Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

The bipartisan debt bonanza

Ushering in a tidal wave of new government spending

- RICHARD EPSTEIN COMMENTARY

THIS past week, President Donald Trump and Congress found once again that, despite all their difference­s, they could agree on one key issue: an authorizat­ion of an increase in spending, in this instance by some $1.37 trillion.

There was, as ever, much political disagreeme­nt on spending priorities. Democrats tend to favor a larger social safety net, while the president and some Republican­s favor defense and other essential facilities. But let no one ever deny that a passion for pork runs deep on both sides of the aisle, with goodies galore for all involving gun violence, election security, defense expenditur­es, federal pay raises, the 2020 census, Head Start, food stamps, energy subsidies, and lots more.

Some of the new expenditur­es can be paid for out of increased tax revenues generated by a thriving economy that has managed to survive a protracted trade war with China and snail-like progress toward adopting the new United States-Mexico-Canada agreement. But make no mistake about it, a huge chunk of the new social expenditur­es will be paid for by tomorrow’s citizenry — by issuing debt today.

To be sure, some debt is always a proper part of the capital structure of any organizati­on, including the U.S. government. There are many current expenditur­es that will yield benefits for years to come. People borrow money to pay for their homes so that they can match their expected debt payments in each period with their expected income in that same period.

The same propositio­n holds for public expenditur­es. It makes little sense to fund future capital expenditur­es for roads and other public infrastruc­ture out of current cash receipts. The debt incurred for these expenditur­es is backed by a long-term asset capable of carrying the load. Ideally, at least some portion of the cost of the road should come from revenues tied to these improvemen­ts, whether tolls or gasoline taxes, as that form of fiscal discipline is the best way to ensure that a particular project is not just more pork. But even if general revenues are spent, the social balance sheet contains at least some asset to set off the liability.

Alas, cash-accounting systems for government expenditur­es do not account for these capital assets. Fifty years ago, a much larger fraction of government expenditur­es was made on roads and other infrastruc­ture improvemen­ts. Today more of the budget is dedicated to transfer payments, chiefly through Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.

The consequenc­es of this change in the use for the national debt are dramatic. A graph of the basic picture would show only modest increases in the national debt ceiling between 1940 and 1980. But then the arrow turns smartly upward, from roughly from $1 trillion in the early 1980s to nearly $21 trillion today — of which at least two-thirds has occurred in the past 15 years.

The growth of national debt seems to be largely independen­t of which party is in power, even as the two parties have some difference in priorities. Both Barack Obama and Donald Trump are, in their different ways, big, populist spenders, and there is not a strong of public accounting that prevents either from shoveling out large sums of money to their favored constituen­ts, often as legislativ­e favors in an election year.

In previous years, the United States was able to park a substantia­l share of our debt on foreign entities, which marked their confidence that these obligation­s would be repaid in due course, without any inflation that could cheapen the dollar. Today, more of the debt is internal to the United States. Some people might think that this developmen­t just means that we owe the money only to ourselves — which is no big deal. That would be true if such debt were held in equal proportion­s by all citizens. But that’s just a fantasy, for it turns out, on net, that some individual­s and firms have a far larger share than the rest of the public at large.

Put otherwise, payment or nonpayment of the debt does result in major wealth transfers among our citizens. And it could result in some form of inflation if the government prints more money in order to pay creditors with cheaper dollars.

And it is here that we have the great puzzle. Great inflation has

The growth of national debt seems to be largely independen­t of which party is in power, even as the two parties have some difference in priorities.

not taken place as interest rates have remained low, so the worst-case scenario has not occurred. All that does not make the current system ideal. Artificial­ly low interest rates are a deterrent to individual savings. Huge government deficits could eventually drive out private investment, thereby reducing long-term growth. The truth is, however, a tacit bipartisan consensus scoffs at those “deficit hawks” who think deficits really matter. There have been too many times that these hawks cried wolf and nothing happened.

So the puzzle is, why worry? I think the explanatio­n comes from a related source. It is the belief that we can

propose massive increases in public expenditur­es without worrying about the budgetary consequenc­es, given that some combinatio­n of taxes and borrowing stand ready to cover the public cost without worrying about inflation. Thus far, that position has held tolerably firm. But that is because the Republican appetites for spending increases, as ample as they are, are tiny in comparison with the far more ambitious Democratic expenditur­es.

Thus, Sen. Elizabeth Warren can propose with a straight face a wealth tax of 6 percent on persons whose assets exceed $50 million, a hefty increase in individual and corporate taxation rates, a shutting down of private equity firms by onerous regulation, and a dilution of private shareholde­rs by forcing all boards to appoint various union and public representa­tives. Those proposals are all growth killers which, if adopted, will lead to a massive contractio­n of the economy.

Sadly, it is just that much harder to fight the expanded public sector if we remain indifferen­t to the small distortion­s of excessive borrowing. The next iteration of public reform, should it ever come to pass, will prove far more dangerous.

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