Sunday, November 24, 2019

Fallacy of We

Leo Getz: You hungry? I'll call for anything you want. See this silk robe? Free.
Sgt Roger Murtaugh: It's not free. 
Leo Getz: Yes it is.
Sgt Roger Murtaugh: It's taxpayer's money.
Leo Getz: Same thing.
--Lethal Weapon 2

Article discusses the absurd claim that federal debt is not a problem because it is money that we owe to ourselves. The 'we owe it to ourselves' crowd argues that because government debt can be passed on to future generations, the debt can persist into perpetuity so long as people are willing to lend and government is able to service the debt. Moreover, because federal debt is owned by domestic citizens, the money used to repay debt doesn't leave the economy.

But, as the article points out, about 1/3 of federal debt is in fact owned by outsiders. In other words, we don't owe a substantial portion of federal debt to ourselves. We owe it to others.

A larger problem can be called 'the fallacy of us, we, and our.'  Individuals lend and borrow, not collectives. Individuals who incur federal debt are different from individuals who bear the burden of repaying the debt. The beneficiaries are people today who enjoy the borrowed funds and what they can purchase. However, future taxpayers are hurt, as they must repay the debt borrowed by previous generations.

However, the most fundamental problem is one not directly addressed in the article. Government debt constitutes borrowing by force. Sovereign debt is a contract between governments and private lenders with the promise that bond principal and interest will be repaid by citizens under threat of force. Confiscating economic resources by force distorts how those resources would have been allocated by individuals engaging freely in production and trade.

Moreover, when government knows that it can take resources at gunpoint, it will surely 'borrow' more, which leads to lower saving and, ultimately, to capital consumption over time.

The result is fewer resources available for investment and productivity improvement down the road. Prosperity, consequently, is restrained.

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