RangerDave wrote:
How do you arrive at that number, Stathol? Are you adding the present value of unfunded future entitlement payments to the debt side of the ratio?
Yes. Debt is debt.
RangerDave wrote:
If so, are you also adding the present value of future GDP increases to the GDP side of the ratio?
No.
RangerDave wrote:
If not, then it's a skewed calculation.
It's nothing of the sort. Or are you going to claim that every debt-to-equity ratio ever published for any business is skewed? The government's present-day debt = roughly $130T. The country's present-day GDP is roughly $14.8T. Our present day debt-to-GDP ratio is therefore about 8.8:1. In fact, if we're talking about actual debt-to-equity ratio, the picture is far more grim. That would be about 75:1 today.
I
could compare present day debt to some mythical future GDP, but that be entirely dishonest since "future GDP" is a purely speculative value. There is no factual basis for determining what it will be.
RangerDave wrote:
It depends. Do they have the ability to substantially increase their own income at will? Can they just print money and pay the bills that way if they choose? Do they have a right to opt out of many of the future expenses that would prompt them to draw on their line of credit? If the answer to all those questions is yes, then I'm not quite so worried about it. (In short, sovereign nation != individual borrower.)
Here we get to the crux of it. What you're not-so-subtly angling for in questioning my calculation is that you don't consider those unfunded liabilities to be
real
liabilities because the government can renege on them whenever it wants. But then, it can also just as easily renege on treasury bonds, etc. -- but for some ill-defined reason, you seem to think that would somehow be unacceptable behavior. Well, it's not odd that you think it's unacceptable -- it's odd that you think defaulting on its other forms of debt is somehow better. The government takes money away from its own citizens -- dis-proportionally from the poor, I might add -- and promises to someday give it back. Instead it spends all of that money and then reneges on its promise. I don't call that ethical. I call it one of the most depraved forms of theft there is. At least the person buying the treasure bill had a choice. At least they were (if they had a brain) aware that all investment has risk and that you can lose your principal. Those "unfunded liabilities" as you call them were taken away from people effectively at gunpoint. They had no choice. Reneging on them is actually far worse, ethically, than defaulting on what you call "real" debt.
Of course, you're also "not so worried" because instead of just flat out defaulting, they could either 1) Tax the citizenry arbitrarily, in order to pay them back WITH THEIR OWN **** MONEY or 2) fire up the printing press and defraud them all on a massive scale.
The fact that neither of these options leaves you not particularly worried I think says about all I really need to know about your ethics and your politics. No thank you.