A debt culture gone awry
By Hamid Varzi
08/21/07 "IHT"
-- -- -: August 17, 2007 --- - The U.S. economy,
once the envy of the world, is now viewed across the
globe with suspicion. America has become shackled by
an immovable mountain of debt that endangers its
prosperity and threatens to bring the rest of the
world economy crashing down with it.
The ongoing sub-prime mortgage crisis, a result of
irresponsible lending policies designed to generate
commissions for unscrupulous brokers, presages far
deeper problems in a U.S. economy that is beginning
to resemble a giant smoke-and-mirrors Ponzi scheme.
And this has not been lost on the rest of the world.
This new reality has had unfortunate side effects
that go beyond economics. As a banker working in the
heart of the Muslim world, I have been amazed by the
depth and breadth of anti-Americanism, even among
U.S. allies, manifested in reactions ranging from
fierce anger to stoic fatalism. Muslims outside the
United States interpret America's policies in the
Middle East not as an effort to spread democracy but
as a blatant neocolonialist attempt to solve its
economic problems by force. Arabs and Persians alike
argue that America's fiscal irresponsibility has
forced the nation to seek solutions through military
aggression.
Many believe that America's misguided adventure in
Iraq was a desperate attempt to capture both a
reliable source of cheap oil and a major export
market for the United States.
The United States borrows a whopping $2.5 billion
daily from abroad to service its burgeoning debt. In
order to continue borrowing at reasonable interest
rates America needs to retain credibility with its
overseas creditors, especially Far Eastern nations
running huge trade surpluses. A cessation of foreign
lending would force the Fed to raise interest rates
to attract money, precipitating a collapse of the
already weak housing market and pushing the economy
into recession.
This is why the Chinese, in particular, have
threatened to retaliate against proposed U.S. trade
sanctions by reducing their $1.3 trillion in dollar
holdings.
The U.S. debt situation is so grave that the Chinese
would not even need to "dump dollars" to precipitate
a meltdown but could simply refuse to extend further
credit: They could cease purchasing additional
Treasury Bonds and Treasury Bills, without selling
any excess inventory. China has the far stronger
hand, because a run on the dollar would merely
reduce China's gigantic cash surplus while
increasing America's debt burden to astronomical
levels.
U.S. debt affects all nations, but in surprisingly
different ways: Third world farmers suffer from the
effects of gigantic U.S. farm subsidies aimed at
reducing the trade deficit, while Russia has
actually profited from America's lack of discipline.
Flush with funds generated from a decade of trade
and account surpluses, Russia views U.S. sensitivity
to its expansionist energy policy as a response to
America's own failure to reduce energy waste and
exploit alternative energy sources when it had the
opportunity to do so. In sum, American economic
decadence has become a source of Russian strength.
America's supply-side economists argue that there is
nothing wrong with going into debt, but this is
valid only as long as a nation and its consumers are
gaining something in return.
What have Americans gained from their nation's
mountain of debt? A crumbling infrastructure, a
manufacturing base that has declined 60 percent
since World War II, a rise in the wealth gap, the
lowest consumer-savings rate since the depths of the
Great Depression, 50 million Americans without
health insurance, an educational system in decline
and a shrinking dollar that makes foreign travel a
luxury.
The best cars, the best bridges and highways, the
fastest trains and the tallest buildings are all to
be found outside America's borders. Supply-siders
ignore the crucial distinction between, on the one
hand, debt employed as an investment vehicle to
enhance competitiveness and, on the other, debt used
to pay off current expenses and to create even more
debt.
The bottom line is that America is awash in red ink
and seeks the wrong solutions to its debt problems.
A return to fiscal responsibility would make America
far stronger, both domestically and internationally,
than would a continuation of current policies that
falsely project strength through idle protectionist
threats and failed military aggression.
Current tensions between the United States and the
rest of the world will continue as long as America's
military bark is louder than its economic bite.
A solution to the U.S. debt problem requires radical
measures, including: the elimination of corporate
tax loopholes, a reversal of tax breaks for the
ultra-rich, a bipartisan campaign to eliminate
budget "pork," imposition of stringent limits on
corporate debt and speculative lending, a vast
reduction in military expenditure and, finally, an
additional 50 cent per gallon gasoline tax that
would slash the federal deficit, curtail energy
waste and spur technological breakthroughs.
Let us hope America heeds the warnings, dispenses
with junk-food economics and embraces a crucial diet
of fiscal discipline. It remains to be seen,
however, whether America's political leaders have
the courage to instigate such reforms, and whether
Congress is finally willing to do something for the
future of ordinary, hard-working Americans.
Hamid Varzi is an economist and banker based in
Tehran.
Copyright © 2007 the
International Herald Tribune All rights reserved
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