On May 18, 2009, at 2:19 PM, Max B. Sawicky wrote:

You seem to imply that the availability of Gov securities reduces
consumption
of the rich.  If not, if their saving is no different, how are they
richer?

"The rich," at least the American rich, haven't been financing our deficit. Their holdings of Treasury securities ex-savings bonds, went from 6.6% of GDP at the end of 1999 to 0.6% at the end of 2008. The rest of world sector financed almost 80% of the increase in Treasury debt.

Re: the alleged debasement, the initial borrowing finances something.
Borrowing
v. taxes just changes when the bill is paid.  Present value of Gov
spending is more
likely to be increased by the use of borrowing, not reduced, since the
bill is
presented to future, richer generations.

You're ignoring debt service, which was over 4% of GDP in the Reagan years, and a rising debt/GDP ratio. It was 32% of GDP when Bush took office, and 44% when he left. It's likely to rise past 60% fairly soon.

And what has this debt been financing? Tax cuts for the rich and a military buildup. What will the future increases in debt finance? A stim program, yes, but also lots of bank bailouts. None of that makes us richer, or gives us any reason to be optimistic about the greater wealth of future generations.

Doug
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