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    Federal Fiscal Burden Consumes 93% Of America’s Wealth

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    Federal Fiscal Burden Consumes 93% Of America’s Wealth Authored by James D. Agresti via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours), Based on data from a U.S. Treasury report, the federal government has amassed $142 trillion in debts, liabilities, and unfunded obligations. This staggering figure equals 93 percent of all the wealth Americans have accumulated since the nationโ€™s founding, estimated by the Federal Reserve to be $152 trillion. The U.S. Capitol building is seen at sunrise in Washington on July 31, 2023. (Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times) Unlike other measures of federal red ink that cover an arbitrary period, extend into the infinite future, or ignore government resources, the figure of $142 trillion applies strictly to Americans who are alive right now and includes the governmentโ€™s commercial assets. Thus, it quantifies the financial burden that todayโ€™s Americans are leaving to their children and future generations. Complete Versus Incomplete Accounting Federal lawย requires the U.S. Treasury to publish an annual report that details the governmentโ€™s โ€œoverall financial position.โ€ In addition to theย national debt, the โ€œFinancial Report of the United States Governmentโ€ also includes the governmentโ€™s explicit and implicit financial commitments, such as: โ€ข federal employeeย pensions and other retirement benefits like healthcare. โ€ข environmental liabilities likeย contaminated nuclear sites. โ€ข unfunded obligations forย social insurance programs like Medicare. Such โ€œfiscal exposures,โ€ asย explained by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), โ€œrepresent significant commitments that ultimately have to be addressed.โ€ Thus, GAO stresses that ignoring them can โ€œmake it difficult for policymakers and the public to adequately understand the governmentโ€™s overall performance and true financial condition.โ€ Yet, that is precisely what the media does. Although the Treasuryย publishedย the report in February,ย Google Newsย indicates that no major media outlet has mentioned it. Meanwhile, the same outlets haveย frequently reportedย on the national debt and federal budget, which are incomplete measures of the federal governmentโ€™s fiscal situation. The commonly cited national debt and federal budget areย mainly basedย on cash accounting, which is theย simplistic processย of counting money as it flows in or out. Thus, liabilities like pension benefits for federal workers arenโ€™t measured until they are actually paid, which is often decades after they are promised. In contrast, the Treasury reportย mainly usesย accrual accounting, which measures financial commitmentsย as they are made. This is how the federal government requires large corporations to report their finances. In the words of the Financial Accounting Standards Board, which isย taskedย by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission to create private-sector accounting rules,ย accrual accountingย is the โ€œmost relevant and reliableโ€ way to measure the financial health of pension plans. The same applies to other retirement benefits like healthcare. Theย accounting ruleย that governs such benefits explains that โ€œa failure to accrueโ€ implies โ€œthat no obligation exists prior to the payment of benefits.โ€ Since an obligation does exist, failing to account for it โ€œimpairs the usefulness and integrityโ€ of financial statements. The Grand Total Aย methodical tallyย of accrual accounting data in the Treasury report shows that the federal government has amassed $142 trillion in debts, liabilities, and unfunded obligations beyond the value of its commercial assets. This reflects the governmentโ€™s finances at the close of its 2023 fiscal year onย Sept. 30, 2023. The primary components of this burden, which are unpacked below, include: โ€ข $26.3 trillion in publicly held national debt. โ€ข $16.6 trillion in liabilities that are not accounted for in the publicly held debt. โ€ข $104.2 trillion in unfunded social insurance obligations. These figures tally to $147.1 trillion in debts, liabilities, and unfunded obligations. Offsetting this isย $5.4 trillionย in commercial assets owned by the federal government, leaving a grand total shortfall ofย $141.7 trillion. Numbers in the trillions areย hard to conceive, so itโ€™s revealing to place them in context. The figure of $142 trillion amounts to 93 percent of the net wealth Americans have accumulated since the nationโ€™s founding, estimated by the Federal Reserve to beย $152 trillion. This includes all of their assets in savings, real estate, corporate stocks, private businesses, and consumer durable goods like automobiles and furniture. The governmentโ€™s $142 trillion shortfall alsoย amounts to: โ€ข $430,252 for every person living in the United States. โ€ข $1,098,087 for every household in the United States. โ€ข 2 times annual U.S. economic output (GDP). โ€ข 30 times annual federal revenues. Publicly Held Debt The simplest major item quantified by the Treasury report is the publicly held debt, which isย $26.3 trillion. This is the money the federal government owes to non-federal entities like individuals, corporations, state governments, and foreign governments. Publicly held debt is aย partial measureย of the national debt that excludesย $6.9 trillionย the federal government owes to federal programs like Social Security and Medicare. The Treasury report alsoย detailsย these intergovernmental debts andย consolidatesย them with the items below. Liabilities Pension and other retirement benefits are a large part of compensation packages for government employees. With these generous benefits included, civilian non-postal federal employees receive an average of 17 percent moreย total compensationย than private-sector workers with comparable education and work experience. Postal workers receive even greater premiums ranging fromย 25 percent to 43 percent. In 2022, federal, state, and local governments spent $2.3 trillion onย employee compensation, costing each household in the nation an average of $17,299. The Treasury report shows that the federal government currently owesย $14.3 trillionย in pensions and other benefits to federal employees and veterans that are not accounted for in theย publicly heldย national debt. To pay the present value of these benefits will require an average of $109,005 fromย every householdย in the United States. The Treasury reports other liabilities of the federal government,ย such as: โ€ข $124 billion in accounts payable. โ€ข $645 billion in environmental and disposal liabilities. โ€ข $99 billion in insurance and guarantee program liabilities. Altogether, the Treasury recordsย $16.6 trillionย in liabilities that are not accounted for in the publicly held debt. Social Security & Medicare A similar but far more expensive situation exists withย social insurance programs like Social Security and Medicare. This is becauseโ€”contrary to popular beliefโ€”these programs donโ€™t save workersโ€™ taxes for their retirements. Instead, theyย immediately spendย the vast majority of those taxes to pay benefits to current recipients. Thus, they areย called โ€œpay-as-you-goโ€ programs. In stark contrast, theย U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysisย explains that โ€œfederal law requires private pension plans to operate as funded plans, not as pay-as-you-go plans.โ€ The reasons for this, asย explainedย by the American Academy of Actuaries, are to increase โ€œbenefit securityโ€ and ensure โ€œintergenerational equity.โ€ Social Security and Medicare, on the other hand, haveย levied dramaticallyย increasedย tax burdensย on succeeding generations of Americans, thus creating severe generational inequality. And unlessย retirement agesย areย raisedย or benefits are reduced in some other way, taxes will need to be increased again toย keepย the programsย solvent. Federal actuaries measure the unfunded obligations of Social Security and Medicare in severalย different ways, but only one of them approximates accrual accounting. This is called the โ€œclosed-groupโ€ unfunded obligation, which is the money needed to cover the shortfalls for all current taxpayers and beneficiaries in these programs. In theย words ofย Harvard Law School professor and federal budget specialistย Howell E. Jackson, the closed-group measure โ€œreflects the financial burden or liability being passed on to future generations.โ€ These burdens areย $49.8 trillionย for Social Security andย $53.9 trillionย for Medicare. Placing these figures in context: โ€ข Social Securityโ€™s unfunded obligationsย amount to an additional $272,237 from every person who currently pays Social Security payroll taxes. โ€ข Medicareโ€™s unfunded obligationsย amount to an additional $201,932 from every U.S. resident aged 16 or older. Those shortfalls are what remain after the federal government hasย paid back with interestย all of the money it has borrowed from Social Security and Medicare. Social Security and Medicare differ from true pensions because taxpayers donโ€™t have aย contractual rightย to receive these benefits. Nevertheless, paying these benefits is an implied commitment of the federal government, andย federal lawย requires that these programs be included in the Treasury report. The Treasury report estimates that the combined closed group unfunded obligations of Social Security, Medicare, and some smaller social insurance programs areย $104.2 trillion. This figure doesnโ€™t include intergovernmental debt, which isย consolidatedย with other data in the report. Federal Assets The Treasury also records the federal governmentโ€™sย commercial assets, such as: โ€ข $922 billion in cash and other monetary assets. โ€ข $1.2 trillion in property, plants, and equipment. โ€ข $1.7 trillion in receivable loans, mainly comprised ofย student loans. However, the report doesnโ€™t account for federal stewardship land and heritage assets, such as national parks and the original copy of the Declaration of Independence. While these items have tangible value, theย reportย explains that they โ€œare intended to be preserved as national treasures,โ€ not sold to the highest bidder to cover debts. In total, the government ownedย $5.4 trillionย in commercial assets at the close of its 2023 fiscal year. Adding up the federal governmentโ€™s debts, liabilities, and unfunded obligations and then subtracting the value of its commercial assets yields a fiscal shortfall ofย $142 trillion. Root Causes Theย first critical stepย in solving a problem is to understand its root causes. However,ย scientific surveysย show that many voters are misinformed about the root causes of government debt. A scientific, nationally representative surveyย commissioned in 2020ย by Just Facts found thatย 25 percentย of voters believe the main driver of the rising national debt is military spending. This accords with the reporting of media outlets that frequently blame the debt onย military spending. In reality,ย military spendingย has plummeted from 53 percent of all federal expenses in 1960 to 17 percent in 2022: Theย same surveyย found that anotherย 25 percentย of voters believe tax cuts were the main driver of debt, in accord withย news storiesย that blame the debt on tax cuts. In reality,ย federal revenuesย have stayed at a roughly level portion of the U.S. economy for the past 80 years: As shown in the charts above, the primary driver of the national debt is increased spending, particularly onย social programs. These programsโ€”which provide healthcare, income security, education, nutrition, housing, and cultural servicesโ€”have grownย from 21 percent of all federal spending in 1960 to 64 percent in 2022. Yet, onlyย 39 percent of votersย correctly identify social spending as the primary cause of rising debt. Moreover, the vast bulk of the governmentโ€™s unfunded obligations are due to Social Security and Medicare. Thus, theย Congressional Budget Officeย projects that the main drivers of future debt will be Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, the Childrenโ€™s Health Insurance Program, Obamacare, and interest on the national debt. Under the weight of these, the publicly held debt isย due to soarย to unprecedented levels over coming decades. Harmful Effects Aย broad rangeย of academic publications explain that excessive government debt can cause far-reaching negative outcomes, such as lower wages, increased inflation, weak economic growth, higher taxes, reduced government benefits, or combinations of such results. Likewise,ย GAO warnsย that โ€œthe costs of federal borrowing will be borne by tomorrowโ€™s workers and taxpayers,โ€ which โ€œmay reduce or slow the growth of the living standards of future generations.โ€ Such effects may have already begun. Althoughย association does not prove causation, the national debt hasย skyrocketed over recent decades, and with this, the United States has experienced episodes of historically poor growth in gross domestic product (GDP), productivity, andย household income. Along with this,ย rapid inflationย has set in, another commonย consequenceย of excessive government debt. While some believe the U.S. government can spend and borrowย with abandonย because it canย print money, one of the most established laws of economics is that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Theย prolific economistย William A. McEachernย explainsย why this is so: โ€œThere is no free lunch because all goods and services involve a cost to someone. The lunch may seem free to you, but it draws scarce resources away from the production of other goods and services, and whoever provides a free lunch often expects something in return. A Russian proverb makes a similar point but with a bit more bite: โ€˜The only place you find free cheese is in a mousetrap.โ€™โ€ From Just Facts Daily Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge. Tyler Durden Mon, 08/12/2024 – 19:15

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