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Deepening deficits now make the US one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations

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Deepening deficits now make the US one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations​

The trouble with "American exceptionalism" is that the United States is starting to look exceptional in a bad way when it comes to budget deficits and debt, says Ruchir Sharma for the Financial Times.

Commentary: Deepening deficits now make the US one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations


The US is now the biggest deficit spender in the developed world. (Photo: iStock/Nerthuz)

18 Jul 2023 06:06AM

NEW YORK: The buzz around “American exceptionalism” keeps on growing, boosted by the strength of the United States economy and markets compared with other developed countries - and to a stumbling China. But this confident talk overlooks the extent to which US growth now depends on deficits and debt.

Based on those measures, the US has started to look exceptional in a bad way. Once typical, it is now the biggest deficit spender in the developed world.

During the pandemic, the US budget deficit tripled to more than 10 per cent of gross domestic product, more than double the peak in other developed economies. In coming years, the US deficit is expected to average close to six per cent of GDP - well above its historic norm, and a full six times the average in other developed economies.

BIDEN’S SPENDING PROGRAMMES​

How did the US steer so deeply into the red? Most countries have ended the spending programmes that were launched to ease the pain of pandemic-induced lockdowns. But all the US$6.7 trillion in new spending from the Biden administration came after 2020 was over. Most of it had nothing to do with pandemic relief.

Instead, President Joe Biden used the sense of crisis to launch a latter-day New Deal, building infrastructure and industry ostensibly to compete with China and combat climate change. No other government plans to spend as heavily, leaving the US all but alone on the road to deeper deficits.

Fans of Bidenomics see it as a smart investment. But they ignore the curve-busting scale of new spending and its potential consequences for US debt, inflation and growth in the long run.

The US has been running deficits almost every year since the 1960s without triggering a serious financial crisis. So the conventional wisdom is that deficits don’t matter.

Many economists argue that they pay for themselves if the economic growth generated by new public spending exceeds the government’s interest payments. That feat was easier to achieve when interest rates were near zero, however. Now that rates are rising, it’s almost impossible.

PUBLIC DEBT AT HISTORIC HIGHS​

Though public debt is at historic highs - more than 100 per cent of GDP across the developed world - it is stabilising in Europe but rising relentlessly in the US. With interest rates rising rapidly at the same time, the interest paid on public debt is increasing - and doing so much faster in the US.

Within 10 years, US government interest payments will exceed spending on defence and on social programmes such as Medicaid. The Bank for International Settlements says developed economies need to bring deficits down sharply in this high-rate environment or end up with more new debt than new growth. The Biden team clearly feels this advice doesn’t apply to the world’s leading economic superpower.

Through 2025, the trillions unleashed by this administration will push government spending up to 39 per cent of GDP, most of it not covered by new revenue. In other big developed economies, spending is poised to fall sharply as a share of GDP, while revenues hold up relatively well.

Under pressure from Congress last month, Biden signed the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, creating the appearance of a new restraint. Despite what looks like large spending cuts of US$1.3 trillion over 10 years, the US deficit is still projected to hover near six per cent of GDP throughout the next decade.

Though inflation dipped last week, it’s still running well above two per cent, and Biden’s defenders blame its return on anything but his spending plans, including the lingering effect of global supply chain disruptions.

“AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM” STILL LINGERS​

While inflation did spike worldwide, it did so most sharply in nations that spent the most during the pandemic. Few spent more than the US. A recent study from the Federal Reserve attributed two-thirds of America’s recent inflation surge to excess demand, and half that increase in demand to deficit spending.

But the positive view of American exceptionalism still dominates. Many favour Biden’s calls for bigger government, dismissing fears of a deficit-driven crisis as crying wolf and preparing for a threat that never comes.

They scoff at the idea that foreigners might ever tire of financing US spending habits or buying into US markets. America’s flaws pale and its technology dazzles in comparison to rivals in Europe and Asia.

So why should anyone care about America’s deepening debt and deficits? Because it is now one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations. Its deficit has climbed the ranks to worst in the developed world, its public debt is already the third highest after Japan and Italy.

To wilfully ignore this new reality is an exceptionally risky mistake.

 
. .
The mother of all crashes is on the horizon. The dollar is declining as the World currency.

Can anyone see the Chinese buying US treasury bonds? They've been dumping them at the rate of $100 billion per month. There are no more buyers.

Batten down the hatches and expect the worse.
 
. . .
What is going on with Japan?
Japan is fuked by their economic reform. Long story short. Their industrial market moved on before they made the transition into financial industry. When the industrial base dried up, and their service sector has not catch up on the deficit, that mean massive debt.
 
.

Deepening deficits now make the US one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations​

The trouble with "American exceptionalism" is that the United States is starting to look exceptional in a bad way when it comes to budget deficits and debt, says Ruchir Sharma for the Financial Times.

Commentary: Deepening deficits now make the US one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations


The US is now the biggest deficit spender in the developed world. (Photo: iStock/Nerthuz)

18 Jul 2023 06:06AM

NEW YORK: The buzz around “American exceptionalism” keeps on growing, boosted by the strength of the United States economy and markets compared with other developed countries - and to a stumbling China. But this confident talk overlooks the extent to which US growth now depends on deficits and debt.

Based on those measures, the US has started to look exceptional in a bad way. Once typical, it is now the biggest deficit spender in the developed world.

During the pandemic, the US budget deficit tripled to more than 10 per cent of gross domestic product, more than double the peak in other developed economies. In coming years, the US deficit is expected to average close to six per cent of GDP - well above its historic norm, and a full six times the average in other developed economies.

BIDEN’S SPENDING PROGRAMMES​

How did the US steer so deeply into the red? Most countries have ended the spending programmes that were launched to ease the pain of pandemic-induced lockdowns. But all the US$6.7 trillion in new spending from the Biden administration came after 2020 was over. Most of it had nothing to do with pandemic relief.

Instead, President Joe Biden used the sense of crisis to launch a latter-day New Deal, building infrastructure and industry ostensibly to compete with China and combat climate change. No other government plans to spend as heavily, leaving the US all but alone on the road to deeper deficits.

Fans of Bidenomics see it as a smart investment. But they ignore the curve-busting scale of new spending and its potential consequences for US debt, inflation and growth in the long run.

The US has been running deficits almost every year since the 1960s without triggering a serious financial crisis. So the conventional wisdom is that deficits don’t matter.

Many economists argue that they pay for themselves if the economic growth generated by new public spending exceeds the government’s interest payments. That feat was easier to achieve when interest rates were near zero, however. Now that rates are rising, it’s almost impossible.

PUBLIC DEBT AT HISTORIC HIGHS​

Though public debt is at historic highs - more than 100 per cent of GDP across the developed world - it is stabilising in Europe but rising relentlessly in the US. With interest rates rising rapidly at the same time, the interest paid on public debt is increasing - and doing so much faster in the US.

Within 10 years, US government interest payments will exceed spending on defence and on social programmes such as Medicaid. The Bank for International Settlements says developed economies need to bring deficits down sharply in this high-rate environment or end up with more new debt than new growth. The Biden team clearly feels this advice doesn’t apply to the world’s leading economic superpower.

Through 2025, the trillions unleashed by this administration will push government spending up to 39 per cent of GDP, most of it not covered by new revenue. In other big developed economies, spending is poised to fall sharply as a share of GDP, while revenues hold up relatively well.

Under pressure from Congress last month, Biden signed the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023, creating the appearance of a new restraint. Despite what looks like large spending cuts of US$1.3 trillion over 10 years, the US deficit is still projected to hover near six per cent of GDP throughout the next decade.

Though inflation dipped last week, it’s still running well above two per cent, and Biden’s defenders blame its return on anything but his spending plans, including the lingering effect of global supply chain disruptions.

“AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM” STILL LINGERS​

While inflation did spike worldwide, it did so most sharply in nations that spent the most during the pandemic. Few spent more than the US. A recent study from the Federal Reserve attributed two-thirds of America’s recent inflation surge to excess demand, and half that increase in demand to deficit spending.

But the positive view of American exceptionalism still dominates. Many favour Biden’s calls for bigger government, dismissing fears of a deficit-driven crisis as crying wolf and preparing for a threat that never comes.

They scoff at the idea that foreigners might ever tire of financing US spending habits or buying into US markets. America’s flaws pale and its technology dazzles in comparison to rivals in Europe and Asia.

So why should anyone care about America’s deepening debt and deficits? Because it is now one of the most fiscally irresponsible nations. Its deficit has climbed the ranks to worst in the developed world, its public debt is already the third highest after Japan and Italy.

To wilfully ignore this new reality is an exceptionally risky mistake.



Still better than fighting useless interventions with no return.



New York(CNN Business)US factories are humming, and manufacturers are scrambling to find workers as the pace of hiring hits levels not seen in decades.

Friday's September jobs report showed US manufacturers added another 22,000 workers in September, increasing employment in the sector by nearly 500,000 over the course of the last 12 months.

The nearly 13 million workers employed in US factories make up the industry's largest workforce since the Great Recession caused employment in the sector to plunge more than a dozen years ago. Since April, manufacturing employment has been growing at about a 4% annual rate, the fastest sustained pace of growth since 1984, when the sector had more than twice as large a share of US jobs.
 
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