|
THE
IRONY of the United States’ current financial situation is that
it would be absolutely impossible for any business or private citizen to
ever wind up in such dire straits. It literally couldn’t happen, as
there are far too many safeguards that would kick in to prevent the sort
of uncontrolled, addictive descent into unprecedented debt (and deficit
spending) that we currently see gripping Washington D.C.
If com-panies spent this way, they would go bankrupt – their assets
auctioned off to repay investors. Private citizens? Their credit scores
would be ruined, and no financial institution would ever lend them money
again.
Yet as is so often the case, the U.S. Congress is not governed by the
fiscal realities the rest of us must face. In fact, whenever Congress
needs to borrow more money to fund bureaucratic bailouts, soaring
entitlement obligations or new deficit spending, it simply raises its
credit limit (or “debt ceiling”) to make these new unnecessary line
items appear to be legitimate.
Of course, words like “out-of-control” or “unsustainable” don’t
really cut it these days when it comes to Washington’s impending budget
disaster.
We are looking at nothing short of catastrophic recklessness – as
well as an unmitigated contempt for future generations that is likely to
cripple our nation’s economy for decades.
(Article continues below ads. Please note that Perspicacity Press does not necessarily endorse these ads.)
Our leaders are manipulating the nation’s credit limit so that they
are able to spend taxpayer money with impunity on a nonexistent
“recovery” – or in the case of the latest (and largest) proposed
manipulation, money that they have already spent on a nonexistent
“recovery.”
Rather than coming to grips with this crisis by cutting spending
obligations and working toward paying down the deficit, the U.S.
Congress is instead moving toward the largest-ever increase of its debt
ceiling – less than a year after raising the ceiling to its current
level of $12.1 trillion.
“We ought to pass a debt limit extension that gets us through next
year,” House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer said recently.
Actually, the House thought it had already done that, which goes to
show just how quickly these politicians are blowing through borrowed
money.
At the request of President Barack Obama’s administration, the House
voted earlier this year to raise the debt ceiling to $13 trillion, but
it now appears that even this stratospheric number will prove incapable
of containing the coming year’s spend-fest – complete with its record
$1.5 trillion deficit.
In fact, the national debt is expected to charge past the $13
trillion threshold by the middle of next summer, which assumes that the
federal government incurs no new obligations – like, for example, a
massive socialized medicine proposal.
So how high will Congress raise the ceiling? And here’s an even more
frightening question – what happens when that credit limit is surpassed?
Obviously we don’t need a crystal ball to answer the second question.
Congress will raise the debt ceiling as often as it wants – by as much
as it wants.
For example, after holding steady at $5.9 trillion from 1997-2002,
the debt ceiling has more than doubled over the last seven years
according to data released by the White House Budget Office. Of course
these automatic votes rarely receive much – if any – publicity. In fact,
the provision authorizing the jump to the current $12.1 trillion limit
was buried deep within the federal “stimulus” bill.
As for the size of the forthcoming increase, most estimates put the
number at around $1.5 trillion – which is nearly twice the size of the
previous record increase.
That is truly the definition of a limitless reserve – but the
unavoidable reality is that every dime of that skyrocketing tab must be
paid back by the American taxpayers, who can simply no longer afford to
finance Washington’s reckless credit card spree.
|