A troubled currency and financial system and large budget and
trade deficits do not present an attractive face to creditors. Yet
Washington in its hubris seems to believe that the US can forever rely
on the Chinese, Japanese and Saudis to finance America's life beyond
its means. Imagine the shock when the day arrives that a US Treasury
auction of new debt instruments is not fully subscribed.
The US
has squandered $500 billion dollars on a war that serves no American
purpose. Moreover, the $500 billion is only the out-of-pocket costs. It
does not include the replacement cost of the destroyed equipment, the
future costs of care for veterans, the cost of the interests on the
loans that have financed the war, or the lost US GDP from diverting
scarce resources to war. Experts who are not part of the government's
spin machine estimate the cost of the Iraq war to be as much as $3
trillion.
The Republican candidate for President said he would
be content to continue the war for 100 years. With what resources? When
America's creditors consider our behavior they see total fiscal
irresponsibility. They see a deluded country that acts as if it is a
privilege for foreigners to lend to it, and a deluded country that
believes that foreigners will continue to accumulate US debt until the
end of time.
The fact of the matter is that the US is bankrupt.
David M. Walker, Comptroller General of the US and head of the
Government Accountability Office, in his December 17, 2007, report to
the US Congress on the financial statements of the US government noted
that "the federal government did not maintain effective internal
control over financial reporting (including safeguarding assets) and
compliance with significant laws and regulations as of September 30,
2007." In everyday language, the US government cannot pass an audit.
Moreover,
the GAO report pointed out that the accrued liabilities of the federal
government "totaled approximately $53 trillion as of September 30,
2007." No funds have been set aside against this mind boggling
liability.
Just so the reader understands, $53 trillion is $53,000 billion.
Frustrated by speaking to deaf ears, Walker recently resigned as head of the Government Accountability Office.
As
of March 17, 2008, one Swiss franc is worth more than $1 dollar. In
1970, the exchange rate was 4.2 Swiss francs to the dollar. In 1970, $1
purchased 360 Japanese yen. Today $1 dollar purchases less than 100 yen.
If
you were a creditor, would you want to hold debt in a currency that has
such a poor record against the currency of a small island country that
was nuked and defeated in WW II, or against a small landlocked European
country that clings to its independence and is not a member of the EU?
Would
you want to hold the debt of a country whose imports exceed its
industrial production? According to the latest US statistics as
reported in the February 28 issue of Manufacturing and Technology News,
in 2007 imports were 14 percent of US GDP and US manufacturing
comprised 12% of US GDP. A country whose imports exceed its industrial
production cannot close its trade deficit by exporting more.
The
dollar has even collapsed in value against the euro, the currency of a
make-believe country that does not exist: the European Union. France,
Germany, Italy, England and the other members of the EU still exist as
sovereign nations. England even retains its own currency. Yet the euro
hits new highs daily against the dollar.
Noam Chomsky recently
wrote that America thinks that it owns the world. That is definitely
the view of the neoconized Bush administration. But the fact of the
matter is that
the US owes the world. The US "superpower" cannot
even finance its own domestic operations, much less its gratuitous wars
except via the kindness of foreigners to lend it money that cannot be
repaid.
The US will never repay the loans. The American economy
has been devastated by offshoring, by foreign competition, and by the
importation of foreigners on work visas, while it holds to a free trade
ideology that benefits corporate fat cats and shareholders at the
expense of American labor. The dollar is failing in its role as reserve
currency and will soon be abandoned.
When the dollar ceases to
be the reserve currency, the US will no longer be able to pay its bills
by borrowing more from foreigners.
I sometimes wonder if the
bankrupt "superpower" will be able to scrape together the resources to
bring home the troops stationed in its hundreds of bases overseas, or
whether they will just be abandoned.
Paul Craig Roberts
was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration.
He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal editorial page and
Contributing Editor of National Review. He is coauthor of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at:
PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com