sexta-feira, 24 de janeiro de 2014

Divida publica: quem vai pagar?

Não é o Brasil. Mas não estamos muito melhor...
Considerem o diferencial entre as taxas de crescimento da dívida, comparada ao crescimento do PIB americano e da inflação. A dívida aumenta mais rápido.
O que vai ocorrer?
Só existem três "soluções": mais inflação, mais dívida, mais juros da dívida, o que dá baixo crescimento.
Paulo Roberto de Almeida 

Can we inflate the debt away?
By Robert Romano
6
After a brief slowdown in fiscal year 2013 that ended September 30 — when the national debt grew "only" by $671.9 billion at a 4.18 percent rate — 2014 is shaping up to be another year awash in red ink.
So far, since October 1, the debt has skyrocketed another $537.9 billion. And we're not even halfway through the fiscal year yet.
Of course, the 2013 slowdown and subsequent explosion is entirely on account of the temporary standoffs between Congress and President Barack Obama over the debt ceiling last year.
As a result of legislative gridlock, the debt ceiling was not significantly raised for several months, and the growth of the national debt was briefly arrested. From Dec. 31, 2012 through Jan. 31, 2013 it held at about $16.4 trillion. And from May 31, 2013 all the way through the end of the government shutdown, it stood at about $16.7 trillion.
More than half of the increase in debt for fiscal year 2014 — some $328.2 billion — occurred on a single day: October 17, the day after the government shutdown ended.
Now the debt ceiling has been "suspended" — which is to say it is no longer in effect — until February 7.  
Assuming Congress once again raises it, since the single-day explosion of October 17the debt has risen at a rate of about $2 billion a day. With roughly 250 days left in the fiscal year, then we can expect another $500 billion increase in the debt bySeptember 30.
By then, the debt will have increased by more than $1 trillion for the 2014 fiscal year, or at a greater than 6 percent increase.
That is much faster than even nominal economic growth as measured by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. So far, through three quarters, the economy has only grown a 2.97 percent before adjusting for inflation, or at a 3.96 percent rate annualized.
Meaning the debt-to-GDP ratio, at 99 percent as of September 30, will continue rising this year, and every year thereafter so long as the debt grows faster than the economy. We may not be able to grow our way out of this mess.
And we may not be able to inflate our way out of it either. Inflation only came in at 1.46 percent in 2013, and that includes food and energy.
In fact, since 1981, only twice has inflation outpaced the growth of the debt: in 2000 and 2001.
One very good reason for that is after 1981 was about the time the U.S. began running massive balance of payments deficits. That is, more capital flowed overseas via trade, interest payments, and other transactions than was brought in.
As a result, despite massive deficit-spending and now, even with $900 billion of quantitative easing each year by the Federal Reserve, inflation has remained subdued here — because we have exported it overseas.
As long as the debt keeps growing at a pace faster than nominal economic growth and inflation, our ability to repay it over time will by definition be diminished. Eventually, it will become so large as to be impossible to be refinanced, let alone be repaid, when we run out of willing and able lenders.
So let the salons pretend that we "owe it to ourselves." Or that somehow, we possess some uncanny ability to repay it by inflating it away with printed money. In the end, none of that is going to work. Every day that goes by, the probability of default increases.
But perhaps we shouldn't say that too loudly. After all, we don't want to get anythreatening phone calls from the Department of Treasury for telling the truth about the debt.
Robert Romano is the senior editor of Americans for Limited Government.

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