribution), to the US polity (in the
form of
a remarkable shift to the Right) and to the US and world economy (in
the form
of an accentuation of the world recession, on which more later).
Some would argue
that Obama had no choice in the matter, that to avert the crisis which
would
have ensued if the US
government had defaulted on its payments, he had to bow to the
Republicans. But
this is erroneous. Quite apart from the fact that he had been
pusillanimous all
along, especially in continuing with the Bush-era tax-cuts, he turned
out to be
pusillanimous even when it came to the crunch. He did have an obvious
way out,
which was suggested by many, but he did not follow it. The way out was
as
follows.
While government
bonds are counted as government debt, money issued by the government is
not.
The Federal Reserve holds $1.7 trillion of government bonds at the
moment,
which it has been buying in its effort to lower long term interest
rates (for
stimulating a recovery). This sum is counted as government debt and
hence figures
in all calculations about whether government debt is within the
statutory ceiling.
If the government merely substitutes money printed by it for government
bonds
in the Federal Reserve Board’s portfolio, then its debt falls well
within the
ceiling (since the estimated excess over the ceiling is $1.5 trillion
which is less
than the $1.7 trillion of government bonds with the Fed).
Government-printed
money in the US
is not a new idea: Abraham Lincoln had printed notes called
“Greenbacks” (the
term is still used in common parlance to refer to the dollar),
precisely in a
similar situation when the federal government had got into a debt
crisis
because of financing Civil War expenditure. True, substituting
government notes
for government bonds (it does not matter to the Fed because interest
rates on
government bonds are near-zero, and much of the Fed’s interest earnings
come to
the government treasury anyway), appears to be a phoney solution; but
since the
debt-ceiling problem is a phoney problem anyway, a phoney solution is
all that
it requires, and this solution is quite enough to counter the
arm-twisting by
the Republicans).
STRUCTURAL
REASONS
The reason Obama
did not do it, is structural; it is not because of some personal
failure on his
part, as Liberal writers have been suggesting. Obama’s apparent
pusillanimity
in other words is not a character trait but a consequence of his bowing
to the
pressures of finance capital. A big debate has been on for some time in
the US
about the
size of the fiscal deficit. While many progressive economists have been
rightly
emphasising that in the midst of a recession a large fiscal deficit is
necessary for stimulating the economy, and that it cannot possibly do
any harm,
not even on the inflation front (since the inflation in the US, not
alarmingly
high in any case, is not caused by excess demand), the financial
interests and
the media controlled by them have been systematically wanting a cut in
the
fiscal deficit. This is hardly surprising: finance capital is always
opposed to
any form of State activism except that which promotes its own
interests. It
propagates not just the view that what is good for finance is good for
the
economy, but an even stronger version of it: only what
is good for finance is good for the economy. For it to
admit that the interests of
the economy can be served by government action that is not aimed at
promoting
its own interests, is to undermine its own raison
d’etre. The phoney problem of the debt ceiling has been used to
effect a
real cut in the fiscal deficit. And that too without affecting the
interests of
the rich, the reversal of whose tax-cuts had already been carefully
removed
from the agenda earlier.
A fiscal deficit
can be curtailed either through garnering larger tax revenue or through
effecting expenditure cuts. How it is curtailed, and upon whom the
impact of
tax increases and expenditure cuts falls, are important issues
affecting the
class distribution of income. Finance capital not only wants a cut in
the
fiscal deficit, but a cut effected correctly in class terms (from its
point of
view). Obama has done both to its satisfaction. No doubt he was goaded
by the
Right, but he could not stand up to finance capital, because his own
election
was funded largely by that bastion of finance capital, Wall Street. Underlying what Liberal writers, quite
rightly, see as a shift to the Right in US politics, is the increase in
the
power of finance capital.
Ironically, a good
deal of the increase in government debt in the US has been caused by
the
government’s effort to bail out banks from the financial crisis they
had
collectively brought upon themselves, and also by the Bush tax-cuts for
the
rich which, themselves not particularly anti-recessionary, could not be
reversed even as the government had to work out a stimulus package
against
recession. But this very increase in government debt imposed by the
rich and
the financial interests, has been used by the same interests to bring
about
cuts in welfare expenditures for the poor!
The fact that this
would worsen the recession in the US, and hence in the world
capitalist economy as a whole, has been rightly emphasised by many
writers.
Countering a recession requires increased spending. Since the US
cannot
suddenly expand its net exports (and if it did, then some other
countries’
recession would be accentuated since it would have to be based on a
“beggar-my-neighbour” policy), its domestic expenditure has to
increase. Since
neither private consumption expenditure nor private investment are
showing any
signs of a recovery (they would recover once the economy begins to
recover),
the increased spending will have to come from the government, and, in
the
absence of taxes upon the rich, will have to be financed by a fiscal
deficit
(taxes on the poor nullify the expansionary effects of government
spending).
Curtailing the fiscal deficit, and that too via cuts in expenditures
for the
poor, will therefore aggravate the recession in the US,
and hence the world economy.
It may be asked:
why is finance capital insisting upon such a course which is ultimately
dangerous for the system as a whole, since it confronts the system with
both
greater popular antagonism and a worse crisis? The reason is because
capitalism
is not a planned but a spontaneous system. This spontaneity is what
makes it
doomed. Paraphrasing Lenin we can say that if capitalism could do all
those
things which were reasonable and humane, then it would not be
capitalism.