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View Full Version : Ron Paul Appeals To America: "Default Now, Or Suffer A More Expensive Crisis Later"



Ares
22nd July 2011, 02:27 PM
By Ron Paul, op-ed first posted in Bloomberg

Default Now, Or Suffer A More Expensive Crisis Later

Debate over the debt ceiling has reached a fever pitch in recent weeks, with each side trying to outdo the other in a game of political chicken. If you believe some of the things that are being written, the world will come to an end if the U.S. defaults on even the tiniest portion of its debt.

In strict terms, the default being discussed will occur if the U.S. fails to meet its debt obligations, through failure to pay either interest or principal due a bondholder. Proponents of raising the debt ceiling claim that a default on Aug. 2 is unprecedented and will result in calamity (never mind that this is simply an arbitrary date, easily changed, marking a congressional recess). My expectations of such a scenario are more sanguine.

The U.S. government defaulted at least three times on its obligations during the 20th century.

-- In 1934, the government banned ownership of gold and eliminated the right to exchange gold certificates for gold coins. It then immediately revalued gold from $20.67 per troy ounce to $35, thus devaluing the dollar holdings of all Americans by 40 percent.

-- From 1934 to 1968, the federal government continued to issue and redeem silver certificates, notes that circulated as legal tender that could be redeemed for silver coins or silver bars. In 1968, Congress unilaterally reneged on this obligation, too.

-- From 1934 to 1971, foreign governments were permitted by the U.S. government to exchange their dollars for gold through the gold window. In 1971, President Richard Nixon severed this final link between the dollar and gold by closing the gold window, thus in effect defaulting once again on a debt obligation of the U.S. government.
Unlimited Spending

No longer constrained by any sort of commodity backing, the federal government was now free to engage in almost unlimited fiscal profligacy, the only check on its spending being the market’s appetite for Treasury debt. Despite the defaults in 1934, 1968 and 1971, world markets have been only too willing to purchase Treasury debt and thereby fund the government’s deficit spending. If these major defaults didn’t result in decreased investor appetite for U.S. obligations, I see no reason why defaulting on a small amount of debt this August would cause any major changes.

The national debt now stands at just over $14 trillion, while net total liabilities are estimated at over $200 trillion. The government is insolvent, as there is no way that this massive sum of liabilities can ever be paid off. Successive Congresses and administrations have shown absolutely no restraint when it comes to the budget process, and the idea that either of the two parties is serious about getting our fiscal house in order is laughable.
Boom and Bust

The Austrian School’s theory of the business cycle describes how loose central bank monetary policy causes booms and busts: It drives down interest rates below the market rate, lowering the cost of borrowing; encourages malinvestment; and causes economic miscalculation as resources are diverted from the highest value use as reflected in true consumer preferences. Loose monetary policy caused the dot-com bubble and the housing bubble, and now is causing the government debt bubble.

For far too long, the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy and quantitative easing have kept interest rates artificially low, enabling the government to drastically increase its spending by funding its profligacy through new debt whose service costs were lower than they otherwise would have been.

Neither Republicans nor Democrats sought to end this gravy train, with one party prioritizing war spending and the other prioritizing welfare spending, and with both supporting both types of spending. But now, with the end of the second round of quantitative easing, the federal funds rate at the zero bound, and the debt limit maxed out, Congress finds itself in a real quandary.
Hard Decisions

It isn’t too late to return to fiscal sanity. We could start by canceling out the debt held by the Federal Reserve, which would clear $1.6 trillion under the debt ceiling. Or we could cut trillions of dollars in spending by bringing our troops home from overseas, making gradual reforms to Social Security and Medicare, and bringing the federal government back within the limits envisioned by the Constitution. Yet no one is willing to step up to the plate and make the hard decisions that are necessary. Everyone wants to kick the can down the road and believe that deficit spending can continue unabated.

Unless major changes are made today, the U.S. will default on its debt sooner or later, and it is certainly preferable that it be sooner rather than later.

If the government defaults on its debt now, the consequences undoubtedly will be painful in the short term. The loss of its AAA rating will raise the cost of issuing new debt, but this is not altogether a bad thing. Higher borrowing costs will ensure that the government cannot continue the same old spending policies. Budgets will have to be brought into balance (as the cost of servicing debt will be so expensive as to preclude future debt financing of government operations), so hopefully, in the long term, the government will return to sound financial footing.
Raising the Ceiling

The alternative to defaulting now is to keep increasing the debt ceiling, keep spending like a drunken sailor, and hope that the default comes after we die. A future default won’t take the form of a missed payment, but rather will come through hyperinflation. The already incestuous relationship between the Federal Reserve and the Treasury will grow even closer as the Fed begins to purchase debt directly from the Treasury and monetizes debt on a scale that makes QE2 look like a drop in the bucket. Imagine the societal breakdown of Weimar Germany, but in a country five times as large. That is what we face if we do not come to terms with our debt problem immediately.

Default will be painful, but it is all but inevitable for a country as heavily indebted as the U.S. Just as pumping money into the system to combat a recession only ensures an unsustainable economic boom and a future recession worse than the first, so too does continuously raising the debt ceiling only forestall the day of reckoning and ensure that, when it comes, it will be cataclysmic.

We have a choice: default now and take our medicine, or put it off as long as possible, when the effects will be much worse.

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/ron-paul-appeals-america-default-now-or-suffer-more-expensive-crisis-later

midnight rambler
22nd July 2011, 02:30 PM
This situation is far worse than what the country faced in '33. It is moment of truth time for the American people.

Ares
22nd July 2011, 08:41 PM
This situation is far worse than what the country faced in '33. It is moment of truth time for the American people.

Agreed if the polls are any indicator. The people want the government to default. 42% don't want it raised at all, compared to 22% who do, and the idiotic 35% who "don't know."

http://www.gallup.com/poll/148454/debt-ceiling-increase-remains-unpopular-americans.aspx

General of Darkness
22nd July 2011, 09:00 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEP8cQF-QC4&feature=player_embedded

midnight rambler
22nd July 2011, 09:24 PM
Agreed if the polls are any indicator. The people want the government to default. 42% don't want it raised at all, compared to 22% who do, and the idiotic 35% who "don't know."

http://www.gallup.com/poll/148454/debt-ceiling-increase-remains-unpopular-americans.aspx

There will always be that 30% of the population which are hardcore rubes who enthusiastically lap up WHATEVER the gov.msm serves up to them as if it were manna from Heaven. This is the 30% who voted for 0bunghole.

Libertytree
23rd July 2011, 06:20 AM
There will always be that 30% of the population which are hardcore rubes who enthusiastically lap up WHATEVER the gov.msm serves up to them as if it were manna from Heaven. This is the 30% who voted for 0bunghole.

I had a conversation with one of those hardcore rubes, a very educated rube at that but dumb as a sack of wet washrags. He invoked the too big to fail mantra on the US .gov and that it just could NOT happen in America. I also mentioned the 12T the Fed spent on the bailout but since the nightly news didn't mention it it must not have happened and my source for such a story had to be some kind of wacked out right wing conspiracy source. I told him it was the GAO and still he called BS....I needed a cold beer and some fresh air.

midnight rambler
23rd July 2011, 06:36 AM
a very educated rube at that but dumb as a sack of wet washragsThese are the most dangerous ones because they have means and they use those means to actively enable the Death Cult. What those rubes don't get is that once the Death Cult has used them up and then they subsequently become aware they've been used up and discarded like a spent condom the Death Cult will eliminate them just as Yuri Bezmenov correctly pointed out.

Libertytree
23rd July 2011, 07:06 AM
These are the most dangerous ones because they have means and they use those means to actively enable the Death Cult. What those rubes don't get is that once the Death Cult has used them up and then they subsequently become aware they've been used up and discarded like a spent condom the Death Cult will eliminate them just as Yuri Bezmenov correctly pointed out.

I might also add that this person works for the state .gov and I suspect that any mention of not just default but collapse as well kicks in the denial mode and sends chills of terror into their belief system. They've all been led to believe that working for the state was THE safest place to gain employment.

midnight rambler
23rd July 2011, 07:09 AM
I might also add that this person works for the state .gov and I suspect that any mention of not just default but collapse as well kicks in the denial mode and sends chills of terror into their belief system. They've all been led to believe that working for the state was THE safest place to gain employment.

Working for the gov.org is the only place of employment for those who are unable to earn an honest living in the real world, just another class of parasite.

palani
23rd July 2011, 07:11 AM
Default already occurred. In the early '80s with interest rates around 15% Treasury 30 year bonds were going for around 9%. People who bought these bonds took quite a bit less for them than other commercial paper. Maybe for the safety. Maybe for patriotic reasons. Who knows.

After 25 years of paying interest on these bonds Treasury decided (probably Congress decided for them) to no longer pay ANY further interest on the bonds. They could be cashed in and the amount on the face would be paid but they defaulted on their contract to pay the interest.

Another instance can be considered to be the Gramm-Rudman act of the 1970's where federal contractors were paid less than they contracted for based upon the budget deficit.

The federal government has been an ongoing default ever since Lincoln decided to pass 1040 bonds.

mick silver
23rd July 2011, 08:54 AM
ron paul tells it like it is . he maybe the only man left in power that could fix the mess were in . i hope the people of this country wake up an see this before it to late . my dad would not know this country today it so sad we have moved this far to one side