Default on U.S. Treasuries Likely?
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  Default on U.S. Treasuries Likely?
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Author Topic: Default on U.S. Treasuries Likely?  (Read 1139 times)
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« on: August 05, 2009, 11:19:20 PM »

I'm neither endorsing nor attacking Hummel's analysis. I'm simply posting it for discussion.

http://www.econlib.org/library/Columns/y2009/Hummeltbills.html

Almost everyone is aware that federal government spending in the United States is scheduled to skyrocket, primarily because of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Recent "stimulus" packages have accelerated the process. Only the naively optimistic actually believe that politicians will fully resolve this looming fiscal crisis with some judicious combination of tax hikes and program cuts. Many predict that, instead, the government will inflate its way out of this future bind, using Federal Reserve monetary expansion to fill the shortfall between outlays and receipts. But I believe, in contrast, that it is far more likely that the United States will be driven to an outright default on Treasury securities, openly reneging on the interest due on its formal debt and probably repudiating part of the principal.

To understand why, we must look at U.S. fiscal history. Economists refer to the revenue that government or its central bank generates through monetary expansion as seigniorage. Outside of America's two hyperinflations (during the Revolution and under the Confederacy during the Civil War), seigniorage in this country peaked during World War II, when it covered nearly a quarter of the war's cost and amounted to about 12 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). By the Great Inflation of the 1970s, seigniorage was below two percent of federal expenditures or less than half a percent of GDP. This was partly a result of globalization, in which international competition disciplines central banks. And it also was the result of sophisticated financial systems, with fractional reserve banking, in which most of the money that people actually hold is created privately, by banks and other financial institutions, rather than by government. Consider how little of your own cash balances are in the form of government-issued Federal Reserve notes and Treasury coin, rather than in the form of privately created bank deposits and money market funds. Privately created money, even when its quantity expands, provides no income to government. Consequently, seigniorage has become a trivial source of revenue, not just in the United States, but also throughout the developed world. Only in poor countries, such as Zimbabwe, with their primitive financial sectors, does inflation remain lucrative for governments.

The current financial crisis, moreover, has reinforced the trend toward lower seigniorage. Buried within the October 3, 2008 bailout bill, which set up the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP), was a provision permitting the Fed to pay interest on bank reserves, something other major central banks were doing already. Within days, the Fed implemented this new power, essentially converting bank reserves into more government debt. Fiat money traditionally pays no interest and, therefore, allows the government to purchase real resources without incurring any future tax liability. Federal Reserve notes will, of course, continue to earn no interest. But now, any seigniorage that government gains from creating bank reserves will completely vanish or be greatly reduced, depending entirely on the differential between market interest rates on the remaining government debt and the interest rate on reserves. . . .

What about increasing the proceeds from explicit taxes? Examine Graph 1, which depicts both federal outlays and receipts as a percent of GDP from 1940 to 2008. Two things stand out. First is the striking behavior of federal tax revenue since the Korean War. Displaying less volatility than expenditures, it has bumped up against 20 percent of GDP for well over half a century. That is quite an astonishing statistic when you think about all the changes in the tax code over the intervening years. Tax rates go up, tax rates go down, and the total bite out of the economy remains relatively constant. This suggests that 20 percent is some kind of structural-political limit for federal taxes in the United States. It also means that variations in the deficit resulted mainly from changes in spending rather than from changes in taxes. The second fact that stands out in the graph is that federal tax revenue at the height of World War II never quite reached 24 percent of GDP. That represents the all-time high in U.S. history, should even the 20-percent-of-GDP post-war barrier prove breachable.



Compare these percentages with that of President Barack Obama's first budget, which is slated to come in at above 28 percent of GDP. Although this spending surge is supposed to be significantly reversed when the recession is over, the administration's own estimates have federal outlays never falling below 22 percent of GDP. And that is before the Social Security and Medicare increases really kick in. In its latest long-term budget scenarios, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), not known for undue pessimism, projects that total federal spending will rise over the next 75 years to as much as 35 percent of GDP, not counting any interest on the accumulating debt, which critically varies with how fast tax revenues rise. However, the CBO's highest projection for tax revenue over the same span reaches a mere 26 percent of GDP. Notice how even that "optimistic" projection assumes that Americans will put up with, on a regular peacetime basis, a higher level of federal taxation than they briefly endured during the widely perceived national emergency of the Second World War. Moreover, once you add in the interest on the growing debt because of the persistent deficits, federal expenditures in 2083, according to the CBO, could range anywhere between 44 and 75 percent of GDP.

We all know that there is a limit to how much debt an individual or institution can pile on if future income is rigidly fixed. We have seen why federal tax revenues are probably capped between 20 and 25 percent of GDP; reliance on seigniorage is no longer a viable option; and public-choice dynamics tell us that politicians have almost no incentive to rein in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. The prospects are, therefore, sobering. Although many governments around the world have experienced sovereign defaults, U.S. Treasury securities have long been considered risk-free. That may be changing already. Prominent economists have starting considering a possible Treasury default, while the business-news media and investment rating agencies have begun openly discussing a potential risk premium on the interest rate that the U.S. government pays. The CBO estimates that the total U.S. national debt will approach 100 percent of GDP within ten years, and when Japan's national debt exceeded that level, the ratings of its government securities were downgraded.

The much (unfairly) maligned credit default swaps (CDS) in February 2009 were charging more for insurance against a default on U.S. Treasuries than for insurance against default of such major U.S. corporations as Pepsico, IBM, and McDonald's. Because the premiums and payoffs of the CDS on U.S. Treasury securities are denominated in Euros, the annual premiums also reflect exchange-rate risk, which is probably why, with the subsequent modest decline in the dollar, CDS premiums for ten-year Treasuries fell from 100 basis points to almost 30. But you can make a plausible case that CDS underestimate the probability of a Treasury default since such a default could easily have far reaching financial repercussions, even hurting the counterparties providing the insurance and impinging on their ability to make good on their CDS. Surely the purchasers of the U.S. Treasury CDS have not overlooked this risk, which would be reflected in a lower annual premium for less-valuable insurance.

. . . .

. . . . It is not literally impossible that the Federal Reserve could unleash the Zimbabwe option and repudiate the national debt indirectly through hyperinflation, rather than have the Treasury repudiate it directly. But my guess is that, faced with the alternatives of seeing both the dollar and the debt become worthless or defaulting on the debt while saving the dollar, the U.S. government will choose the latter. Treasury securities are second-order claims to central-bank-issued dollars. Although both may be ultimately backed by the power of taxation, that in no way prevents government from discriminating between the priority of the claims. . . .

Still unconvinced that the Treasury will default? The Zimbabwe option illustrates that other potential outcomes, however unlikely, are equally unprecedented and dramatic. We cannot utterly rule out, for instance, the possibility that the U.S. Congress might repudiate a major portion of promised benefits rather than its debt. If it simply abolished Medicare outright, the unfunded liability of Social Security would become tractable. Indeed, one of the current arguments for the adoption of nationalized health care is that it can reduce Medicare costs. But this argument is based on looking at other welfare States such as Great Britain, where government-provided health care was rationed from the outset rather than subsidized with Medicare. Rationing can indeed drive down health-care costs, but after more than forty years of subsidized health care in the United States, how likely is it that the public will put up with severe rationing or that the politicians will attempt to impose it? And don't kid yourself; the rationing will have to be quite severe to stave off a future fiscal crisis.

. . . .
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True Federalist (진정한 연방 주의자)
Ernest
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« Reply #1 on: August 05, 2009, 11:57:51 PM »

At present, net interest (exclusive of the fictional interest paid to the Social Security trust funds and the like) is only $164 billion  for the FY 2010 budget.  Even a complete repudiation of the public debt does not eliminate the deficit.  Neither inflation nor repudiation can get us out of our current fiscal hole, only cuts in spending and/or increases in revenue (preferably by increasing the tax base instead of the tax rate) can do that.
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opebo
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« Reply #2 on: August 06, 2009, 12:13:07 PM »

Haha, right wing claptrap.  All that is needed is increases in the top tax rate.  Totally phoney 'crisis'.
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Beet
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« Reply #3 on: August 08, 2009, 10:28:44 PM »
« Edited: August 08, 2009, 10:37:02 PM by Beet »

"The Economics of Liberty." Sigh. Why are all the good economics sites out there with writers who make such observations about seigniorage and economic development, Medicare Part A, or Russia 1998, or point out that the US CDS contract is traded in euros, libertarian sites? Where is the left wing equivalent of "the economics of liberty"?  I see that the author is a professor of economics at San Jose State. There goes the notion that all academics, particularly academics at California institutions, are left wing.

On the topic at hand, it should be rather obvious that either monetization or default lies down the road, and I think the author makes a convincing case that it will be default rather than monetization.

But the really useful part of this is not for Americans to know, but for America's creditors to know. After all, who is hurt the most by a U.S. default? The Chinese. They are the ones with the most to fear. And it is for them to know that they cannot continue to force-feed the American pig and accumulate Treasury securities for much longer without risk losing their investments-- they must allow the US to depreciate its currency. That will allow them to unwind their bets as the price mechanism puts more Americans to work allows us to earn out way out; not only of our debt to them but our debts to each other. It also, incidentally, benefits us for precisely those reasons.

Haha, right wing claptrap.  All that is needed is increases in the top tax rate.  Totally phoney 'crisis'.

What is convincing about the argument is that it stands on its own empirically, not ideologically. The basis of the argument is that politically, the public will not accept the taxes required to balance the books. One does not need to be left wing or right wing or socialist or libertarian to believe this. It is purely a meditation on the nature of Western democracy. Everything that I have seen as a follower of American politics tells me that he is absolutely correct.
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opebo
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« Reply #4 on: August 09, 2009, 03:14:10 PM »

Haha, right wing claptrap.  All that is needed is increases in the top tax rate.  Totally phoney 'crisis'.

What is convincing about the argument is that it stands on its own empirically, not ideologically. The basis of the argument is that politically, the public will not accept the taxes required to balance the books. One does not need to be left wing or right wing or socialist or libertarian to believe this. It is purely a meditation on the nature of Western democracy. Everything that I have seen as a follower of American politics tells me that he is absolutely correct.

Yes, the american working class is a fool.  Not exactly big news.
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exnaderite
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« Reply #5 on: August 09, 2009, 10:02:43 PM »

For the above reasons there will never be any default per se, nor will taxes rise.

It seems probable that the White House and Fed will engineer an inflation rate above what we're used to, without unleashing a wage price spiral. 5% inflation over 10 years equals 62.9% cumulatively, which is also 1.336 times of 2% inflation over the same period.

Suddenly all that "debt" is a lot easier to pay. As an added bonus, many "bad assets" in the banking system will magically turn good again. Everyone wins. Except the Chinese. But the alternative is so much worse anyway.
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