No Way Out

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TCS

This essay is excerpted from a recent version of The Credit Strategist (formerly the HCM Market Letter).  To obtain the complete issue, you must subscribe directly to this publication; Please go hereThe Credit Strategist is on Twitter - @credstrategist

“If men were angels, no government would be necessary.  If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary.  In framing a government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this:  you must first enable the government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.  A dependence on the people is, no doubt, the primary control on the government; but experience has taught mankind the necessity of auxiliary precautions.”

James Madison, Federalist #51

Whether or not Congress manages to raise the debt ceiling before the U.S. Treasury runs out of money is almost beside the point.  It would be incredibly reckless and foolish to default on our debt, but our country is run by reckless and foolish men and women.  But a debt-ceiling deal won’t change the fact that the United States is on an unsustainable financial course. As Peter Coy wrote in Bloomberg Businessweek, “An honest assessment of the country’s projected revenue and expenses over the next generation would show a reality different from the apocalyptic visions conjured by both Democrats and Republicans during the debt-ceiling debate.  I would be much worse.”1 The inexorable laws of compound interest alone will render it increasingly difficult if not impossible to rein in our debt. According to Mr. Coy, the Congressional Budget Office computed that it would require $15 trillion of cuts over the next decade just to keep the debt/GDP ratio where it is today in the year 2085 (a meaningless time frame but indicative of the scale of the problem).  And even that ratio is artificially low because it excludes many off- balance sheet obligations such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. 

Many people argue that it is absurd to even discuss the possibility of downgrading the credit quality of a country with the resources and wealth of the United States.  David Rosenberg points out, for example, that “[t]his is a country with a $15 trillion national income stream, a $50 trillion capital stock and $80 trillion of net worth in its household and business sector.  The ability is there [to pay our debts], including all of the off-balance sheet liabilities.  This is not some banana republic; it is not Greece, Argentina or Mexico.”2  He goes on, however, to point to the heart of the problem, a “political deficit right now that is blowing the fiscal issue out of proportion.”3  TCS agrees that there is a profound political deficit, but we do not believe that it is being blown out of proportion.  In fact, we think the severity of the economic challenges facing the U.S. is being underestimated, at least by the financial markets.

The U.S. most likely will not default this week, but there will come a time when it does default by repaying its debt with a shrunken currency.  Under the current financial regime, inflation and currency devaluation are the only means by which the U.S. can meet its obligations under even a best case scenario.4  Inflation and devaluation mean that lenders will receive less than they invested in real terms.  A default by any other name is still a default. 

Congress can pass and repeal all the laws it wants, but it cannot alter the laws of mathematics.   Current debates over the best way to address the budget crisis are based on the assumption that the problem can be solved through a fairly conventional combination of expense cuts and revenue increases.  That is simply not the case anymore.  These are linear solutions applied to a problem that is exponential in nature:  the federal deficit and the cost of servicing it.  The United States will have to adopt radical and creative solutions in order to avoid suffering the fate of other countries that have permitted their economic policies to be hijacked by selfish financial and political elites.


1.Peter Coy, “It Gets Worse,” Bloomberg Businessweek, August 1, 2011, p. 6.

2. Breakfast with Dave, July 28, 2011, p. 4.

3. Ibid.

4. Perhaps in the future there will be a different way of looking at finance that will allow the U.S. to fully exploit its wealth, but that is a discussion for another day (and a topic TCS has just started to think about).