US Debt Ceiling Explained

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In summary, the conversation discusses the issue of the US debt ceiling and the potential consequences of reaching it. It also touches on the idea of printing money without borrowing as a solution, but highlights potential problems such as inflation. The conversation also addresses the misconception of the US owning Europe and examines the impact of large amounts of dollars being held abroad. Overall, the conversation highlights the complexities and challenges of the US financial situation.
  • #1
lugita15
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I thought it might be helpful to explain the whole debt ceiling issue. The US government takes in a certain amount in taxes, and then pays out a much higher amount in spending. To pay for the difference, it takes out loans, AKA Treasury bonds, from investors and foreign countries. Like any loan, you have to pay interest, but our finances are so bad that we borrow even the money we need to pay the interest on the loans we already have!

The problem we're having now is that there is a law which puts a cap on the total amount we can owe at once, and our debt is expected to hit it on August 2. At that point we can only spend as much as we take in, which is a tough thing to achieve overnight when we borrow 40 cents for every dollar we spend. So what do we cut? If we skip some interest payments, then lenders like China may start charging us higher interest rates, which could worsen our economic situation. Halting defense contractor payments or soldier pay would place an undue burden on our troops, and delaying Medicare payments would lead to doctors turning away seniors. But if we pay everything I listed, we'll have almost nothing for everything else. Say goodbye to border agents, federal housing, welfare, prison security, and all the other services of Uncle Sam.

Finally, there's Social Security, which is kind of up in the air. Many people believe there is a vault of cash somewhere called the trust fund, but sadly that's not true. As payroll taxes come in, the government immediately spends the money on whatever it wants, and then just sticks Treasury bonds in the trust fund. In normal circumstances those bonds are sold on the open market to pay for benefits, but after we hit the debt ceiling we're not allowed to borrow any more money. So seniors may not get their checks on August 3.

All in all, it's a terrible situation, so we should hope a deal is reached soon to raise the debt ceiling.
 
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  • #2


yeah, well, the problem is that we don't have to borrow. we are a sovereign nation, and we can just print the dollars without debt instead of printing the dollars and also paying interest on those dollars.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ruYfR-Ht1o

tell me, where do you think the Federal Reserve got $16 Trillion dollars to bail out foreign banks?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/busin...-of-interest/2011/07/21/gIQAJbbnSI_story.html

does this mean we now own europe the way some people think china owns us?
 
  • #3


Proton Soup said:
yeah, well, the problem is that we don't have to borrow. we are a sovereign nation, and we can just print the dollars without debt instead of printing the dollars and also paying interest on those dollars.
...
does this mean we now own europe the way some people think china owns us?

It's an interesting idea, but it won't solve the fiscal deficit problem. In essence, it is a return to 'golden' coins; a thing you can trade for goods which is state issued with the difference that it wouldn't have an intrinsic value. You would think that governments then would be forced to run a fiscal surplus, but in the end, they will just issue loans again. I.e., nothing would change.

The US doesn't own Europe; netto, the US is a significant importer of goods, you run a large trade deficit. That means that lots of dollars end up abroad, some in Europe, some in China. Europe and China don't own the US, they own paper.

Mostly, with dollars which ended up in Europe, US treasury bonds and companies are bought. The latter means that ownership of firms is transferred to foreigners. That's not a bad thing, in the end, I think it means that US workers keep their jobs, and usually the owner ends up immigrating to the US, or companies are just merged into international clusters. Again, netto, nothing changed except that goods were given to the US at no cost.

(The only thing which changes for the US as more money accumulates abroad is that it becomes more difficult to buy products, like oil. I.e., oil prices go up.)
 
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  • #4


Proton Soup said:
yeah, well, the problem is that we don't have to borrow. we are a sovereign nation, and we can just print the dollars without debt instead of printing the dollars and also paying interest on those dollars.

So you will have a larger money supply chasing goods and a proper chance of resulting inflation. Would you end up like Zimbabwe and hyperinflation? Would you want to? Why would anyone want to work if money is "free".
 
  • #5
MarcoD said:
It's an interesting idea, but it won't solve the fiscal deficit problem. In essence, it is a return to 'golden' coins; a thing you can trade for goods which is state issued with the difference that it wouldn't have an intrinsic value. You would think that governments then would be forced to run a fiscal surplus, but in the end, they will just issue loans again. I.e., nothing would change.

The US doesn't own Europe; netto, the US is a significant importer of goods, you run a large trade deficit. That means that lots of dollars end up abroad, some in Europe, some in China. Europe and China don't own the US, they own paper.

Mostly, with dollars which ended up in Europe, US treasury bonds and companies are bought. The latter means that ownership of firms is transferred to foreigners. That's not a bad thing, in the end, I think it means that US workers keep their jobs, and usually the owner ends up immigrating to the US, or companies are just merged into international clusters. Again, netto, nothing changed except that goods were given to the US at no cost.

(The only thing which changes for the US as more money accumulates abroad is that it becomes more difficult to buy products, like oil. I.e., oil prices go up.)

it's got nothing at all to do with gold.

256bits said:
So you will have a larger money supply chasing goods and a proper chance of resulting inflation. Would you end up like Zimbabwe and hyperinflation? Would you want to? Why would anyone want to work if money is "free".

if you get rid of taxes, and have no real economy, then that could happen. it's entirely a matter of how much money you put into circulation. don't try to use it as an excuse to get to something for nothing, and that won't happen.

problem is, congress is overspending now, but we're also paying interest on debt that only makes the problem worse and enriches the wealthy for no good reason as they provide no real service in exchange for us giving them money.
 
  • #6
Like any loan, you have to pay interest, but our finances are so bad that we borrow even the money we need to pay the interest on the loans we already have!

This simply is not true, and is more or less the definition of bankruptcy. Interest on outstanding debt costs the Treasury ~$40B a month, against ~$200B in revenues.
 
  • #7
As a recipient of the GI Bill, to fund my education, this has me pretty worried. I don't even know if I will get paid this month (which is money that I have essentially already earned). Thanks for the information, I have admittedly not followed these events until I realized that it could effect me personally.
 
  • #8
talk2glenn said:
This simply is not true, and is more or less the definition of bankruptcy. Interest on outstanding debt costs the Treasury ~$40B a month, against ~$200B in revenues.
I didn't mean that it's impossible to pay interest without borrowing, I was talking about our current practice. Starting at the beginning of the month, we pay for things out of revenues until we're out of cash. Then we use borrowed money for everything else. By the time we have to pay interest coupons, we usually have run out of revenue. Of course, once we hit the debt ceiling the Treasury Department will probably change the schedule of our payments, so that interest comes before everything else.
 
  • #9
QuarkCharmer said:
As a recipient of the GI Bill, to fund my education, this has me pretty worried. I don't even know if I will get paid this month (which is money that I have essentially already earned). Thanks for the information, I have admittedly not followed these events until I realized that it could effect me personally.
Thank you for your service. This is the rough order that people expect Obama to prioritize payments: interest on the debt, Social Security, soldier pay, veterans benefits, defense contractors, Medicare payments, and then everything else. So you're relatively likely to be paid.
 
  • #10
yeah, well, the problem is that we don't have to borrow. we are a sovereign nation, and we can just print the dollars without debt instead of printing the dollars and also paying interest on those dollars.

This is more or less the worst idea anyone could seriously propose. We will sooner default on the debt than try printing our way out.

tell me, where do you think the Federal Reserve got $16 Trillion dollars to bail out foreign banks?

The Fed has a balance sheet - it does not print money. That is the exclusive domain of the Treasury. What the Fed can do is borrow against or sell book assets, to raise working capital. Its stakeholders (the member banks) are the primary providers of working Board capital.
 
  • #11
talk2glenn said:
This is more or less the worst idea anyone could seriously propose. We will sooner default on the debt than try printing our way out.

defaulting seems to be unconstitutional. the worst idea is that we ever started borrowing in the first place. but if for some reason we do need to spend more than we take in, i think it is better to reduce the purchasing power of the dollar directly than to dilute the dollar, and then also owe debt on top of that.

The Fed has a balance sheet - it does not print money. That is the exclusive domain of the Treasury. What the Fed can do is borrow against or sell book assets, to raise working capital. Its stakeholders (the member banks) are the primary providers of working Board capital.

are you telling me that the federal reserve bailed out the banks by borrowing money from the banks, to then give it back to the banks?

i'm also wondering if you can explain to me who, if not the Fed, creates money out of thin air for http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantitative_easing" [Broken] doesn't have to exist as a printed currency. it's still there electronically, and when the banks use fractional reserve lending, they add even more to the money supply.
 
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  • #12
i'm also wondering if you can explain to me who, if not the Fed, creates money out of thin air for quantitative easing. created money doesn't have to exist as a printed currency. it's still there electronically, and when the banks use fractional reserve lending, they add even more to the money supply.

The funds for quantitative easing aren't "created" in the strictest sense - they are taken from the out-of-circulation asset stock held by the reserve, and injected into the circulated money supply, either by purchasing non-dollar assets, or lowering the reserve requirements, or some combination of both.

The Fed has numerous tools with which it controls the money supply. The power to issue and/or retire currency is not one of them.
 
  • #13
On the topic of who prints money:

Federal Reserve Notes are authorized by Section 411 of Title 12 of the United States Code and are issued to the Federal Reserve Banks at the discretion of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.[2] The notes are then put into circulation by the Federal Reserve Banks.[3] Once the notes are put into circulation, they become liabilities of the Federal Reserve Banks[4] and obligations of the United States.

Federal Reserve Notes are legal tender, with the words "this note is legal tender for all debts, public and private" printed on each note. (See generally 31 U.S.C. § 5103.) They have replaced United States Notes, which were once issued by the Treasury Department. Federal Reserve Notes are backed by the assets of the Federal Reserve Banks, which serve as collateral under Federal Reserve Act Section 16. These assets are generally Treasuries which have been purchased by the Federal Reserve through its Federal Open Market Committee in a process called monetizing the debt. (See Monetization.) This monetized debt can increase the money supply, either singly with the issuance of new Federal Reserve Notes or multiply with the creation of debt money through the fractional-reserve banking of the Federal Reserve System.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Reserve_Note
 
  • #14
once again, printed paper notes are not the only money. most of it is electronic. the treasury prints the paper and mints the coins.
 
  • #15
lugita15 said:
The problem we're having now is that there is a law which puts a cap on the total amount we can owe at once, and our debt is expected to hit it on August 2. At that point we can only spend as much as we take in, which is a tough thing to achieve overnight when we borrow 40 cents for every dollar we spend.

Minor correction: the U.S. has already incurred the debt to push it past the "ceiling," that is to say, the money is already spent. However, in order to add those debts to the list of "payees" the debt ceiling has to be raised.

Even if the U.S. went on an instant "spend as much as we take in" diet, the debt ceiling would still have to be raised to accommodate existing debt obligations.

A small point in detail, but still important. It's like we already swiped the credit card, took home the new vacuum cleaner, and then realized that we're at $5,120 out of our $5,000 credit limit and NOW we're discussing if we need to raise our credit limit.
 
  • #16
FlexGunship said:
Minor correction: the U.S. has already incurred the debt to push it past the "ceiling," that is to say, the money is already spent. However, in order to add those debts to the list of "payees" the debt ceiling has to be raised.

Even if the U.S. went on an instant "spend as much as we take in" diet, the debt ceiling would still have to be raised to accommodate existing debt obligations.

A small point in detail, but still important. It's like we already swiped the credit card, took home the new vacuum cleaner, and then realized that we're at $5,120 out of our $5,000 credit limit and NOW we're discussing if we need to raise our credit limit.
No, that's not true. Every dollar we spend has to come from somewhere. It either comes from money we have already collected in taxes, or money we have already borrowed through Treasury bonds. Every dollar we borrow is immediately added to a number called the "Public Debt Subject to Limit". We are only allowed to engage in borrowing if this number is less than the debt ceiling. So no, our debt has not exceeded the debt ceiling, and we don't need to raise the debt ceiling "to accommodate existing debt obiligations".

The US government spends its money on two things: 1. interest on Treasury bonds and 2. everything else. The first is associated with "money that is already spent", but the second isn't. Once we hit the debt ceiling, will be able to pay everything in category 1 and some of category 2, essentially forever. A "spend as much as we take in diet" is sufficient to not default on our debt.
 
  • #17
Proton Soup said:
it's got nothing at all to do with gold.

I said it is like returning to 'golden' coins without any intrinsic value. It was a polite manner of saying that it won't work.

I am sorry, but the guy has no idea what he is talking about, is unemployed, and is just posting videos to make some money. Don't buy into it.

I have listened to two ideas of him:

1) Let's just print money without any intrinsic or other value. Who'ld want it? Golden coins had intrinsic value. You also have fiat money, and some other forms. All forms of money are backed by a manner which gives the currency value. It really is a no-brainer that this [his proposal] cannot work.

2) Let's use copper coins. That's a return to commodity money. Will it solve any problem: no! It is not a problem of which type of currency the US uses to create a debt hole. The debt hole is the problem. [And that hole cannot magically disappear, unless for default.]

Don't post stuff of the guy again, unless just for laughs. It is a scam.
 
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  • #18
lugita15 said:
No, that's not true.

I understand the nature of the debt ceiling is complicated. Let me further clarify: we need to raise the debt ceiling to honor PAST debt obligations, not future ones. If you're not familiar with Geithner's letter to republicans, then you should read it. It will illuminate a lot of dark areas. Don't feel bad, even Senate Republicans get confused by it.

Link: http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Documents/DLDeMint062811.pdf The quote below is taken directly from his letter.

Timothy Geithner said:
The debt limit applies to past decisions of Congress. Increasing the debt limit is necessary to allow the United states to honor obligations previously authorized and appropriated by Congress.

[...]

Increasing the limit does not increase the obligations we have as a Nation; it simply permits the treasury to fund those obligations Congress has already established.

(Emphasis is in Geithner's ORIGINAL letter, I did not add emphasis.)

To put it simply, we have out spent the debt ceiling, and now the bill is due. You either raise the ceiling to pay your past obligations, or you default. Simply going on a budgetary diet doesn't solve anything; it's too late. We have passed that point.
 
  • #19
MarcoD said:
I said it is like returning to 'golden' coins without any intrinsic value. It was a polite manner of saying that it won't work.

I am sorry, but the guy has no idea what he is talking about, is unemployed, and is just posting videos to make some money. Don't buy into it.

I have listened to two ideas of him:

1) Let's just print money without any intrinsic or other value. Who'ld want it? Golden coins had intrinsic value. You also have fiat money, and some other forms. All forms of money are backed by a manner which gives the currency value. It really is a no-brainer that this [his proposal] cannot work.

2) Let's use copper coins. That's a return to commodity money. Will it solve any problem: no! It is not a problem of which type of currency the US uses to create a debt hole. The debt hole is the problem. [And that hole cannot magically disappear, unless for default.]

Don't post stuff of the guy again, unless just for laughs. It is a scam.

our current currency doesn't have any intrinsic value. our current currency is a fiat currency. the US dollar is not backed by gold, silver, copper, or anything else. just the "faith and credit" of the US government. in the past, this country has used currency backed by gold, silver, and fiat currencies backed by nothing at all. all have functioned as currencies, but currencies backed by silver or gold are sensitive to hoarding and groups trying to corner the market.

now, if you can prove to me that the US dollar is backed by some intrinsic object, I'm all ears.
 
  • #20
FlexGunship said:
I understand the nature of the debt ceiling is complicated. Let me further clarify: we need to raise the debt ceiling to honor PAST debt obligations, not future ones. If you're not familiar with Geithner's letter to republicans, then you should read it. It will illuminate a lot of dark areas. Don't feel bad, even Senate Republicans get confused by it.

Link: http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Documents/DLDeMint062811.pdf The quote below is taken directly from his letter.



(Emphasis is in Geithner's ORIGINAL letter, I did not add emphasis.)

To put it simply, we have out spent the debt ceiling, and now the bill is due. You either raise the ceiling to pay your past obligations, or you default. Simply going on a budgetary diet doesn't solve anything; it's too late. We have passed that point.

i believe he is talking about spending "obligations" there, not actual debts. those spending "obligations" can simply be annulled by additional legislation.
 
  • #21
FlexGunship said:
I understand the nature of the debt ceiling is complicated. Let me further clarify: we need to raise the debt ceiling to honor PAST debt obligations, not future ones. If you're not familiar with Geithner's letter to republicans, then you should read it. It will illuminate a lot of dark areas. Don't feel bad, even Senate Republicans get confused by it.

Link: http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Documents/DLDeMint062811.pdf The quote below is taken directly from his letter.
(Emphasis is in Geithner's ORIGINAL letter, I did not add emphasis.)

To put it simply, we have out spent the debt ceiling, and now the bill is due. You either raise the ceiling to pay your past obligations, or you default. Simply going on a budgetary diet doesn't solve anything; it's too late. We have passed that point.
I agree with Proton Soup. When Geithner says "obligations previously authorized and appropriated by Congress", he means spending. Every year, Congress passes an appropriations bill, detailing line by line how much money should be spent every month and on what. So Geithner is saying that raising the debt ceiling will allow the government to spend money that Congress wanted it to spend. It's not like the money has already been spent and now has to be paid for.

It's just like a family which has made plans to go to the movies once a month, and typically pays for it by adding onto their credit card. But if they hit their credit limit they may no longer be able to afford that trip to the movies anymore. In other words, they will have stopped an expenditure they had previously decided to make every month.
 
  • #22
Proton Soup said:
i believe he is talking about spending "obligations" there, not actual debts. those spending "obligations" can simply be annulled by additional legislation.

lugita15 said:
I agree with Proton Soup. When Geithner says "obligations previously authorized and appropriated by Congress", he means spending.

That would be nice, because it would make the whole sticky issue a lot simpler, but again, that's not true. In fact, if that were true, then we wouldn't default on any debt obligations, we would simply have to stop spending. There seems to be intentional misinformation circulating that this is an option.

A quote from senator DeMint (R):
You don't have much choice if you charge something on your credit card. You have to pay for it, and that's effectively what this debt limit is... we've already spent the money. The question is now, do we shut down the government, or do we fund what we've already done?

(http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Documents/DLDeMint062811.pdf" [Broken])

We haven't hit a "credit limit" on a credit card. That's not the analogy. We've passed it. The money is spent. Now it has to be paid in the form of treasury securities which can be sold to private and public investors. The debt ceiling doesn't limit spending, it limits the selling of Treasury securities (effectively setting a limit on the amount of debt in circulation).

The debt ceiling says nothing about spending practices. The debt ceiling was passed between March 17th and May 30th of this year when you look at spending. And we have been spending since then. That's why people are talking about "default" now. The problem is people read headlines and listen to sound bites.

(March 2011) EDIT: Link removed... broken?
(May 2011) http://www.kaj18.com/news/obama-congress-prepare-for-next-round-of-budget-fights/
(May 2011) http://www.thestreet.com/story/11141473/1/us-debt-rating-under-threat-moodys.html
 
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  • #23
Perhaps it will be easier to understand in 6 weeks - when the 2012 budget is addressed. Should we start a new thread "CR or Budget 2012"?
 
  • #24
FlexGunship said:
That would be nice, because it would make the whole sticky issue a lot simpler, but again, that's not true. In fact, if that were true, then we wouldn't default on any debt obligations, we would simply have to stop spending. There seems to be intentional misinformation circulating that this is an option.

A quote from senator DeMint (R):(http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Documents/DLDeMint062811.pdf" [Broken])

We haven't hit a "credit limit" on a credit card. That's not the analogy. We've passed it. The money is spent. Now it has to be paid in the form of treasury securities which can be sold to private and public investors. The debt ceiling doesn't limit spending, it limits the selling of Treasury securities (effectively setting a limit on the amount of debt in circulation).

The debt ceiling says nothing about spending practices. The debt ceiling was passed between March 17th and May 30th of this year when you look at spending. And we have been spending since then. That's why people are talking about "default" now. The problem is people read headlines and listen to sound bites.
I think DeMint is talking about interest on the debt, because there is a risk that Obama would not prioritize interest payment over everything else, and thus there could be a default. (Obama suggested in his East Room press conference on the debt ceiling that it would be irresponsible to pay Chinese investors their interest before paying social security checks or Pell grants).

I agree with you that the debt limit ceiling limits the total amount of Treasury bonds in circulation, and I agree that we technically hit the ceiling a few months ago. You seem to be saying that after we hit the ceiling, we just kept spending the same amount of money, and now we have to pay for that spending in excess of the ceiling. If your account is correct, where did we get the money? We can't spend a dollar if we didn't get it from somewhere, and we must either have gotten it out of revenues or out of borrowing. It is literally impossible for the government to spend money first and then issue debt later to pay for it.

What really happened a few months ago is that the Treasury department took extraordinary (though not unprecedented) action. Federal government workers have pension plans, which they contribute a portion of their salaries to. Usually Geithner takes those contributions and puts that money in the pension funds, known as CSRDF and GSIF, and then pension benefits for retirees are paid out of those funds. But since we hit the ceiling, he has instead just been taking those pension contributions and using them for the general spending of the government. Of course, this practice can't go on forever, because every month the pension funds get depleted because they're needed to pay retirees. Eventually, the funds will be completely exhausted, so that Geithner will have to use the pension contributions of workers in order to pay the benefits, and so he won't be able to use that money to fund government operations. At that point he will have run out of tricks, and either the debt ceiling will have to be raised or else large portions of federal spending will be halted immediately. That is the magical date of August 2.
 
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  • #25
lugita15 said:
It is literally impossible for the government to spend money first and then issue debt later to pay for it.

That's not true. Checks are issued against reserves when direct federal funding isn't available. The reserves are usually in the form of low grade unsecured bonds and aren't useful in international trade or with large investment institutions, but they allow day-to-day business to continue (like paychecks).

It's then the responsibility of the treasury to replace unsecured debts with secured debts prior to maturity.

lugita15 said:
What really happened a few months ago is that the Treasury department took extraordinary (though not unprecedented) action. Federal government workers have pension plans, which they contribute a portion of their salaries to. Usually Geithner takes those contributions and puts that money in the pension funds, known as CSRDF and GSIF, and then pension benefits for retirees are paid out of those funds. But since we hit the ceiling, he has instead just been taking those pension contributions and using them for the general spending of the government. Of course, this practice can't go on forever, because every month the pension funds get depleted because they're needed to pay retirees. Eventually, the funds will be completely exhausted, so that Geithner will have to use the pension contributions of workers in order to pay the benefits, and so he won't be able to use that money to fund government operations. At that point he will have run out of tricks, and either the debt ceiling will have to be raised or else large portions of federal spending will be halted immediately. That is the magical date of August 2.

This is an important point. Yes! Those are obligations that must be paid back to those pension programs. Additionally, lower grade unsecured bonds have been dispersed and need to be accounted for as federal debt.

We both seem to agree on that point that the U.S. Government has ALREADY spent more than the debt ceiling. I happen to be a libertarian, so I agree with your flavoring of the situation: spending MUST be curtailed immediately. But, regardless, in order to maintain our standing as a creditworthy borrower, the debt ceiling must be raised (and it appears as though that vote is imminent).

What has happened in the public arena is that republicans (full disclosure: I voted republican in the last midterm election and the last presidential election; the lesser of two evils (?)) have painted it as though it's an optional increase and that if we could just get our spending under control, we'd be all set. It's just not that simple; the debt ceiling has to be raised to pay current obligations (domestic and foreign). AFTER that's done, then we can talk about fixing the actual problem.
 
  • #26
FlexGunship said:
That's not true. Checks are issued against reserves when direct federal funding isn't available. The reserves are usually in the form of low grade unsecured bonds and aren't useful in international trade or with large investment institutions, but they allow day-to-day business to continue (like paychecks).

It's then the responsibility of the treasury to replace unsecured debts with secured debts prior to maturity.



This is an important point. Yes! Those are obligations that must be paid back to those pension programs. Additionally, lower grade unsecured bonds have been dispersed and need to be accounted for as federal debt.

We both seem to agree on that point that the U.S. Government has ALREADY spent more than the debt ceiling. I happen to be a libertarian, so I agree with your flavoring of the situation: spending MUST be curtailed immediately. But, regardless, in order to maintain our standing as a creditworthy borrower, the debt ceiling must be raised (and it appears as though that vote is imminent).

What has happened in the public arena is that republicans (full disclosure: I voted republican in the last midterm election and the last presidential election; the lesser of two evils (?)) have painted it as though it's an optional increase and that if we could just get our spending under control, we'd be all set. It's just not that simple; the debt ceiling has to be raised to pay current obligations (domestic and foreign). AFTER that's done, then we can talk about fixing the actual problem.

Worse yet, the debt deal spending cuts are designed to slow the increase of the national debt - not cut this year's (or next) actual spending.
 
  • #27
FlexGunship said:
That's not true. Checks are issued against reserves when direct federal funding isn't available. The reserves are usually in the form of low grade unsecured bonds and aren't useful in international trade or with large investment institutions, but they allow day-to-day business to continue (like paychecks).

It's then the responsibility of the treasury to replace unsecured debts with secured debts prior to maturity.
I haven't heard of these low-grade unsecured bonds before. Do you have any sources which talk about them?
FlexGunship said:
This is an important point. Yes! Those are obligations that must be paid back to those pension programs.
Actually, under Federal law the Treasury Secretary is only required to pay back that money into those pension funds IF the debt ceiling is raised. Otherwise, he has no legal obligation to do so (although it would be unfair to government workers).

FlexGunship said:
We both seem to agree on that point that the U.S. Government has ALREADY spent more than the debt ceiling. I happen to be a libertarian, so I agree with your flavoring of the situation: spending MUST be curtailed immediately. But, regardless, in order to maintain our standing as a creditworthy borrower, the debt ceiling must be raised (and it appears as though that vote is imminent).

What has happened in the public arena is that republicans (full disclosure: I voted republican in the last midterm election and the last presidential election; the lesser of two evils (?)) have painted it as though it's an optional increase and that if we could just get our spending under control, we'd be all set. It's just not that simple; the debt ceiling has to be raised to pay current obligations (domestic and foreign). AFTER that's done, then we can talk about fixing the actual problem.
I'm actually a democrat who wants more spending, and so I very much want the debt ceiling raised. I'm just saying that we don't default on our debts if it's not. But we would be betraying a lot of trust people have in the government. Poor people in federal housing, soldiers fighting around the world, government workers, companies receiving federal funding, scientists doing valuable research, etc., are all counting on us to spend the money we promised.
 
  • #28
lugita15 said:
I'm actually a democrat who wants more spending, and so I very much want the debt ceiling raised. I'm just saying that we don't default on our debts if it's not. But we would be betraying a lot of trust people have in the government. Poor people in federal housing, soldiers fighting around the world, government workers, companies receiving federal funding, scientists doing valuable research, etc., are all counting on us to spend the money we promised.

Given the fact the Government doesn't have the money to pay these obligations and must borrow 43% of every dollar spent - shouldn't we feel betrayed by our politicians in that they don't even have a budget - yet they've promised more and more to people who depend on them?
 
  • #29
lugita15 said:
I haven't heard of these low-grade unsecured bonds before. Do you have any sources which talk about them?

Well, I'll have to try to find something official, but it was a big issue at the last city council meeting since most of our local construction contractors were paid with funds backed by these unsecured bonds with assurance that they would be replaced with secured bonds come This November (6 months after issuance, but 6 months before maturity).

Now there is fear that the unsecured bonds will come to maturity and will be defaulted upon.

So, the work (which was done under the Federal stimulus plan) has already been done, and was paid for with temporary funds with assurance that those funds would be paid for by the U.S. government. It's already a done deal; the road exists and has been painted and is being driven on. It's an obligation whether your agree with it in principle or not. The contractors have been paid, cashed their checks, and got their money. So the bank will come to the city to collect the mature value of the bonds starting May of next year, and the city will go to the state.

Somewhere, someone has to pay off those bonds. The bank could choose to hold onto those bonds but I don't think that's common practice. The treasury is supposed to sell high-grade secured bonds and give the cash to the state, so the state can give the cash to the city, so the city can pay off the bonds the bank holds.

It affects every level! The next time work has to be done, banks will be more cautious. Most U.S. debt is help by private individuals and institutions inside the U.S. Here's an example of some.
 
  • #30
WhoWee said:
Worse yet, the debt deal spending cuts are designed to slow the increase of the national debt - not cut this year's (or next) actual spending.
Actually, the debt deal cuts about 22 billion dollars from the 2012 budget, which will reduce the spending-to-GDP ratio by a tiny amount. (You shouldn't compare the actual dollars spent, because 2011 dollars are not the same as 2012 dollars, because the economy is likely to be bigger in 2012.)
 
  • #31
FlexGunship said:
The debt ceiling says nothing about spending practices. The debt ceiling was passed between March 17th and May 30th of this year when you look at spending. And we have been spending since then. That's why people are talking about "default" now. The problem is people read headlines and listen to sound bites.

(March 2011) EDIT: Link removed... broken?
(May 2011) http://www.kaj18.com/news/obama-congress-prepare-for-next-round-of-budget-fights/
(May 2011) http://www.thestreet.com/story/11141473/1/us-debt-rating-under-threat-moodys.html

OK, so the Wizard is doing some magic behind the curtain at the Fed.
 
  • #32
lugita15 said:
Actually, the debt deal cuts about 22 billion dollars from the 2012 budget, which will reduce the spending-to-GDP ratio by a tiny amount. (You shouldn't compare the actual dollars spent, because 2011 dollars are not the same as 2012 dollars, because the economy is likely to be bigger in 2012.)

How much do you expect the economy to grow in 2012 - and why?
 
  • #33
Proton Soup said:
OK, so the Wizard is doing some magic behind the curtain at the Fed.

Actually, Geithner is the secretary of the Treasury. Bernanke is the chairman of the Federal Reserve. But, yes, Geithner is quite the "wizard." It's good to have an economist on the post as opposed to a banker; I like him better than Paulson.

EDIT: The fact that I didn't like Paulson had NOTHING to do with his previous position as CEO of Goldman Sachs; I think that actually worked in his favor.
 
Last edited:
  • #34
FlexGunship said:
Actually, Geithner is the secretary of the Treasury. Bernanke is the chairman of the Federal Reserve. But, yes, Geithner is quite the "wizard." It's good to have an economist on the post as opposed to a banker; I like him better than Paulson.

EDIT: The fact that I didn't like Paulson had NOTHING to do with his previous position as CEO of Goldman Sachs; I think that actually worked in his favor.

I too think quite highly of Geithner. But Paulson gets high marks from me as well. When push came to shove, he abandoned a lifetime of ideology for the good of the country. I have to respect that no matter what else he may have done.

I have a friend on the left who thinks it a crime that someone like Geithner is running the Treasury. I don't get it. Who do we want; someone who doesn't understand the system?
 
  • #35
Ivan Seeking said:
I too think quite highly of Geithner. But Paulson gets high marks from me as well. When push came to shove, he abandoned a lifetime of ideology for the good of the country. I have to respect that no matter what else he may have done.

I have a friend on the left who thinks it a crime that someone like Geithner is running the Treasury. I don't get it. Who do we want; someone who doesn't understand the system?

See, I used to feel the exact opposite; very strongly, in fact. When Geithner was nominated I thought it was the apocalypse. But he has a very practical sense of economic theory (oxymoronic?) which was not made obvious to the public.

Paulson may have done well from an "overcoming-personal-challenges" point of view, but he had a history of repeatedly saying the housing market was either stable, already at the bottom, or under control. Even when he chooses not to take action, he should've been able to do a better job of figuring this stuff out. Could I have done it? NO WAY! But I'm also not accepting nominations for Secretary of the Treasury. I don't, for a second, think he was anything but honorable and did his best on behalf of the country... he just didn't seem to do a very good job in retrospect.

Also... he looks disturbingly like Sarek from the newest Star Trek movie.

images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR9q3AISkczTx2KiWRh51XAH6SjQ5zce-DjfpwEbSje-xYYcNaenQ.jpg

220px-Henry_Paulson_official_Treasury_photo%2C_2006.jpg
 
<h2>What is the US debt ceiling?</h2><p>The US debt ceiling is a limit set by Congress on the amount of money the government can borrow. It is essentially the maximum amount of debt the US government is allowed to have.</p><h2>Why is the US debt ceiling important?</h2><p>The debt ceiling is important because it helps control government spending and ensures that the US government does not accumulate too much debt. It also serves as a reminder for Congress to regularly review and approve the budget.</p><h2>What happens if the US debt ceiling is reached?</h2><p>If the US debt ceiling is reached, the government will not be able to borrow any more money, which can lead to a government shutdown or default on its debts. This can have serious economic consequences and affect the country's credit rating.</p><h2>Who sets the US debt ceiling?</h2><p>The US debt ceiling is set by Congress through legislation. It is usually raised or lowered based on the government's financial needs and the state of the economy.</p><h2>How often is the US debt ceiling raised?</h2><p>The US debt ceiling is raised whenever Congress passes a new budget or approves additional spending. In the past, it has been raised multiple times a year, but in recent years, it has become a more contentious issue and has caused political gridlock.</p>

What is the US debt ceiling?

The US debt ceiling is a limit set by Congress on the amount of money the government can borrow. It is essentially the maximum amount of debt the US government is allowed to have.

Why is the US debt ceiling important?

The debt ceiling is important because it helps control government spending and ensures that the US government does not accumulate too much debt. It also serves as a reminder for Congress to regularly review and approve the budget.

What happens if the US debt ceiling is reached?

If the US debt ceiling is reached, the government will not be able to borrow any more money, which can lead to a government shutdown or default on its debts. This can have serious economic consequences and affect the country's credit rating.

Who sets the US debt ceiling?

The US debt ceiling is set by Congress through legislation. It is usually raised or lowered based on the government's financial needs and the state of the economy.

How often is the US debt ceiling raised?

The US debt ceiling is raised whenever Congress passes a new budget or approves additional spending. In the past, it has been raised multiple times a year, but in recent years, it has become a more contentious issue and has caused political gridlock.

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