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America's Ticking Bankruptcy Bomb

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    America's Ticking Bankruptcy Bomb

    June 14, 2011

    The failures of federal, state and local officials of both major parties, over many years, have primed a ticking bankruptcy bomb for America that will explode the American Dream if we don’t disarm it. But it is not too late to reverse course and avert the coming bankruptcy of America.

    Reversing course will require fundamental structural reforms of all levels of government, and our most politically sensitive entitlement programs, including Social Security, Medicare, the continuing empire of dozens of federal/state welfare programs, and now replacement of ObamaCare with Patient Power.

    If we do this right, thoroughly modernized entitlements will serve the poor, seniors and most vulnerable among us far better, and a new economic boom will restore America’s traditional, world leading prosperity.

    During George Bush’s eight years as president, the federal government grew by one-seventh relative to the economy, after Republican congressional majorities had so promisingly reduced it by that much from 1994 to 2000. But when President Obama got behind the steering wheel in 2009, he accelerated into hyperdrive even more so in all the wrong directions, doggedly pursuing the opposite of Reaganomics in every detail.

    Federal spending under President Obama has already soared by another fourth relative to the economy, to the highest in history except during World War II. President Obama’s own 2012 budget projected the federal deficit for 2011 at $1.65 trillion, the highest in world history by far. Already this year, for every dollar of federal spending, 43 cents will be borrowed. Spending for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and the income security programs (mostly welfare), will consume 95 percent of all federal revenues. What is left will not even be enough to pay interest on the national debt, equal to 10 percent of federal revenues.




    The national debt, now rocketing toward $20 trillion by 2020, is already the highest in history relative to GDP except for World War II, and on its current course will soar well past that record. Indeed, the national debt has been rocketing upwards so fast that under current policies more debt will be run up in one term under President Obama than under all other presidents in history – from George Washington to George Bush – combined, according to President Obama’s own 2012 budget.

    On our current course, indeed, our national debt as a percent of GDP will soar past the level that triggered bankruptcy for Greece, when the financial markets refused to lend the government enough to cover its enormous annual deficit. The European Union tried to end that crisis with a trillion-dollar bailout financed by its taxpayers. But who will bail out America? Who even could?

    Even worse, the national debt does not nearly encompass everything the government owes, or on which it is subject to liability. Besides the unfunded liabilities for Social Security and Medicare, which our government today cannot even validly calculate, usually overlooked as well are the unfunded liabilities for federal military pensions, veterans benefits, and federal civil service pensions. Then there are the FDIC’s guarantees for bank deposits, the FHA’s home mortgage guarantees, and trillions more in mortgage-backed securities and federal guarantees of those securities held by the Federal Reserve, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the FHA. None of this is counted in the national debt.

    Somehow, President Obama insisted that it was a good idea to add all of the entitlement promises of ObamaCare on top of these obligations. ObamaCare added a costly new entitlement program to provide federal welfare subsidies for health insurance for families making as much as $88,000 per year, soon climbing to more than $100,000. Woefully overpromised Medicaid, the health care program for the poor, was sharply expanded to cover nearly 100 million Americans by 2021 according to CBO. While President Obama won enactment of ObamaCare promising it would reduce deficits, it will actually add another $4 trillion to $6 trillion to the nation’s deficits and debt through the first 20 years alone.

    State and local governments add even further to the problem. People use the term “failed state” to refer to Somalia, with its disintegrated government. But that term may increasingly be applied to California, New York, Michigan and Illinois, with their out of control state budgets and deficits, runaway government pensions, dysfunctional education bureaucracies, and increasingly belligerent public sector unions.

    These states already resemble Greece, with our federal government already bailing them out at taxpayer expense, which started in President Obama’s first stimulus bill in 2009. State and local government debt has soared toward a projected $4 trillion, or another 24 percent of GDP, by 2012. The unfunded liabilities of state and local pensions total $3.8 trillion, with state and local promises to pay retired employee health benefits adding further unfunded liabilities of $1.4 trillion. None of this is counted in the national debt either.

    Adding still more to these troubles is the extended weakness and instability of the economy. With this year’s federal deficit already projected at $1.65 trillion, another recession now would threaten precisely the same national bankruptcy as suffered by Greece.

    The solution lies first in restoring booming economic growth, which requires restoring the principles of Reaganomics. Then we must modernize all of our nation’s entitlement programs to rely on modern capital, labor and insurance markets, with transformed incentives that would further contribute to economic growth. With such reforms, we can achieve all of the liberal social goals of those programs far more effectively, serving seniors and the poor actually better, at just a fraction of the costs of the current tax and redistribution programs.

    That would include extending the enormously successful 1996 reforms of the old, New Deal era, Aid to Families with Dependent Children program (AFDC) to the remaining 184 federal means-tested welfare programs, sending welfare back to the states. It would include, as well, allowing workers the freedom to eventually choose to substitute personal savings, investment and insurance accounts to finance all of the benefits now financed by the payroll tax, ultimately replacing that tax entirely with a family wealth engine that would feed mighty rivers of savings and investment into a booming economy.

    Further liberating, pro-growth reforms are necessary at the state and local levels. That includes using a state spending limit like Colorado’s Taxpayer Bill of Rights to phase out state income taxes in the 41 states that still suffer that job and growth killing burden. Nine states already survive perfectly well without any state income taxes, including big, booming states like Texas and Florida.

    The solution to our economic crisis lies first in restoring booming economic growth, which requires restoring the principles of Reaganomics.
    8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

    #2
    Originally posted by tobee43 View Post
    The national debt, now rocketing toward $20 trillion by 2020
    Still laughing about that. Once they start speaking the truth that the national debt is OVER $100 TRILLION DOLLARS due to the rape and plunder of all of the funds that they have used, you will understand the truth.

    The party is over........
    All information contained in this post is for informational and amusement purposes only.
    Bankruptcy is a process, not an event.......

    Comment


      #3
      Of course Fox forgets to mention that most of this was run up in the past ten years....we cannot fight various wars on the credit card.

      By the way - as usual - Frogger is correct...this is but the tip of the iceberg!

      Comment


        #4
        It's the bankruptcy mindset, that all of us should already know. We rob Peter to pay Paul. However, our accounting is all askew because we borrowed the money from the future (robbing our 401(k) even)! Sure, it doesn't show on the books today, but tomorrow... we will see the real cost.

        I never understood the financial concept of Net Present Value (or net present dollars). We would be shocked to see the number if it were ever calculated for the federal government. (Yes, the NPV is actually at least $75 trillion; it may actually be closer to the $100 trillion that frogger eludes to.) However, you'll never hear them talk about $75T or $100T in any administration. It's just too scary to even fathom!

        The problem is not the wars. The problem is, really, entitlements. We keep adding new entitlements without accounting for cost. No company on the planet could operate the way the federal government is run.
        Chapter 7 (No Asset/Non-Consumer) Filed (Pro Se) 7/08 (converted from Chapter 13 - 2/10)
        Status: (Auto) Discharged and Closed! 5/10
        Visit My BKForum Blog: justbroke's Blog

        Any advice provided is not legal advice, but simply the musings of a fellow bankrupt.

        Comment


          #5
          Right!

          Perhaps eventually the entire world needs a reset - no one owes anyone anything - we all start from square one...

          Comment


            #6
            Looks good on paper, but until a complete restructure of our government (basic, simplistic laws and policy) is done, it won't happen. We are no longer a government by the people. We are a government of the special interests, lobbists, and greedy corporations. There isn't a dimes difference between either political party.

            How much is one trillion? http://www.pagetutor.com/trillion/index.html
            Filed July 2009. Discharged 08/08/2014. Awaiting closing. We made it !!!! Woo-hoo!

            Comment


              #7
              well, i for one would like to know where exactly florida is "booming".

              in a much as the entitlement issue, which is a sensitive one, certainly, but, i must say we worked a total of 90 years between us, and i'm not wanting anything i didn't pay for??? i can't control the fact that the money we put into these programs were misused by our congress and government. i know the actual blame is not as simply as poor business management ...or is it?
              8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

              Comment


                #8
                Hi Tobee!!!

                It's not management- it's where the money goes - remember also too - SS taxes are limited to the first 106K per year...so if' you're a millionaire or billionaire you pay not a cent more for SS taxes than say a high priced accountant. So if we lifted the cap for SS, the issue would go away, instantly.

                But of course what is the single largest budget item - and no, it's not SS, Medicare, or entitlements...

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by IamOld View Post
                  Hi Tobee!!!

                  It's not management- it's where the money goes - remember also too - SS taxes are limited to the first 106K per year...so if' you're a millionaire or billionaire you pay not a cent more for SS taxes than say a high priced accountant. So if we lifted the cap for SS, the issue would go away, instantly.

                  But of course what is the single largest budget item - and no, it's not SS, Medicare, or entitlements...
                  where is that money REALLY going...i know, to build a bridge...you think??? one that goes from the pacific to the altanic with only 2 toll booths?
                  8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by tobee43 View Post
                    where is that money REALLY going...i know, to build a bridge...you think??? one that goes from the pacific to the altanic with only 2 toll booths?
                    Hey - I sat in traffic for 3.5 hours this AM because of some accidents - I would LOVE some actual road building!!!!!

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by IamOld View Post
                      Hey - I sat in traffic for 3.5 hours this AM because of some accidents - I would LOVE some actual road building!!!!!
                      i would too, and it would also employ many, except it wouldn't employ me.. i can't lift sacks of 100 pound concrete anymore.
                      8/4/2008 MAKE SURE AND VISIT Tobee's Blogs! http://www.bkforum.com/blog.php?32727-tobee43 and all are welcome to bk forum's Florida State Questions and Answers on BK http://www.bkforum.com/group.php?groupid=9

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Niether can I :-) But such projects always employ almost more indirect workers than direct workers!!!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by IamOld View Post
                          Of course Fox forgets to mention that most of this was run up in the past ten years....we cannot fight various wars on the credit card.

                          By the way - as usual - Frogger is correct...this is but the tip of the iceberg!
                          The last 40 years to be exact.
                          The essence of freedom is the proper limitation of Government

                          Comment


                            #14
                            And get a look at our last hope to oppose Obama.





                            Ladies and gents I regret to say that it's game over. The USA is dead and will not come back.
                            The essence of freedom is the proper limitation of Government

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by IamOld View Post
                              Hi Tobee!!!

                              It's not management- it's where the money goes - remember also too - SS taxes are limited to the first 106K per year...so if' you're a millionaire or billionaire you pay not a cent more for SS taxes than say a high priced accountant. So if we lifted the cap for SS, the issue would go away, instantly.

                              But of course what is the single largest budget item - and no, it's not SS, Medicare, or entitlements...
                              Actually, it is Social Security, Social Security is $800B a year. You may think it's the defense department, but they are a "very" close second. Combined, entitlements are over $2.2 trillion of the $3.6 trillion dollar budget and that's only for Social Security, Unemployment Insurance, Medicare, and Health Insurance.

                              Removing the cap on Social Security doesn't "fix" the budget problem; it would only fix the Social Security collections deficiency. You can not tax someone on SS and spend it somewhere else. (Okay, they do that, but you can not legitimately increase SS taxation, just to fund something else.) You could only increase tax or reduce the size of the federal government in order to get the budget back in alignment.

                              The choice isn't easy... either get rid of the military (or back it down significantly) or cut the larger programs. It's difficult to choose. I, for one, don't want to be a congressman in this day and age!

                              This problem is bigger than blaming anyone but the Congress that has done this over the last 30-40 years. The current Congress is trying to fix the problem, but it may just be... too big to fix. Only a complete failure would "reset" the economy and cause some serious re-thinking.

                              Source: 2011 Federal Budget
                              Chapter 7 (No Asset/Non-Consumer) Filed (Pro Se) 7/08 (converted from Chapter 13 - 2/10)
                              Status: (Auto) Discharged and Closed! 5/10
                              Visit My BKForum Blog: justbroke's Blog

                              Any advice provided is not legal advice, but simply the musings of a fellow bankrupt.

                              Comment

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