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Greenspan testimony points to deepening US fiscal crisis
By Nick Beams
16 February 2004
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In his semi-annual testimony to Congress last week, Federal
Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan gave his now almost customary
upbeat assessment of the prospects facing the US economy.
He began by noting that in the period since his previous testimony
last July, when convincing signs of accelerated activity were
not in evidence, the picture had now brightened with
gross domestic product expanding vigorously and productivity
surging. Looking forward, he continued, the
prospects are good for the sustained expansion of the US economy.
At the same time, he promised that, while interest rates would
eventually have to rise as the economy expanded, the Federal Reserve
could be patient in removing its current policy accommodation
which has seen rates at a 40-year low. These upbeat remarkscharacterised
rather acidly by a Financial Times editorial as Mr
Greenspan as the eternal optimist: everything is for the best
in the best of all possible economieswere the basis
of major news reports that the American economy had turned the
corner and helped fuel a sharp rise on Wall Street.
But looking behind the headlines there are indications, even
in the Greenspan speech itself, that all is far from well in the
US economy.
So far as the increase in US economic growth is concerneda
transition from an extended period of subpar economic performance
to one of more vigorous expansionGreenspan noted that
household spending was once again the mainstay with
real personal consumption spending increasing nearly 4 percent
and outlays on residential structures rising by about 10 percent.
Rising consumption spending is generally taken to indicate
a healthy economy. This is because it is normally the result of
increased wages and employment levels, which in turn reflect increased
investment and productive activity. Not in this case however.
As Greenspan acknowledged, the biggest factor in rising consumer
spending was the low interest rates engineered by the Fed. These
prompted automakers to offer incentive deals, thereby boosting
sales, while the lowest home mortgage rates in decades were
a major contributor to record sales of existing residences, engendering
a large extraction of cash from home equity. That cash was
used to support personal consumption spending, home improvement,
and the repayment of higher cost debt. In other words, far from
indicating a healthy economy, the increase in consumption spending
was largely the result of the housing bubble created by the Feds
low-interest rate regime.
Even as he put the best possible gloss on the state of the
US economy, Greenspan was forced to recognise that the sharp increase
in the budget deficit contained dangers both in the short and
long term. The deficit, he noted, had risen to $375 billion in
the 2003 fiscal year and appears to be widening considerably
in the current fiscal year with current projections indicating
that very sizable deficits are in prospect in the years
to come.
The imbalance in the federal budgetary situation would soon
pose serious longer-term fiscal difficulties especially
due to the retirement of the baby-boom generation
in the next few years. Without corrective action, this development
will put substantial pressure on our ability in coming years to
provide even minimal government services while maintaining entitlement
benefits at their current level, without debilitating increase
in tax rates. The longer we wait before addressing these imbalances,
the more wrenching the fiscal adjustment will ultimately be.
The problems are not confined to the longer-term. If the prospects
for increasing federal budget deficits are factored in by money
markets, this could lead to a rise in long-term interest rates,
leading in turn to cuts in investment and other interest-rate
sensitive spending thereby undermining the private capital
formation that is a key element in the economys growth
prospects.
Rising concerns over the worsening fiscal position have been
reflected in recent press commentary. For example, in a comment
published last Friday by BusinessWeek described the governments
finances as a fiasco of mammoth proportions. It cited
a recent article by Niall Ferguson, history professor at New York
University, and Laurence J. Kotlikoff, professor of economics
at Boston University, which drew ominous parallels between
fiscal overstretch in imperial Bourbon France and contemporary
America.
BusinessWeek noted that projected deficits over the
next decade run to around $2.4 trillion but that if Bush succeeds
in his campaign to make the temporary tax cuts permanent, then
the red ink would exceed $5.2 trillion. In other words,
if the tax cuts are made permanent, the deficit will be 100 percent
worse than at present.
Given such warnings, one might have expected that, in his report
to Congress, Greenspan would have come down firmly against the
Bush tax cuts which have provided a major boost for high-income
earners.
However, when questioned about his position in the Senate last
week, Greenspan was adamant that the tax cuts should remain in
force.
I am in favour, as I have indicated in the past, for
continuing the tax cuts that are in dispute at this particular
stage, he said. It is crucially important that we
try to find, wherever we can, reductions in outlays, before adverting
to the question of revenues to fill the gap. The gap, he
insisted, should be taken out on the expenditure side.
As many economic commentators have pointed out, taking
it out in the expenditure side means destroying what remains
of the system of social security set in place in the programs
of the 1930s and the 1960s.
Greenspans vigorous defence of the Bush tax cuts recalls
editorial comments made by the Financial Times on the tax
cut plan last May. It said that the lunatics were now in
charge of the asylum with more extreme Republicans
set on creating a fiscal disaster as way of destroying social
welfare programs. Proposing to slash federal spending,
the editorial noted, particularly on social programs, is
a tricky electoral proposition, but a fiscal crisis offers the
tantalising prospect of forcing such cuts through the back door.
Linking the tax measures to the war on Iraq, the editorial
said that for the extremists undermining the multilateral
international order is not enough; long-held views on income distribution
also require radical revision.
These themes were voiced in an article by well-known economic
commentator and author William Greider, published in the Nation
last May. According to Greider, the Bush presidency has been anchored
in a hard-driving right-wing movement whose aim is
to roll back the twentieth century so that the primacy of
private property rights is re-established over government
regulation and above all, private wealthboth enterprises
and individuals with higher incomesare permanently insulated
from the progressive claims of the graduated income tax.
As chairman of the Federal Reserve, Greenspan has to at least
give the impression of political neutrality, claiming to base
himself on the findings of economic analysis. But, as his history
shows, he is flesh of one with some of the most aggressive defenders
of the free market and private property and wealth
within the American ruling class.
These views were clearly set out in an article published in
1966 defending the gold standard as the real basis of all finance,
and subsequently reprinted in the book Capitalism, the Unknown
Ideal by extreme right-wing philosopher Ayn Rand. According
to Greenspan, chronic deficit spending was the hallmark
of the welfare state, while the welfare state itself was nothing
more than a mechanism by which governments confiscate the wealth
of the productive members of society to support a wide variety
of welfare schemes.
Asked in 1993 if he still agreed with the conclusions of his
article, Greenspan replied: Absolutely. That basic
agreement seems to have been underlined once again by his insistence
that the answer to the growing fiscal crisis in the US is to make
permanent the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy while slashing domestic
government spending.
See Also:
Bush budget freezes social spending to
pay for military buildup
[14 February 2004]
US budget deficit to hit half a trillion
dollars
[4 February 2004]
Whither the US dollar?
[25 November 2003]
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