Debt made the US. So Alan Greenspan's doubts about unbalanced budgets should
surprise no one, least of all Democrats
Published: January 29 2001 19:36GMT | Last Updated: January 29 2001 19:44GMT



This week the Congressional Budget Office is set to forecast US federal surpluses
even fatter than anyone had imagined. But the big public finance splash of the
season came from Alan Greenspan, who delivered the lowdown on the federal surplus:

It is an evil, was the logic of what he had to say.

This revelation appeared to shock and offend America's political and financial
actors, many of whom have argued that the focus of public finance must always be the
systematic elimination of the federal debt. Over the course of the 1990s, this
school of thought has become so ingrained that to diverge from it is considered
heresy. Many Democrats are now accusing Mr Greenspan of selling out in order to win
the affection of the tax-cutting, deficit-generating, Bush administration.

But the devil surplus as conjured by the Fed chairman is not a new one, not even to
the chairman himself. When, in his testimony last week, he expressed surprise, it
was not surprise at his own tax-cut-rather-than-surplus position. That he had laid
out any number of times, including years ago, when the need to cuddle up to Mr Bush
had not yet materialised on the political horizon. If he was selectively read at the
time, that is not entirely his fault. No, the chairman's surprise was at the size of
the surplus, and that it had accumulated so quickly.

In fact, the abhorrence of surplus and the appreciation of debt have deep roots in
the Anglo-American tradition. Most obviously, there is John Maynard Keynes's
argument that a surplus may lead to inadequate demand - too much taxation and too
little government spending can slow down the economy. But there are at least three
other important anti-surplus arguments.

The first is that great powers need to be debtors. Only then will they issue bonds
that perform their necessary function of providing liquidity in financial markets.
Mr Greenspan worried that, without its bonds, a debt-free Washington would be forced
to invest in private sector bonds. This would lead to a lively debate over who got
to sell bonds to the government - or, as he put it, make it "exceptionally difficult
to insulate the government's investment decisions from political pressures".

In Hamilton's Blessing, his history of American debt, John Steele Gordon goes
further, positing that debt may be a necessary concomitant to prosperity. Mr Gordon
notes that Alexander Hamilton, the great consolidator of the young America's debt,
helped turn a debtor collection of colonies whose credit was "not worth a
Continental [dollar]" into a sovereign magnet for global capital. Hamilton's America
was so admired that in 1794 it had the highest credit rating in Europe; the French
diplomat Charles Maurice de Talleyrand called US bonds "safe and free from
reverses".

Hamilton was influenced by the experience of 18th-century Britain, which used debt
to expand. The key to the debtor empire's success, as Mr Gordon notes, was that the
debt was properly structured and funded, with a portfolio offering a range of
maturities. (Americans already feeling nostalgic about the demise of their long bond
will find Mr Gordon's account of Consols, callable bonds of indefinite maturity,
particularly interesting.)

The second argument against a surplus is that the cash could be put to better use
elsewhere. This argument - similar to Keynes's concern - is that Adam Smith was
wrong when he said: "What is prudence in the conduct of every private family can
scarce be folly in that of a great kingdom." In fact, a government is more like a
business than a family. And a business that spends too much money paying off debt
forgoes the opportunity to invest in new ventures. Or, as Mr Greenspan put it,
surpluses and their consequences "lower the potential growth of the economy".

The third argument against a surplus - and, in America's case, for tax cuts - is
that it concentrates financial power in the hands of the government. A government
will always spend a surplus and such extra spending in the public sector is
dangerous. In more religious periods, other American leaders routinely couched this
view in the language of the Church. In 1889, for example, the new president, the
Presbyterian Benjamin Harrison, used his inaugural address to warn that "while a
Treasury surplus is not the greatest evil, it is a serious evil". It led to
wastefulness, he said, and "wastefulness, profligacy or favouritism in public
expenditures is criminal". Mr Greenspan seems to share something of this view.

But if Mr Greenspan's anti-surplus position is so much grounded in tradition, why
the controversy? The answer lies in politics. Democrats are angry not because they
have always opposed deficit spending. They have not, at least not in periods such as
the Great Society. They are angry because they feel Mr Greenspan has betrayed them.
For close to a decade, his anti-deficit line provided economic and moral cover for
their dual agenda: to make Republicans who want to cut taxes look like foolish big
spenders; and eventually to expand the government. Anyone who doubts this need only
recall Vice-President Gore's favourite 1996 campaign line - that Republicans would
"blow a hole in the deficit" - and his 2000 Los Angeles convention speech, in which
he promised government expansion costlier than any Bush tax cut proposal.

Now, by shining a spotlight on the anti-surplus component of his thinking, Mr
Greenspan has permitted Republicans to snatch the mantle of respectability. Suddenly
the previously spurned tax cuts have become healthy surplus blasters - and promoters
of faster growth.

This is as it should be. No economic theory can suit all periods. The deficit
fighters of the 1990s cast themselves as moral heroes. Now the enemies of surpluses
have just as much right to claim the high ground.



 from FT.com



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