August 7, 2011
Credibility, Chutzpah And Debt

By PAUL KRUGMAN

https://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/08/opinion/credibility-chutzpah-and-debt.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print

To understand the furor over the decision by Standard & Poor’s, the rating 
agency, to downgrade U.S. government debt, you have to hold in your mind two 
seemingly (but not actually) contradictory ideas. The first is that America is 
indeed no longer the stable, reliable country it once was. The second is that 
S.& P. itself has even lower credibility; it’s the last place anyone should 
turn for judgments about our nation’s prospects.

Let’s start with S.& P.’s lack of credibility. If there’s a single word that 
best describes the rating agency’s decision to downgrade America, it’s chutzpah 
— traditionally defined by the example of the young man who kills his parents, 
then pleads for mercy because he’s an orphan.

America’s large budget deficit is, after all, primarily the result of the 
economic slump that followed the 2008 financial crisis. And S.& P., along with 
its sister rating agencies, played a major role in causing that crisis, by 
giving AAA ratings to mortgage-backed assets that have since turned into toxic 
waste.

Nor did the bad judgment stop there. Notoriously, S.& P. gave Lehman Brothers, 
whose collapse triggered a global panic, an A rating right up to the month of 
its demise. And how did the rating agency react after this A-rated firm went 
bankrupt? By issuing a report denying that it had done anything wrong.

So these people are now pronouncing on the creditworthiness of the United 
States of America?

Wait, it gets better. Before downgrading U.S. debt, S.& P. sent a preliminary 
draft of its press release to the U.S. Treasury. Officials there quickly 
spotted a $2 trillion error in S.& P.’s calculations. And the error was the 
kind of thing any budget expert should have gotten right. After discussion, S.& 
P. conceded that it was wrong — and downgraded America anyway, after removing 
some of the economic analysis from its report.

As I’ll explain in a minute, such budget estimates shouldn’t be given much 
weight in any case. But the episode hardly inspires confidence in S.& P.’s 
judgment.

More broadly, the rating agencies have never given us any reason to take their 
judgments about national solvency seriously. It’s true that defaulting nations 
were generally downgraded before the event. But in such cases the rating 
agencies were just following the markets, which had already turned on these 
problem debtors.

And in those rare cases where rating agencies have downgraded countries that, 
like America now, still had the confidence of investors, they have consistently 
been wrong. Consider, in particular, the case of Japan, which S.& P. downgraded 
back in 2002. Well, nine years later Japan is still able to borrow freely and 
cheaply. As of Friday, in fact, the interest rate on Japanese 10-year bonds was 
just 1 percent.

So there is no reason to take Friday’s downgrade of America seriously. These 
are the last people whose judgment we should trust.

And yet America does have big problems.

These problems have very little to do with short-term or even medium-term 
budget arithmetic. The U.S. government is having no trouble borrowing to cover 
its current deficit. It’s true that we’re building up debt, on which we’ll 
eventually have to pay interest. But if you actually do the math, instead of 
intoning big numbers in your best Dr. Evil voice, you discover that even very 
large deficits over the next few years will have remarkably little impact on 
U.S. fiscal sustainability.

No, what makes America look unreliable isn’t budget math, it’s politics. And 
please, let’s not have the usual declarations that both sides are at fault. Our 
problems are almost entirely one-sided — specifically, they’re caused by the 
rise of an extremist right that is prepared to create repeated crises rather 
than give an inch on its demands.

The truth is that as far as the straight economics goes, America’s long-run 
fiscal problems shouldn’t be all that hard to fix. It’s true that an aging 
population and rising health care costs will, under current policies, push 
spending up faster than tax receipts. But the United States has far higher 
health costs than any other advanced country, and very low taxes by 
international standards. If we could move even part way toward international 
norms on both these fronts, our budget problems would be solved.

So why can’t we do that? Because we have a powerful political movement in this 
country that screamed “death panels” in the face of modest efforts to use 
Medicare funds more effectively, and preferred to risk financial catastrophe 
rather than agree to even a penny in additional revenues.

The real question facing America, even in purely fiscal terms, isn’t whether 
we’ll trim a trillion here or a trillion there from deficits. It is whether the 
extremists now blocking any kind of responsible policy can be defeated and 
marginalized.

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