The US Economy (Art#2)
Health of the US Economy
by John Koraska
Revision: October 9, 2007
“With Congress, every time they
make a joke, it’s a law
And every time they make a law it’s a joke.”
Will Rogers
“The Road to Hell is paved with Good Intentions!”
The U.S. economic super-highway now
being traveled may have a similar destination. The character and moral fiber
of the United States of America is crossing the threshold of an era of
enormous challenges. Conflicting policies, philosophies and beliefs will be
severely tested.
Impotence of Policy Makers
The prospect for future prosperity of the United
States is increasingly more uncertain and depressing. The cumulative results of significant
defects embedded in U S tax and welfare law are rapidly approaching an epic
economic crisis. Both the government and the banking system appear powerless
to avoid an inevitable economic relapse.
Phony
Money breeds Unjust Law
Real money that represents a “Store of Value” is “the”
bedrock foundation for a healthy economy and a strong nation. During the
Great Depression, “New Deal” legislation that violated constitutional
restraints by creating artificial fiat money has engendered a complex
array of defective laws that has robbed citizens the freedom to decide for
themselves what is in their own best interests. To preserve individual
Freedom there is no more important option than the inalienable right to save
money that represents a repository of wealth as a means of attending his own
affairs by preserving the fruits of labor and responsible financial conduct.
Since the 2001 recession there
have been many economic developments in the USA that indicate economic good
health. Measured by public and private statistics, indexes and surveys; the
U.S. economy currently (Oct 2007) appears strong. Employment is high,
business enjoys double digit profits and the economy is generally viewed as
vibrant. However; beneath the “numbers”, there exists an undercurrent
of public unease about the future health of the U.S. economy. That anxiety is
not without merit.
Revitalization of the economy is
not without costs. Each cyclical recovery over the past several decades has
required more stimulation than the one that preceded it. This one has taken
the largest deficit spending in history, 13 successive interest rate cuts by
the Federal Reserve, two massive tax cuts, three wars (War on Terrorism,
Afghanistan and Iraq), establishment of another redundant bureaucracy
(Homeland Security), massive tax incentives (i.e. Capital Gain and Dividend
tax rate reductions to 15%), significant growth in Money Supply, short term
negative interest rates, a tax induced housing ‘boom’ and a ‘low-interest’
induced mortgage refinancing ‘Boom’ to emerge from a relatively modest
recession.
Until 2005, strong housing
activity contributed significantly to national economic vigor. A prolonged
reversal of this vital force (and contiguous factors) might now lead to
the next recession, possibly in 2008. The cheap money to finance this ‘Boom’
has decimated savings and punished savers to a degree not seen since the early
1980s. During the 5 year period 1978 to 1982 inflation reduced purchasing
power of the US Dollar by 50%.
The combined force of a
depreciating currency, US government fiscal and Federal Reserve
monetary policies have shattered incentives to save. Tax penalties
combined with the inflation impact on earned interest and capital; results in
negative yields on savings accounts. Further complicating matters for US
savers, is the over 40% devaluation of the US Dollar against the Euro since
Jan 2002. Domestic inflation coupled with global devaluation of the dollar has
created a highly volatile economic environment that is neither manageable nor
sustainable.
Recent Fed actions, that injected
billions$ into the Sub-prime mortgage market, and deeper than expected cuts
in the Discount and Fed Funds (interest) rates signaled a reversal in
priorities of fighting inflation and support for the US dollar. These sudden
policy changes are opposite the actions taken by Paul Volker to fight
inflation and lure foreign investment by raising interest rates to historic
highs in the late 1970s, early 1980s. The current Fed’s preference to
reinvigorate a weakening economy will have significant long-term, inflationary
impact.
The US
Economy is Floundering in Oceans of Debt
Fueled by unsustainable levels of debt and
Trillions$ in unfunded social obligations, the U.S. Economic Ship of State is
cruising in uncharted waters. Failure of U.S. public policy (federal,
state and local) has created perilous social and economic conditions that have
accelerated beyond control. Groundwork for these dire conditions has evolved
with defective policies begun during the Great Depression. The age of citizen
virtue has been replaced by an age of consumerism characterized by greed,
manipulation and power stimulated by phony money and faulty tax and welfare
laws.
This generation's buy now, pay later consumers realize and have accepted the
notion that painless means of correcting flawed economic policies is
impossible. The philosophy of debtism was created when the US government began
to ignore Constitutional restraints on its power. Responsible citizenship was
gradually replaced by consumers who, for the first time, were able to spend
without benefit of savings; such was the power of the new plastic redeemable
for goods and services worldwide. With this evolved the new American
debt-slave. Buying stuff we don't need with money we don't have has become the
American way of life.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson recently asked Congress to increase the
government debt ceiling by $850 billion from $8.965 trillion to $9.82
trillion, the fifth increase since Bush took office in 2001. It took this
country 205 years (1776 to 1981) to accumulate $1 trillion in government debt
that is limited by "statute," often referred to as the Public or National
Debt. It has taken only 26 years to exceed $9 trillion, an 800 percent
increase.
The $9 trillion federal
debt is the tip of the iceberg. Total contractual American Debt
(federal/state/local plus federal debt to trust funds, business, household,
domestic financial sectors) exceeds $50 trillion. The Net Present Value
(projected future expenditures less future revenues, in current dollars) of
under-funded U.S. government explicit and implicit obligations such as
Military and Civil Service retirement programs, Social Security, Medicare,
etc., add another $45 trillion to the nation's debt.
Total American debt can be conservatively estimated at no less than $100
trillion. Not included are costs of means-tested Social Insurance entitlements
such as Medicaid, Supplemental Security Income, State Children's Health
Insurance Program, and Veterans’ medical and pension benefits, plus
discretionary government subsidies.
Also not included, above, are other discretionary government expenses
(resulting
from Transfer Payments inserted in the IRS tax code) such as the Earned Income
Tax Credit (EITC) that returns more than $40 billion per year of FICA and FIT
taxes to
eligible, low-wage households. Loss of revenues to the federal government
because
of “interest expense deductions”, Child Tax Credits and other
deductions/exemptions from gross income tax liabilities of businesses and
households further compound accounting complexity to a degree that development
of rational monetary and fiscal policies is a practical impossibility.
Defective public policy has created an accounting charade that is
impenetrable. The bottom line is it is impossible to accurately determine the
amounts of total debt and cost of future obligations being passed on to future
generations. That fact will not forever escape the attention of domestic and
foreign lenders or credit rating services.
Trust Fund Myths contribute to
U.S. Budget Deceptions
Alleged Trust Fund
surpluses are spent on other budget priorities (like the War in Iraq and an
expansion of the Children’s’ Health Insurance program) and the interest to
Trust Funds is paid with IOUs. If this deceitful practice was abruptly
discontinued the government would be required to sell the debt to the public
and pay a minimum of 5% interest on $3.9 trillion ($195 billion, annually at
current debt levels) causing the US budget deficit to skyrocket. In August
2007, the Congressional Budget Office lowered its FY2007 budget deficit
estimate to $158 billion, as economic growth bolsters tax revenue. Add in the
$195 billion of IOUs the Government remits to “Trust Funds” and the real
2007 deficit estimate is $353 billion.
The U.S. government does
not provide honest accounting of financial resources to pay for future Social
Insurance obligations. Proper amortization of un-contracted, under-funded
pension (Social Security) and health care (Medicare) benefits is not
difficult. Deceptive accounting is employed simply because the government
wishes to hide the truth from the general public. The truth cannot lie dormant
forever. “You can fool some of the people some of the time, but you cannot
fool all the people all the time!”
The dilemma facing Politicians today, is they are unable to figure out how to
tell “Baby Boomers” (at the threshold of retirement) that there is no way they
can get all the benefits they were promised during their working years.
Political “Promises” are not “Contracts”. Unlike military retiree pay that is
a contractual entitlement between the government and a service member, Social
Security retiree compensation (benefit) rely on political promises that have
already been compromised.
Social Security Trust Fund Myth
The Social Security Act of 1935
requires all surplus contribution amounts be invested only in US government
securities or Securities guaranteed by the US government.
There is not now, nor has there
ever been a surplus of Social Security Trust Funds. The so-called current
"surplus" (more money coming in via the FICA tax than is paid out to
beneficiaries) in the Old-Age, Survivors and Disability Insurance (OASDI)
Trust Funds is grossly misleading. A review of the facts, affirm there is an
actual net cash flow deficit. See
Critique of the 2006 Social Security Trustees Report for details.
An examination of
federal policies and accounting practices exposes disinformation that is
designed to conceal government deception. The media is as guilty of covering
up the truth as is the government. Current OASDI Trust Fund assets (government
IOUs) are offset by an equal amount of US Treasury debt. The OASDI Trust Fund
assets and projected surpluses (through 2017) reflect gross amounts of
combined Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes reported to the
Social Security Administration. These gross amounts have not been adjusted for
corporate expensing of FICA taxes that significantly reduce the actual net
(cash) revenue received by the U.S. Treasury. This accounting scheme is one of
the most disingenuous deceptions ever perpetrated in the history of mankind.
Social Security Act of 1935
Established
Two Direct
Income Taxes on Wage Income
http://www.ssa.gov/history/35acviii.html#Excise
"SECTION 801. (Paraphrasing)
“In addition to other taxes, employees shall pay an income tax on 1% of wages
up to $3,000 and every employer shall pay an excise tax on individuals in his
employ of 1% on wages up to $3,000 on each employee...... "(Note: The
initial 1% was scheduled to increase in the early years of the program.)
FICA Income
Tax Deduction from Gross Individual Income forbidden by Law
"SEC. 803. For the purposes of
the income tax imposed by Title I of the Revenue Act of 1934 or by any Act of
Congress in substitution therefore, the tax imposed by section 801 shall not
be allowed as a deduction to the taxpayer in computing his net income for the
year in which such tax is deducted from his wages.” This explicit deduction
prohibition applies only to Individual Tax returns.
Business Expense Deduction of FIT & FICA Income
Taxes
An employer may keep
approximately one third of the individual Federal Income Taxes (FIT) and
Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) income taxes withheld from employee
paychecks; although workers are lead to believe these taxes are sent to the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) or the Social Security Administration (SSA).
Deduction of employee FICA
and FIT Taxes as Wages
IRS Publication 535
(2004), Business Expenses
http://www.irs.gov/publications/p535/ch06.html
IRS QUOTE: 6. Taxes...
Employment Taxes:
If you have employees, you must
withhold various taxes from your employees' pay. Most employers must withhold
their employees' share of social security and Medicare taxes along with state
and federal income taxes. You may also need to pay certain employment taxes
from your own funds. These include your share of social security and Medicare
taxes as an employer, along with unemployment taxes.
You should treat the taxes you withhold from your
employees' pay as wages on your tax return. You can deduct the employment
taxes you must pay from your own funds as taxes. You pay your employee
$18,000 a year. However, after you withhold various taxes, your employee
receives $14,500. You also pay an additional $1,500 in employment taxes. You
should deduct the full $18,000 as wages. You can deduct the $1,500 you pay
from your own funds as taxes.
UNQUOTE
2006 Social Security Trustee Summary
The 2006 Social Security Trustees
“Summary of 2005 Trust Fund Financial Operations” reported that “The OASDI
Trust Funds received total income of 701.8 billion (Contributions 592.9,
Taxation of Benefits 14.9 and Interest 94.3) and expended 529.9 billion.
Assets increased by $171.8 billion in 2005 to $1.86 trillion because income to
each fund exceeded expenditures."
Comment: The Trustee statements
are misleading. The OASDI income is over stated because the “gross amounts”
of IOUs deposited in the Trust Funds have not been adjusted for the Business
Expense deductions. The “net” FICA taxes collected by the IRS are less
than Social Security expenses. Also not shown as Trust Fund expenses are
Earned Income Tax Credits (EITC) that return FICA taxes paid by eligible low
wage employees.
The 2006 OASDI Trustees Report
stated: “Under the intermediate assumptions, the OASDI cost rate is projected
to decline slightly during 2006 through 2008 and then increase up to the
current level within the next 2 years. It then begins to increase rapidly and
first exceeds the income rate in 2017, producing cash-flow deficits
thereafter. Despite these cash-flow deficits, beginning in 2017, redemption of
trust fund assets will allow continuation of full benefit payments on a timely
basis until 2040, when the trust funds will become exhausted.”
Comment: The intermediate
assumptions are also misleading because, as explained above, the gross
contributions recorded in OASDI Trust funds are significantly less than the
net FICA collections by the Treasury.
Why Most Americans Don't Save
The simple explanation of
“Why Americans don’t save” is there are more incentives to borrow than to save
and too often the real cost of living a middle-class, modern day life-style
increases faster than real net wage income. Because of the inflation
tax and large defects in socialistic tax and welfare policies based generally
on fiat money and debtism; Americans are heavily influenced to spend beyond
their means.
The IRS tax code is loaded with penalties on wage and interest income and
incentives to buy now and pay later. Wage income is taxed twice (FIT and FICA)
and interest income is taxed at nominal normal rates, unlike capital gains and
dividend income which enjoy special (15%)rate preferences. Both wage and
interest income is further subjected to the hidden inflation tax that is
arguably the most destructive among all taxes.
Often the “take home pay” of millions of middle class workers is less than
typical living expenses and they are compelled to borrow, further compounding
the problem. They simply do not have a surplus of money or the will to save or
invest. Those who do enjoy discretionary income for savings are penalized if
they choose to do so. Interest on savings suffers from low, artificially
contrived rates that are often lower than the combined effects of hidden
inflation and direct income taxes.
The Federal Reserve recently lowered its prime lending rate from 5 ¼ to 4 ¾
percent, with rumors of more rate cuts to follow. Having abandoned the fight
against inflation and to forestall a possible recession, those who save will
be further penalized by the Fed’s rush to calm nervous financial markets.
Average annual inflation (measured by the CPI-U, all items) since 1971
(when the dollar became fiat) is 4.6%.
The ultimate hypocrisy is for the U.S. Government, arguably the most wasteful
dis-organization in the universe, to encourage citizens to save when the
governments’ own record of piling up inestimable debt and making promises it
can’t keep is a perfect model of profligacy, fraud and financial
mismanagement.
As of July 31, 2007 the Total Public Debt Outstanding (Debt Held by the Public
$5 trillion + Intra-governmental Holding $3.9) was $8.9 Trillion. Of the Debt
Held by the Public $2.191 Trillion was held by foreigners or 43.8%. Estimated
average rate of interest paid on the public debt is 5%. Percentage of the
Total Debt borrowed from so-called Trust Funds is 43.8% that the Treasury
doesn’t have to pay real interest on.
As economic reality and the truth emerge, public outrage will detonate and
current politicians will be blamed for decades of cumulative government and
banking mismanagement and deception. It will not be a pleasant time for
elected officials.
There are no economic
scenarios politicians can offer that can solve this problem. Absent public
outrage, that is unlikely - because of public apathy -, until the bottom falls
out, the only recourse available to middle-class workers is class-action
lawsuits filed in federal court across the country, demanding that government
STOP misappropriating their retirement “nest eggs”. Even if unsuccessful such
action will scare hell out of the politicians.
Savers are forced to pay income
tax on actual monetary losses in terms of real purchasing power. Debtors are
rewarded with tax deductions and the ability to pay loans back with cheaper
money. The
illusory gains stolen by inflation are subjected to income taxes, thus
government is rewarded by phony money and deceptive tax and welfare laws at
the expense of prudent tax-paying Americans.
This phony money operation could
continue only as long as the US enjoyed dollar hegemony (a trading currency
monopoly that the US has enjoyed since WWII). It is becoming more evident
that the US$ is increasingly vulnerable to the Euro and other foreign currency
and trade challenges, as chronic deficits and account imbalances persist. The
perilous risks to the US economy are of our own making. Phony money and
defective policies encourages Americans to live beyond their means. The heavy
price that must be paid for this cumulative misbehavior is rapidly coming due.
Postponing and political jaw-boning the problems will not make them disappear.
Delay only increases the costs and the painful consequences.
Neither Democrats nor Republicans
seem to grasp the enormous risks of an economy that is being driven by
consumerism and funded by increasing levels of debt. Their lack of knowledge
or action is important. Without full political understanding and contentious
public airing of the cause-and-effect of uncontrollable debt, there is no way
to develop a consensus for confronting the problem and finding solutions.
Lawmakers and bankers are more embroiled in reacting to situations beyond
their control than trying to fix the underlying problems. A solution to the
national “Debt” predicament becomes even more intractable as a result of the
bitter rivalry between the political parties.
Balancing the Rights of Employers
and Workers
A fundamental dilemma facing the
nation is how to develop policies that fairly balance the needs of workers and
their employers. Workers must earn incomes that provide as a minimum, a
moderate living wage with a cushion for savings, to meet future needs such as
retirement. Companies must make a profit with a cushion for investments to
enhance their own development. Contented employees are a company’s best
assets. A worker’s best security is a good paying job.
When balance is biased toward one
side of the competition, the other side must inevitably suffer the
consequences; unless there is an intervening force. It is the function and
responsibility of Government to promote the proper balance among contending
forces. It is not the role of government to choose winners and losers with tax
and welfare laws that are indecipherable to the public it was created to
serve. It is a fact that current government tax, welfare, and immigration
policies weigh heavily against workers, favoring profits over wage income.
Another problem facing workers is
insuring adequate funds are available for retirement. Employers have over the
past quarter century shifted away from Defined Benefit retirement contracts
toward Defined Contributions. The value of these retirement nest-eggs are
subject to the future performance of financial markets that may suffer greatly
because underlying debt and unredeemable social obligations may cause a
downgrade of US Credit worthiness.
Because of current tax laws,
funds withdrawn from tax-deferred accounts are subject to tax even if losses
occur within the individual accounts. Many of those who suffer losses will be
further penalized because of the income tax on SS benefits. Politicians have
already proven they cannot be relied upon to keep their promises.
After decades of political
promises that benefits WOULD NEVER be taxed since income taxes had already
been extracted on the contributions; in 1984 income taxes on benefits began.
The tax on SS benefits is concealed under a labyrinth of complex formulas and
legalese that makes it difficult to determine the amount of the tax, but the
cumulative annual amounts have grown from $3 billion (1984) to $16.9 billion
(2006) and is projected to go higher as inflation pushes benefits above tax
thresholds (not indexed for inflation) established for this relatively
new form of government confiscation.
Development
of Reform Strategies
Unredeemable Debt and Unfunded
Social obligations are like a ticking bomb hidden beneath the US Economy. The
road to perpetual prosperity cannot be achieved without creating a just tax
and welfare systems and a transparent means of government and business
accounting. See
Principles of a Fair Tax System
All great historic advances are
surrounded in controversy. The same can be said about significant corrections
to defective government social and economic policies. The test of time and
wisdom is how to sustain the former while reforming government. The current
dilemma is how to change course from perpetual debt to perpetual prosperity
without destroying the economy. The current economic quagmire developed over
decades and the transition back to sanity will take years .
Strategies for development of
fundamental reforms of federal tax, welfare and banking policies, require
identification of defects in current practices that have generated the current
perilous financial conditions. The seeds of ultimate economic destruction need
to be uprooted and replaced by sound, sustainable, time-tested policies.
For openers, a primary goal must
be the dilution of powers now exercised by the central government and Federal
Reserve bankers. Centralized government management of vast resources and
constituencies simply do not work. Without question, defective fiscal and
monetary policies have caused the U.S. to change status from Creditor to
Debtor nation. Unarguably, long term economic prospects are deteriorating and
future prosperity of this great nation is becoming more uncertain.
Solving Trust Fund problems of compounding
government debt require elimination of fundamental defects in federal
accounting and tax and welfare laws. Adopting accounting procedures and Trust
Fund guidelines government imposes on business would be a good place to start.
A
good place to start would be to limit all Trust Fund investments to assets
external to the Federal Government.
One solution to the National
deficit and debt problems is to change the provision that allows for business
expense deduction of employee taxes (business can partially recover from this
change by passing the expense on to consumers of their goods and services).
Another alternative is to eliminate the corporate income tax and replace it
with a 1% or 2% total business receipts tax. If compelled to make a choice,
most corporations would likely opt for the former instead of the latter.
Government revenues from the Corporate Income Tax are generally nullified by
compliance and enforcement expenses of business and government.
The ultimate irony is the
government is spending "gross" FICA income like it is real time deposits; but
"net" FICA income after "business expensing" falls short of current Social
Security expenditures. To further complicate matters, future benefits are
calculated on combined "gross wage contributions" that overstate
"net income" by more than a third. Why does the US Treasury owe over $2
trillion to the OASDI Trust Funds when the program has been running continuous
negative net cash flows and alleged surpluses (money spent by the
government that wasn’t received) have already been spent on other
priorities? Can anyone offer a rational explanation for this mess? And how can future beneficiaries expect to get paid what they are
being promised when it can be proven that current Social Security expenditures
exceed current "tax adjusted" net income? Ask your congressman or senator to
explain it to you.
The public will
blame
the politicians and the politicians will point to each other. For most folks a
more accurate culprit to
blame
may be a mirror reflection of self.
These
comments were added to the article on October 10, 2007
There is "NO" Social Security Surplus!
Even the most fiscally
responsible candidate running for President of the United States , U.S. House
representative, Rep Ron Paul; does not understand government accounting. In
his recent “Ron Paul’s Texas Straight Talk” weekly column
“Keeping Promises to Seniors” stated:
Quote: In reality, those dollars
are just IOUs the government is writing to itself when it borrows from the
fund to spend on unrelated programs. There are no real assets in the Social
Security Trust Fund. This is similar to taking money out of your savings
account, spending it, then replacing it with an IOU to yourself, and calling
that IOU an asset.
In addition, this money we owe to
our seniors is not even included in official budget deficit figures. In
fiscal year 2006 alone, $185 billion was borrowed from Social Security. The
official deficit was reported to be $248 billion. The actual deficit for 2006
would be $433 billion when combining the two. This sort of accounting would
land private sector executives in prison for fraud. Unquote
The part Dr. Paul (nor any of his
cohorts) seem to be unable to grasp is in 2006 there was no $185 billion to
borrow from Social Security. While gross FICA tax collections reported in the
OASDI (Old Age, Survivors and Dependents Insurance) Trust exceed Social
Security cash benefits; the net income after the (Business Expense
Deduction of FICA taxes) deposited in the U.S. Treasury was billions of
dollars less than OASDI expenditures.
The bottom line is the US
government is commingling and counting money it doesn’t receive, spending it
on programs it can’t afford; and ingenuously converting the negative cash flow
into imaginary surpluses. Unwarranted Treasury debt is created with IOUs to
Trust Funds that are really NOT Trust Funds, but defective accounting
practices that conceal a “Shell Game” used to determine under funded, future
benefits. Perhaps defects in government accounting may be better explained by
using an analogy:
EXAMPLE: John Smith is a wealthy
politician in the 35% nominal tax bracket that itemizes deductions. Smith pays
the School District $10,000 in taxes. He then deducts the $10,000 from his FIT
tax return. The deduction reduces Smith’s income tax liability by $3,500. The
net result is the school gets the gross $10,000. But the US Treasury gets
$3,500 less than it would have received if the tax deduction did not exist.
The gross amounts of the combined
FICA taxes (OASDI) based on wage income are reported by businesses to the SS
administration. SS uses the gross individual wages as part of a complex
formula to determine future benefits. The net amount of FICA tax cash revenue
to the Treasury is approximately 35% less than that reported to SS because of
the Business Expense Deduction of wages, FICA and FIT taxes).
These deceptive accounting
practices and other flawed policies have converted the Public Retirement
program from one created to assist low income workers to one that pays the
highest benefits to those with the least need and/or entitlement to, and pays
the lowest benefits to those below poverty lines.
"The opinion of
10,000 men is of no value if none of them know anything about the subject."
-- Marcus Aurelius