In the words of a
veteran investor, watching the U.S. bond market today is like sitting in
a packed theater and smelling smoke. You look around for signs of other
nervous sniffers. But everyone else seems oblivious.
Yes, the federal government shut down
this week. Yes, we are just two weeks away from the point when the
Treasury secretary says he will run out of cash if the debt ceiling
isn't raised. Yes, bond king Bill Gross has been on TV warning that a
default by the government would be "catastrophic." Yet the yield on a
10-year Treasury note has fallen slightly over the past month (though
short-term T-bill rates ticked up this week).
Part of the reason people aren't
rushing for the exits is that the comedy they are watching is so
horribly fascinating. In his vain attempt to stop the Senate striking
out the defunding of ObamaCare from the last version of the continuing
resolution, freshman Sen. Ted Cruz managed to quote Doctor Seuss while re-enacting a scene from the classic movie "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington."
Meanwhile, President Obama has become
the Hamlet of the West Wing: One minute he's for bombing Syria, the next
he's not; one minute Larry Summers will succeed Ben Bernanke as
chairman of the Federal Reserve, the next he won't; one minute the
president is jetting off to Asia, the next he's not. To be in charge, or
not to be in charge: that is indeed the question.
According
to conventional wisdom, the key to what is going on is a Republican
Party increasingly at the mercy of the tea party. I agree that it was
politically inept to seek to block ObamaCare by these means. This is not
the way to win back the White House and Senate. But responsibility also
lies with the president, who has consistently failed to understand that
a key function of the head of the executive branch is to twist the arms
of legislators on both sides. It was not the tea party that shot down
Mr. Summers's nomination as Fed chairman; it was Democrats like Sen.
Elizabeth Warren, the new face of the American left.
Yet, entertaining as all this
political drama may seem, the theater itself is indeed burning. For the
fiscal position of the federal government is in fact much worse today
than is commonly realized. As anyone can see who reads the most recent
long-term budget outlook—published last month by the Congressional
Budget Office, and almost entirely ignored by the media—the question is
not if the United States will default but when and on which of its
rapidly spiraling liabilities.
True, the federal deficit has fallen to about 4% of GDP this year
from its 10% peak in 2009. The bad news is that, even as discretionary
expenditure has been slashed, spending on entitlements has continued to
rise—and will rise inexorably in the coming years, driving the deficit
back up above 6% by 2038.
A very striking feature of the latest CBO report is how much worse it
is than last year's. A year ago, the CBO's extended baseline series for
the federal debt in public hands projected a figure of 52% of GDP by
2038. That figure has very nearly doubled to 100%. A year ago the debt
was supposed to glide down to zero by the 2070s. This year's long-run
projection for 2076 is above 200%. In this devastating reassessment, a
crucial role is played here by the more realistic growth assumptions
used this year.
As the CBO noted last month in its 2013 "Long-Term Budget Outlook,"
echoing the work of Harvard economists Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff:
"The increase in debt relative to the size of the economy, combined with
an increase in marginal tax rates (the rates that would apply to an
additional dollar of income), would reduce output and raise interest
rates relative to the benchmark economic projections that CBO used in
producing the extended baseline. Those economic differences would lead
to lower federal revenues and higher interest payments. . . .
"At some point, investors would begin to doubt the government's
willingness or ability to pay U.S. debt obligations, making it more
difficult or more expensive for the government to borrow money.
Moreover, even before that point was reached, the high and rising amount
of debt that CBO projects under the extended baseline would have
significant negative consequences for both the economy and the federal
budget."
Just how negative becomes clear when one considers the full range of
scenarios offered by CBO for the period from now until 2038. Only in
three of 13 scenarios—two of which imagine politically highly unlikely
spending cuts or tax hikes—does the debt shrink from its current level
of 73% of GDP. In all the others it increases to between 77% and 190% of
GDP. It should be noted that this last figure can reasonably be
considered among the more likely of the scenarios, since it combines the
alternative fiscal scenario, in which politicians in Washington behave
as they have done in the past, raising spending more than taxation.
Only a fantasist can seriously believe "this is not a crisis." The
fiscal arithmetic of excessive federal borrowing is nasty even when
relatively optimistic assumptions are made about growth and interest
rates. Currently, net interest payments on the federal debt are around
8% of revenues. But under the CBO's extended baseline scenario, that
share could rise to 20% by 2026, 30% by 2049, and 40% by 2072. By 2088,
the last date for which the CBO now offers projections, interest
payments would—absent any changes in current policy—absorb just under
half of all tax revenues. That is another way of saying that policy is
unsustainable.
The question is what on earth can be done to prevent the debt
explosion. The CBO has a clear answer: "[B]ringing debt back down to 39
percent of GDP in 2038—as it was at the end of 2008—would require a
combination of increases in revenues and cuts in noninterest spending
(relative to current law) totaling 2 percent of GDP for the next 25
years. . . .
"If those changes came entirely from revenues, they would represent
an increase of 11 percent relative to the amount of revenues projected
for the 2014-2038 period; if the changes came entirely from spending,
they would represent a cut of 10½ percent in noninterest spending from
the amount projected for that period."
Anyone watching this week's political
shenanigans in Washington will grasp at once the tiny probability of tax
hikes or spending cuts on this scale.
It should now be clear that what we are watching in Washington is not
a comedy but a game of Russian roulette with the federal government's
creditworthiness. So long as the Federal Reserve continues with the
policies of near-zero interest rates and quantitative easing, the gun
will likely continue to fire blanks. After all, Fed purchases of
Treasurys, if continued at their current level until the end of the
year, will account for three quarters of new government borrowing.
But the mere prospect of a taper, beginning in late May, was already
enough to raise long-term interest rates by more than 100 basis points.
Fact (according to data in the latest "Economic Report of the
President"): More than half the federal debt in public hands is held by
foreigners. Fact: Just under a third of the debt has a maturity of less
than a year.
Hey, does anyone else smell something burning?
Mr. Ferguson's latest book is "The Great Degeneration: How Institutions Decay and Economies Die" (Penguin Press, 2013).
Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976?Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. Unless you are in this field of investigative journalism, especially covering extremely sensitive subjects and potentially dangerous subjects as well, you simply cannot understand the complexities and difficulties involved with this work that I face every day.
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