At the turn of the millenium, the concern was that the US was paying off the debt too quickly!
Here are a few excerpts from a speech by then Fed Chair Alan Greenspan in April 2001: The paydown of federal debt “Today I want to address a subject in which your group and the Federal Reserve share a keen interest–the paydown of the federal debt and its implications for the economy and financial markets. While the magnitudes of future federal unified budget surpluses are uncertain, they are highly likely to remain sizable for some time. …
[C]urrent forecasts suggest that under a reasonably wide variety of possible tax and spending policies, the resulting surpluses will allow the Treasury debt held by the public to be paid off. Moreover, well before the debt is eliminated–indeed, possibly within a relatively few years–it may become difficult to further reduce outstanding debt to the public because the remaining obligations will mostly consist of savings bonds, well-entrenched holdings of long-term marketable debt, and perhaps other types of debt that could prove difficult to reduce.”What went wrong over the last 20+ years?
Here is a list of events and policy choices that significantly increased the debt after 2000:
1) The 2000 projections were overly optimistic.
2) The 2001 recession.
3) The 2001 and 2003 Bush Tax Cuts.
4) 9/11, Homeland Security Spending and the War in Afghanistan
5) The War in Iraq
6) The Finacial Crisis and Great Recession
7) The Trump Tax Cuts
8) The Pandemic.
1) Overly Optimistic Projections: Here are the CBO projections from July 2000: The Budget and Economic Outlook: An Update
Click on graph for larger image.
The CBO projections showed an almost $6 Trillion in debt reduction in the 2001 through 2010 period.
I argued in 2000 that these projections ignored possible negative events such as an investment led recession due to the bursting of stock bubble. These projections were clearly overly optimistic.
2) The 2001 Recession: Although Greenspan mentioned “the current slowdown in economic activity” in his April 2001 speech, he didn’t realize the economy was already in a recession. From the May 2000 FOMC minutes: “The information reviewed at this meeting suggested that economic growth had remained rapid through early spring..”The economy was already in a recession!
3) Bush Tax Cuts: These tax cuts were sold as slowing the growth of the surpluses (using Greenspan’s speech for cover)! Instead, the tax cuts (mostly for the wealthy) turned the surpluses into deficits and reduced revenue by $1.5 trillion or more over the 2001 – 2010 period.
There were various Inspector General reports that the Fed and FDIC field examiners were expressing significant concerns in 2003 and 2004, but Greenspan was blocking all efforts to tighten standards – and the Bush Administratio was loosening bank regulations!
This photo shows John Reich (then Vice Chairman of the FDIC and later at the OTS) and James Gilleran of the Office of Thrift Supervision (with the chainsaw) and representatives of three banker trade associations: James McLaughlin of the American Bankers Association, Harry Doherty of America’s Community Bankers, and Ken Guenther of the Independent Community Bankers of America.
“I think this tax bill is going to reduce the size of our deficits going forward,” Sen. Pat Toomey (R-PA), November 2017Complete nonsense.
8) The Pandemic: Deficit spending increased sharply due to the pandemic.
Here is a graph of the actual annual deficits since 2000.
Note: This is not adjusted for the growth of the economy. Later I’ll post a graph showing the annual deficit as a percent of GDP.
So, what happened to “paying off the debt”? A series of adverse events (9/11, pandemic), and poor policy choices.
Note that all the “poor policy choices” were by Republicans including tax cuts, the Iraq War, and failure to properly regulate.
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