Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Debt And Spending : Think China Is the Problem?

Try to understand that we are the problem for the debt, that is our leaders, especially the progressive socialists liberal Democrats, trillions wasted on special projects, riff with fraud and out right thrift, insane spending that does nothing to create jobs but supports special interests that believes America needs "fundamental" change, is the problem.

Think about this, more then 6 trillion was spent in the last 5 years beyond the revenues to help our economic problems but we still have the same problems? How was this not a single reason to not vote for more spending?

Who voted for more economic disaster last November? Who and Why?

The Role of China in the U.S. Debt Crisis
Source: James A. Dorn, "The Role of China in the U.S. Debt Crisis," Cato Journal, March/April 2013.

March 29, 2013

The United States' gross public debt exceeded $16 trillion in 2012, with nearly $4 trillion in spending each year. The myth is that the Chinese own a large amount of the public debt of the United States and are continuing to add to the debt in large amounts each year.

The reality is that the Chinese own a very small amount of the debt. The Chinese have, however, made an impact on the U.S. debt crisis through their own financial repression (China's capital markets are tightly controlled). There are ways China can reduce this impact by advancing the role of the market and limiting the power of government, says James A. Dorn, editor of the Cato Journal.

Entitlement programs, overspending and the stimulus programs of the 2009 financial crisis are the real causes of the U.S. debt crisis. The United States should adhere to its first principles and practice the ideal of liberty under the law while also restoring economic freedom and personal responsibility. Both the United States and China have to work on solving their own problems while jointly avoiding protectionism.
Owners of the U.S. debt:
  • Intragovernmental and Federal Reserve Holdings: 39.9 percent.
  • Foreign Holdings (not China): 22.4 percent.
  • China Holdings: 8.4 percent.
  • Domestic Holdings: 27.3 percent.
China's financial repression and unbalanced economy is leading to:
  • Major distortions in the price system (interest rate controls, a pegged exchange rate, capital controls and credit quotas).
  • Persistent trade surpluses and capital inflows leading to massive foreign exchange reserves.
  • Low consumption with high levels of investment and net exports.
The United States' lack of economic freedom and personal responsibility is leading to:
  • Rapid expansion of the federal government.
  • Excessive private and public debt due to overconsumption.
  • High marginal tax rates on capital.
  • Growing redistributive state.
  • Low saving rate.
  • Highly leveraged financial sector.
  • Rising health care costs.
  • No concerted attempt to reduce government spending.
  • No progress on meaningful tax reform.
 

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