The Sentinel-Record

Dubious noises about the debt

- George Will Copyright 2020, Washington Post Writers group

WASHINGTON — Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, the malleable South Carolinian, says the time has come for “a dialogue about how we can finally begin to address the debt.” Finally the time is at last ripe. Which means a Democratic administra­tion approaches.

Graham wants finally to “begin,” as if there has not been, long before and ever since the

2010 Simpson- Bowles commission ( the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibi­lity and Reform), abundant serious thinking and specific proposals for bringing government outlays and revenues closer together. What Graham wants finally to begin is a “dialogue,” which is one of Washington’s two favorite words ( the other is “conversati­on”) to signal protracted solemnity without politicall­y risky actions.

The Manhattan Institute’s Brian Riedl notes that defense spending is not driving deficits: It is a declining percentage of gross domestic product ( 5.7% in the

1970s and 1980s, 4.6% in 2010, 3.2% today). Deficits are rising not because tax revenues are declining as a percentage of GDP: They have been close to the average 17.3% since 1960.

In 1960, however, just 9% of the population was over 65. Today, 16% is. The great driver of debt is spending on pensions ( Social Security) and health care ( Medicare).

Spending in the name of the pandemic will continue. Trillion- dollar tranches are termed down payments. Then even bigger Biden-era “investment­s” are planned. Yet economist John Cochrane of Stanford’s Hoover Institutio­n notes that the spending binge will begin “with the same debt relative to GDP with which we ended World War II.” And “then in about ten years, the unfunded Social Security, Medicare, and pension promises kick in to really blow up the deficit.”

Twenty months ago, Laurence Kotlikoff, a Boston University economist, wrote an article in The Hill accurately headlined “Social Security just ran a $ 9 trillion deficit, and nobody noticed.” In one year, the system’s long- term unfunded liability went from $ 34 trillion to $ 43 trillion. The unfunded liability is almost double the national debt. Riedl says that under government projection­s, by 2050 Social Security and Medicare “will be running an annual cash shortfall of 14.2% of GDP ( including interest).” Between now and then, Social Security will have collected $52 trillion in payroll taxes and other dedicated revenues and disbursed $ 74 trillion in benefits. The $22 trillion gap must be filled from general revenues or by borrowing. What, you wonder, about the system’s trust fund? It is a paltry $ 3 trillion.

Economist John Merrifield’s chapter in the Cato Institute’s “A Fiscal Cliff ” notes that the planned fiscal 2019 deficit was nearly $ 1 trillion. This was pre- pandemic and at full employment. The deficit was, Merrifield says, “about five times the combined budgets of five of the cabinet department­s created after World War II: Education, Energy, Housing and Urban Developmen­t, Transporta­tion, and Homeland Security.” Economist John Garen, also writing in Cato’s book, says the projected increase in Social Security and Medicare spending of 3.5% of GDP between 2017 and 2040 is equivalent to adding another Defense Department.

Generation­s ago, Republican­s abandoned their assigned role — which was rarely real — as the party of pain that raised taxes to pay for popular Democratic spending programs. Now, in an era of low interest rates — actually, or almost, negative — the assumption is that deficits do not matter as long as the interest rate for servicing the national debt remains lower than the rate of economic growth, so the ratio of debt to GDP declines. At long last, for humanity, or at least the American portion, the table has been set for a free lunch.

This arms the political class with a theory that justifies them in doing what they would do anyway — give grateful voters government goods and services partially paid for by nonvoters: future generation­s. Remember, there are just two ways to fund a government: current taxes and future taxes. ( The latter can include the stealthy tax of inflation: Borrow dollars worth X, repay with dollars worth X minus Y.)

Complacenc­y about today’s soaring debt, and about rolling over $ 10 trillion or so of it annually, requires only the assumption that very low interest rates will ( unlike, say, the Roman, Habsburg, Ottoman, British and Soviet empires) continue forever. So, an old jest is now a fundamenta­l principle: The first law of economics is that scarcity is real, and the first law of politics is to ignore the first law of economics.

If Republican­s control the Senate in January, Lindsey Graham will become chairman of the Budget Committee and finally there will be a dialogue about debt. Or a conversati­on.

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