-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kevin
Carson
Sent: Wednesday, August 03, 2011 8:39 AM
To: free. market. anticapitalist; leftlibertarian2; p2p-foundation;
libertarian-alliance-forum
Subject: [P2P-F] McConnell: 'The debt ceiling will not be clean anymore'


There's an interesting analogy here to Peak Oil. Those who say high oil
prices are the result of "above ground" factors like speculation rather than
declining rates of extraction miss the point: rising speculation, terror
attacks on pipelines, etc., are all secondary epiphenomena of the declining
rate of extraction. The less elastic supply becomes, the more it becomes in
someone's interest to leverage that inelasticity by attacks on supply. The
less elastic oil supply becomes, the higher the ROI on terror attacks on
pipelines and other obstructions of supply.

Likewise, the closer states approach to fiscal exhaustion, the more leverage
can be extracted by threats of default.


 
 

Sent to you by Kevin Carson via Google Reader:

 
 


McConnell:
<http://feeds.washingtonpost.com/click.phdo?i=02bd3bc7187b5e9d1eb412fd5ca6ee
ed> 'The debt ceiling will not be clean anymore'

via Ezra Klein <http://www.washingtonpost.com?wprss=blogs>  by Ezra Klein on
8/2/11



 
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/rf/image_296w//WashingtonPost/Content/Product
ion/Blogs/fact-checker/Images/GYI0064924390.jpg?uuid=-DHkhJRfEeCMGC86Qgc7zA>


The most
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/ezra-klein/post/column-in-praise-of-mit
ch-mcconnell/2011/05/19/AGoMj1oH_blog.html> honest man in Washington did
some more truth-telling on CNBC last night. Speaking to Larry Kudlow, Mitch
McConnell made perfectly clear that the hostage situation we just went
through wasn't a one-shot deal. It's the
<http://jaredbernsteinblog.com/adventures-in-tv-land/?utm_source=feedburner&;
utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JaredBernstein+%28Jared+Bernstein%29>
new normal: 

What we have done, Larry, also is set a new template. In the future, any
president, this one or another one, when they request us to raise the debt
ceiling, it will not be clean anymore. This is just the first step. This, we
anticipate, will take us into 2013. Whoever the new president is, is
probably going to be asking us to raise the debt ceiling again. Then we will
go through the process again and see what we can continue to achieve in
connection with these debt ceiling requests of presidents to get our
financial house in order.

Previously, I've compared the debt ceiling to a bomb ticking away at the
base of the economy. We don't much notice it because it's always been there
and, despite a couple of close calls, it's never gone off. But that doesn't
mean it won't ever go off. Particularly if these sorts of showdowns become
the norm. 

And even if it doesn't go off, Congress's decision to make the risk of
default more visible might well be enough to scare the markets. If you were
an investor, would you want to put your money in a country that regularly
held bitter partisan brawls over whether you would be paid back? Or would,
say, German bonds begin looking like a comparatively better bet? 

We have an increasingly polarized country. We have an increasingly
dysfunctional Congress. One way to respond would be to make it easier for
Congress to operate in a partisan manner and to work to reduce the risk that
gridlock and grandstanding could harm the country. But that, of course,
won't happen, as the people who could rewrite the rules are part of that
dysfunctional system, and answer to our increasingly polarized political
parties. And so we're raising the stakes rather than lowering them. We're
setting up the exact sort of catastrophe we should be laboring to avoid.

Hearing McConnell's comments last night, economist Jared Bernstein was
shocked. "This is not the way of great nations," he wrote
<http://jaredbernsteinblog.com/adventures-in-tv-land/?utm_source=feedburner&;
utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+JaredBernstein+%28Jared+Bernstein%29> .
I disagree. The political system that doesn't modernize and eventually finds
its vulnerabilities exploited by interest-group pressure, internal divisions
and reckless politicians? This is certainly the way of great nations. It's
the way they fall.



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