A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19, 2006, AND THEREAFTER
IS THERE A FEDERAL DEFICIT?
http://www.gmu.edu/departments/economics/wew/articles/06/deficit.htmlGetting back to deficits, my question to you is this: Is there truly a deficit? The short answer is yes, but only in an accounting sense -- not in any meaningful economic sense. Let's look at it. If Congress spends $2.4 trillion but only takes in $2 trillion in taxes, who makes up that $.4 trillion shortfall that we call the budget deficit? Neither the Tooth Fairy, Santa nor the Easter Bunny makes up the difference between what's spent in 2005 and what's taxed in 2005.
Some might be tempted to answer that it's future generations who will pay. That's untrue. If the federal government consumes $2.4 trillion of what Americans produced in 2005, it must find ways to force us to spend $2.4 trillion less privately in 2005. In other words, the federal government can't spend today what's going to be produced in the future.
One method to force us to spend less privately is through taxation, but that's not the only way. Another way is to enter the bond market. Government borrowing drives the interest rate to a level that it otherwise wouldn't be without government borrowing. That higher interest puts the squeeze on private investment in homes and businesses, thereby forcing us to spend less privately. Another way to force us to spend less privately is to inflate the currency. Theoretically, Congress can consume what we produce without enacting a single tax law; they could simply print money. The rising prices, which would curtail our real spending, would act as a tax. Of course, an important side effect of doing so would be economic havoc.
Some Americans have called for a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution as a method to rein in a prolific Congress. A balanced budget is no panacea. For example, suppose Congress spent $6 trillion and taxed us $6 trillion. We'd have a balanced budget, but we'd be far freer with today's unbalanced budget. The fact of business is that the true measure of the impact of government on our lives is not the taxes we pay but the level of spending.
:crazy: :silly: :wtf:
Ah, ok, now I know why he sounds like he's batshit insane:
More from Mr. Walter E. Williams:
Minimum wage, maximum folly
http://www.townhall.com/opinion/columns/walterwilliams/2006/04/26/194892.htmlContributes at WorldNutDaily
http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/archives.asp?AUTHOR_ID=18Adjunct Scholar at the frickin' CATO Institute!!!
http://www.cato.org/people/williams.htmlPopular guest on Rush Limbaugh's show
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walter_E._Williams