Future
historians will likely look back at the debt ceiling rituals being reenacted
these days with a frustrated shaking of their heads. That otherwise reasonable
people would be so readily deceived raises the question that will provoke those
historians: How could this happen?
The
U.S. Congress has imposed successive ceilings on the national debt, each one
higher than the last. Ceilings were intended to limit the amount of federal
borrowing. But the same U.S. Congress so managed its taxing and spending that it
created ever more excesses of spending over tax revenues (deficits).
Those
excesses required borrowing to cover them. The borrowings accumulated to hit
successive ceilings. A highly political ritual of threats and counterthreats
accompanied each rise of the ceiling required by the need to borrow to finance
deficits.
It is
elementary economics to note that if Congress raised more taxes or cut federal
spending—or both—there would be no need to borrow and thus no ceiling on
borrowing to worry about. The ceiling would become irrelevant or merely
symbolic.
Further,
if taxes were raised enough and spending cut enough, the existing U.S. national
debt could be reduced. That situation has happened occasionally in U.S.
history.
The
real issue then is that when borrowing approaches any ceiling, the policy
choices are these three: raise the ceiling (to borrow more), raise taxes, or
cut spending. Of course, combinations of them would also be possible.
In
contrast to this reality, U.S. politics deceives by constricting its debate.
Politicians, the mainstream media, and academics simply omit—basically by
refusing to admit or consider—tax increases. The GOP demands spending cuts or
else it will block raising the ceiling.
The
Democrats insist that raising the ceiling is the better choice than cutting
spending. Democrats threaten to blame the GOP for the consequences of not
raising the debt ceiling. They paint those consequences in lurid colors
depicting U.S. bondholders denied interest or repayment, Social Security recipients
denied their pensions, and government employees denied their wages.
The
unspoken agreement between the two major parties is to omit any serious
discussion of raising taxes to avoid hitting the debt ceiling. That omission
entails deception.
Here
are some tax increases that could help solve the problem by avoiding any need
to raise the debt ceiling. The social security tax could be applied to all wage
and salary incomes, not only those of $160,000 or less as is now the case. The
social security tax could be applied to nonwage income such as interest
dividends, capital gains, and rents.
The
corporate profits tax could be raised back to what it was a few decades ago:
near or above 50 percent versus the current 37 percent rate. A property tax
could be levied on property that takes the form of stocks and bonds.
The
current property tax in the United States (levied mostly at the local level)
includes land, houses, automobiles, and business inventories, while it excludes
stocks and bonds. Perhaps that is because the richest 10 percent of Americans
own roughly 80 percent of stocks and bonds. The current property tax system in
the United States is very nice for that 10 percent.
Another
logical candidate is the federal estate tax which a few years ago exempted
under $1 million of an estate from the tax, but now exempts over $12 million
per person (over $25 million per couple). That exemption makes a mockery of the
idea that all Americans start or live their lives on a level playing field
where merit counts more than inheritance. The U.S. could and should go back
from that tax giveaway to the richest. There are many more possible tax
increases.
Of
course, there are strengths and weaknesses entailed in raising every tax,
positive and negative consequences. But the exact same is true of raising the
debt ceiling and thereby increasing the U.S. national debt. Likewise cutting
spending has its pluses and minuses in terms of pain and gain.
There
is no logical or reasonable basis for excluding tax increases from the national
debate and discussion about raising the debt ceiling and thereby the national
debt.
It is
rather the shared political commitments of both major parties that require and
motivate the exclusion. There is no reason for U.S. citizens to accept,
tolerate, endorse, or otherwise validate the debt ceiling deception perpetrated
against us.
Nor
is the debt ceiling deception alone. The previous national debate over
responding to inflation by having the Federal Reserve raise interest rates
provides another quite parallel example. That debate proceeded by debating the
pros and cons of interest rate increases as if no other anti-inflationary
policy existed or was even worth mentioning.
Once again elementary economics teaches that wage-price freezes and rationing have been used against inflations in the past—including in the United States—as alternatives to raising interest rates or alongside them. U.S. President Nixon in 1971 used wage-price freezes.
U.S. President Roosevelt used rationing during
World War II. But the government, Federal Reserve, major media, and major
academic leaders carried on their recent policy debates as if those other
anti-inflationary tools did not exist or were not worth including in the
debate.
Wage-price
freezes and rationing have their strengths and weaknesses—just as tax increases
do—but once again the same applies to raising interest rates. No justification
exists for proceeding as if alternative options are not there. The U.S.
national debate over fighting inflation was deceptive in the same way that the
debate over the debt ceiling is.
Nor
is the deception any less if it is covered by a claim of “realism.” Those who
grasp elementary economics enough to know that tax increases could “solve” the
debt ceiling issue become complicit in the deception by invoking “realism.”
Since the two major parties are jointly subservient to corporations and the
rich, they rule out tax increases on them.
It
thus becomes “realistic” to exclude that option from the debt ceiling debate.
What is best for corporations and the rich thus gets equated to what is
“realistic.” It is worth remembering that throughout history ruling classes
have discovered, to their shock and surprise, that the ruled can and often do
quickly alter what is “realistic.”
The
debt ceiling deceptions favor corporations over individuals and the richest
individuals over the rest of us. In our thinking and speaking too, the nation’s
class structure and class struggles exhibit their influential power. The
mainstream debt ceiling debate deceives by lying by omission rather than
commission.
This article was produced by Economy for All, a
project of the Independent Media Institute.
Richard Wolff is the author of Capitalism Hits the
Fan and Capitalism’s Crisis
Deepens. He is founder of Democracy at Work.
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