Close Close
Popular Financial Topics Discover relevant content from across the suite of ALM legal publications From the Industry More content from ThinkAdvisor and select sponsors Investment Advisor Issue Gallery Read digital editions of Investment Advisor Magazine Tax Facts Get clear, current, and reliable answers to pressing tax questions
Luminaries Awards
ThinkAdvisor

Financial Planning > College Planning > Student Loan Debt

On the Third Hand: Controlled Demolition

X
Your article was successfully shared with the contacts you provided.

The huuuge problem with the take on the national debt that Donald Trump expressed in May is that he was probably right.

He said, in an interview that might be nearly forgotten ancient history by the time you read this, that the United States ought to try to renegotiate the terms of its debt with creditors. He floated that without saying anything about most economists’ and major investors’ belief that the modern world economy is based on the assumption that the United States always makes good on its obligations. Buying a bill, note or bond issued by the U.S. Treasury is supposed to be a risk-free investment.

See also: Disability Insurance Observer: Systemic risk

On the one hand, if the United States tried to get bond holders to take less than what they were contractually owed, that would amount to a selective default by the pillar of the foundation world.

That’s the kind of event that could be part of the boring montage at the beginning of a movie that focuses mainly on Americans living in bombed out buildings, in enclaves governed by three-eyed mutant warlords with awful teeth. Some of the first victims would likely be the insurance companies and pension funds that were pushed by regulators to invest heavily in government debt securities, and in companies dependent on those securities, by financial regulators that were trying, ever so hard, to reduce risk. The next victims might be cities. The only lives that would still matter would be the lives of people with plenty of ammo.

Trump’s statement about renegotiating the national debt was akin to another common question about the national debt: “Why don’t we just solve our debt problems by, um, printing a lot more money?” Mainly, because the conventional wisdom is that, if the Fed did that, in such a way that everyone understood what the Fed was doing, the value of the dollar would go poof, and much of our civilization would, likely, go poof.

On the other hand, the U.S. government is really just a big longevity benefits and long-term care insurance (LTCI) issuer operating without any of the constraints that keep private-sector insurers solvent enough. Whatever challenges U.S. life insurers face, the U.S. government faces the same challenges, times 100.

Paul Krugman, the Nobel Prize-winning economists and New York Times economist, might be correct about the federal budget deficit itself not mattering all that much. But at some point, the reality that we promised the ability to buy the same gallon of milk, the same nursing home bed, and the same apartment that’s at least 20 feet above sea level to several different people, who are all planning to live without working from the age of 67 to the age of 97, might matter. 

On the third hand, there are three possible positive outcomes:

  • Something about the economy (robots? space travel?) goes well, sparks a com boom, and bails us out.

  • We do print a lot of money, and we figure out how to survive that.

  • We do renegotiate our debt, and we figure out how to survive that.

One way to survive printing a lot of money, renegotiating our debt or going through some equivalent process might be for serious people to get together and think hard about what resources we have, what obligations we have, and what untapped resources we have, and figure out a controlled demolition process for the global economy that protects the widows and orphans; forces the people responsible for over-promising to show that they are sincerely sorry about paying so little attention to math; and maneuvers us past the three-eyed mutant warlord scenario.

So sensible, centrist Republicans and Democrats agree that Trump’s blithe proposal to crack the pillar of the world economy was irresponsible.

Well, great. What are they planning to do, in their sensible, centrist, responsible way, to put a scaffold under the economy, to hold it steady while we replace the rickety pillar? 

See also: 

LTCI Watch: $400

On the Third Hand: Promises, Promises

   

Have you followed us on Facebook? 


NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.