Tags: debt

Andy Sutton to Appear on Liberty Talk Radio

Andy Sutton will appear once again on Liberty Talk Radio with host Joe Cristiano for their monthly discussion this Wednesday, May 18th from 8-9 EDT. Click Here to Listen

This month’s discussion is key for anyone who wants a better understanding of the implications of the USA reaching the statutory borrowing limit. How will it affect you? Will it affect you? When will it affect you? Listen in to find out.

They’ll also be discussing the consumer’s very own role and participation in the creation of inflation – yes, when we as consumers get upset about high gas prices, we have ourselves in large part to blame. Andy will explain the linkage between the consumer’s spending choices and the creation of inflation by the banking system.

Please feel free to call in with your questions and/or comments. The numbers for Liberty Talk Radio are (888) 773-4496 or direct (646) 652-4620. Click Here to Listen

 

Right on Schedule – USA Reaches Debt Limit

WSJ’s Paul Vigna reports the nation’s nearly $14.3 trillion debt ceiling will be breached today. Also, NASDAQ withdrew its bid for the NYSE. (AP Photo/Henny Ray Abrams, file)

The U.S. government is expected to hit the $14.294 trillion debt ceiling Monday, setting in motion an uncertain, 11-week political scramble to avoid a default.

The Treasury Department plans to announce Monday it will stop issuing and reinvesting government securities in certain government pension plans, part of a series of steps designed to delay a default until Aug. 2.

The Treasury’s moves buy time for the White House and congressional leaders to reach a deficit-reduction agreement that could clear the way for enough lawmakers to vote to raise the amount of money Congress allows the nation to borrow.

Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council, said reaching the debt ceiling “should be a warning bell to the political system that it’s time to get serious about preserving our full faith and credit.” The Obama administration says a default would tip the U.S. back into a financial crisis.

But the pathway to a deal remains unclear, even to those doing the negotiating. The White House and Republicans are giving conflicting signals about how close they are to a deal. Vice President Joe Biden said last week the contours of an agreement were taking shape. House Speaker John Boehner painted a different picture Sunday, saying on CBS’s Face the Nation “I’m not seeing any real action.”

Many Republicans and some Democrats have said they won’t vote to increase the debt ceiling without an accompanying deal to cut spending or tackle such longer-term fiscal problems as health-care costs. They argue the debt ceiling is a good venue to force changes needed to help secure the nation’s solvency.

People familiar with the negotiations led by Mr. Biden say they are looking at cuts to agriculture subsidies and federal retirement programs, stepped-up antifraud efforts, increased premiums for pension plans backed by the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation and the sale of wireless spectrum and government properties.

The talks are at an early stage and potential areas of agreement are preliminary, officials warn. But Democrats have not ruled out some thorny issues, according to people familiar with the negotiations, including reforms to the pension program for federal workers.

The areas being examined amount to a sliver of the $4 trillion goal officials have set for deficit reduction over the next 10 years.

And taxes remain a roadblock. Republican leaders say tax increases can’t be part of any deficit plan, but White House officials have said any plan must include revenue increases.

Mr. Sperling said the White House wants an agreement “weeks in advance as opposed to being in stalemate in late July where everything is coming down to the wire.” Mr. Boehner appeared to agree, saying Sunday a deal doesn’t “have to wait until the eleventh hour.”

A group of House Republicans has questioned the validity of the August deadline, suggesting the Treasury could sell assets, such as gold reserves, to keep paying creditors. Treasury officials have rejected the idea, but could be forced to rethink if talks stall.

The U.S. government has hit the debt ceiling before, most notably in 1995 and 1996 when the Clinton administration and House Republicans squared off over government spending. Eventually, though, lawmakers reached deals and the country hasn’t defaulted on its debt in modern history.

Bankers and business executives warned lawmakers last week that default could trigger a financial crisis, sending interest rates soaring, which would make it harder for families and businesses to borrow. That’s because a default would throw into question the value of U.S. Treasury securities, long considered one of the world’s safest investments. Many loans and business deals are based on the value of Treasurys, and if their value eroded the impact would be felt broadly.

Because the government is projected to run a $1.5 trillion deficit this year, it must borrow money to cover its obligations, ranging from military spending to interest on existing debt.

Lawmakers have not felt pressure to act yet in part because markets have remained stable, and the yield for U.S. government debt remains low.

Juggling the Books

Treasury has several steps it can take to avoid exceeding the debt ceiling

DEBTQA

DEBTQA

Yields on 10-year Treasury notes have fallen from more than 3.7% in early February—when Fed officials and others began warning of catastrophic consequences if the debt limit was breached—to below 3.2%.

If investors had serious concerns about a default, they likely would be selling bonds, which would in turn push up their yields. Bond yields have instead been moving down in part because the economy seems to be slowing. Commodities prices also have tumbled, which holds down inflation and puts downward pressure on bond yields.

If officials get too close to Aug. 2, government officials might have to decide which of the country’s creditors to pay and which payments they will suspend or stop.

Treasury officials so far have deflected questions about which creditors would be given priority. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said in a letter to Sen. Michael Bennet (D., Colo.) last week that failing to raise the debt ceiling would lead to a default on obligations “such as payments to our service members, citizens, investors, and businesses.”

May’s Centsible Investor is Available

The May Edition of our premium newsletter, ‘The Centsible Investor’ is available!

Despite the blowout in commodities and the sideways/down action in stocks, the model portfolio lost just .3% in the past month. The portfolio has been bolstered by diversification and also by a few new strategic additions to the dividend section, which we outlined in an earlier dispatch.

This month’s keynote article is an expose of the federal reserve. The article delves into the historical events surrounding the creation of the fed, some comments by various fed officials which lay bare the truth that this was an entity that was created to commit legalized theft via inflation. We explain in easy to understand terms the main mechanisms by which the fed accomplishes this task. Hopefully after reading this piece, you’ll be convinced of the need for a full Congressional investigation (not a whitewash) of this institution and its eventual demise.

The energy update focuses on JP Morgan’s validation of the work we’ve been doing for well over a year – there is a growing disconnect between global oil supply and demand and that we’ve been experiencing supply deficits in the US for some time now.

This month’s metals report is critical in terms of getting a firm understanding of what exactly is going on in the commodities markets recently. The media would have you believe (once again) that the bull market in commodities is over. Why does the media despise commodities so? Because commodities are an excellent proxy of the inflation created by central banks and the bank-sponsored media must do its bidding.

In our equity market update, we look across our full range of indicators: short, medium, and long term and analyze potential disturbances in the markets moving forward. We also outline several triggering mechanisms for these disturbances and give you some signposts to watch for as you navigate through the reams of information you come across daily.

For more information or to subscriber, please click here

Social Security Deficits Now ‘Permanent’

Editor’s Note: A ’rounding error’? This guy probably believes in the tooth fairy too. This Commissioner’s complacency makes this a must-read!

Social Security will run a permanent yearly deficit when looking at the program’s tax revenues compared to what it must pay out in benefits, the program’s trustees said Friday in a report that found both the outlook for Social Security and Medicare, the two major federal social safety-net programs, have worsened over the last year.

Medicare’s hospital insurance trust fund is now slated to run out of money in 2024, or five years earlier than last year’s projection, while Social Security’s trust fund will be exhausted by 2036, a year earlier than the prior projection.

The trustees stressed that exhaustion of the trust funds doesn’t mean the programs will stop paying all benefits. Social Security could fund about three-fourths of benefits past 2036, and Medicare could pay 90 percent of benefits past 2024 under current trends.

The figures come as Congress and President Obama are wrestling over whether to make major changes to the entitlement spending, and Republicans said the new projections should force the debate to turn in their direction.

“Today’s report makes it clearer than ever that doing nothing is not an option. The failure to act means current as well as future beneficiaries, will face significant cuts even sooner than previously estimated,” said three top House Republicans on the Ways and Means Committee, which oversees both programs.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, the managing trustee of the boards of trustees for the two programs, said the report shows the need to act “sooner rather than later,” but said Mr. Obama has actually put forward an outline calling for changes to stabilize the finances for the major entitlements programs.

And Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius argued that Medicare would have been in worse shape without the new health care law Democrats passed last year, which reduced billions of dollars of Medicare payments.

Social Security began running an annual deficit in 2010 when looking at tax income and benefit payments. The gap right now is made up by payments from the trust fund, which in theory has built up over the years when the program ran an annual surplus.

Charles Blahous, one of the trustees, said the gap between tax revenues and benefit payments is now “a permanent feature of the program’s finances going forward.”

Still, Michael Astrue, the Social Security Administration’s commissioner, said the gap was not a major issue compared with the broad size and scope of Social Security.

“It is a rounding error in terms of its significance, in my opinion,” he said.

S&P Cuts Greece’s Credit Rating – AGAIN

Editor’s Note: S&P warns Greece on restructuring its debt, but has no problem with the US Govt and Fed colluding to restructure America’s debt by inflation. This is why the ratings agencies have zero credibility – they are shills of the federal reserve and its primary policy tool – the US government.

Standard & Poor’s has again cut Greece’s credit rating, downgrading it by two notches to B as investor expectations of a debt restructuring continue to rise.

The rating is the lowest yet for Greece and is six notches below investment grade. It comes after European officials acknowledged for the first time that Greece’s €110bn rescue package a year ago was insufficient and that further help would be needed.

Strikingly, Greece has now been at a “junk” credit rating from S&P for more than a year. Recent research from the International Monetary Fund shows that every country that has defaulted since 1975 was junk-rated for at least a year beforehand.

S&P cited the increased likelihood of an extension of the debt payment maturities for Greece’s loans from the European Union as a reason for the downgrade, as private creditors would probably be asked to do the same.

“Such private sector burden sharing would likely constitute a distressed exchange according to our criteria, for which we assign a rating of ‘SD’ for selective default,” it added in a statement on Monday.

The US rating agency also kept Greece on credit watch negative, meaning further downgrades are possible.

Market interest rates on Greek debt continued to rise on Monday with the yield on benchmark 10-year bonds rising 0.22 percentage points to 15.73 per cent. That corresponds to a price of about 56, well below the 100 the bondholder would get if he held it to maturity without a default. The yield on three-year bonds rose 0.4 percentage points to 24.21 per cent.

Americans NEVER Seem to Learn

Editor’s Note: So we’re back at the credit card spending spree again – this time at much higher rates. Americans are the dimmest people on Earth apparently as they just can’t stop borrowing, yet will demand their government do exactly that. Don’t you people realize that is your borrowing that allows the Fed to rob you with inflation?? Well, you’ve made your beds; now llie well in them.

U.S. consumer borrowing rose for a sixth straight month in March, led by a gain in non-revolving credit, which includes auto loans, and a pickup in credit-card use.

The $6 billion increase followed a $7.6 billion rise in February, the Federal Reserve said today in Washington. Economists projected a $5 billion gain in the measure of credit card debt and non-revolving loans for March, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg News survey.

Payroll gains may be giving Americans the ability to ratchet up their borrowing. Employers last month added more jobs than forecast, indicating the economic expansion is withstanding higher fuel prices. – Propaganda

“Consumers are feeling a little more confident about the economic outlook and their own financial situation,” said Russell Price, senior economist at Ameriprise Financial Inc. in Detroit. “Things will improve incrementally from here. As job growth continues, we should continue to see pretty good consumer spending.” Then why is consumer confidence falling????

Estimates in the Bloomberg survey of 37 economists ranged from gains of $2 billion to $8 billion after a previously reported $7.6 billion rise in February.

The U.S. added 244,000 jobs in April, a report from the Labor Department showed today. Economists projected a 185,000 increase, according to the median estimate in a Bloomberg survey. The jobless rate rose to 9 percent.

Credit Cards

Revolving debt, which includes credit cards, increased $1.9 billion in March, the second gain in four months, according to today’s Fed data. Non-revolving debt, including educational loans and loans for autos and mobile homes, rose $4.1 billion for the month. The Fed’s report doesn’t track debt secured by real estate, such as home equity lines of credit.

The increase in non-revolving debt was led by an unadjusted $6.2 billion rise in federal government lending for education.

Auto sales in March slipped to a seasonally adjusted 13.06 million annual rate from 13.38 million a month earlier, according to industry reports.

“We continue to see good solid signs of progress despite some of the challenges that remain” for the economy, Don Johnson, vice president of U.S. sales for General Motors Co., said during an April 1 teleconference. “A recovering job market is going to be the most important factor for the U.S. economy at this stage, and we do anticipate that this is going to continue to improve.”

American Express

American Express Co., the biggest issuer based on customer spending, announced April 21 that first-quarter profit increased and that it reduced funds set aside to cover bad loans.

“Total revenues grew at the healthiest pace since before the recession,” Kenneth I. Chenault, chief executive officer of American Express, said in a statement. No kidding; you keep increasing your rates!

Capital One Financial Corp. reported the same day that its first-quarter profit also rose as fewer credit-card borrowers defaulted.

“The period of shrinking loans through the Great Recession came to an end,” Richard D. Fairbank, chief executive officer at Capital One, said in the statement.

More Americans Leaving Work Force

Editor’s Note: The biggest piece of misinfo in this article is that the shrinking labor force is being caused by purely demographic factors. They near totally discount the increasing number of discouraged workers. Seems to me these type of pieces are building a foundation for clamming shut entitlement spending (austerity).

The share of the population that is working fell to its lowest level last year since women started entering the workforce in large numbers three decades ago, a USA TODAY analysis finds.

The bad economy, an aging population and a plateau in women working are contributing to changes that pose serious challenges for financing the nation’s social programs.

“What’s wrong with the economy may be speeding up trends that are already happening,” says Marc Goldwein, policy director of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a non-partisan group favoring smaller deficits.

For example, job troubles appear to have slowed a trend of people working later in life, putting more pressure on Social Security, he says.

Another change: the bulk of those not working has shifted from children to adults.

In 2000, the nation had roughly the same number of children and non-working adults. Since then, the population of non-working adults has grown 27 million while the nation added just 3 million children under 18.

USA TODAY analyzed employment numbers and 2010 Census data to see how the ratio of workers to non-workers has changed.

Other key findings:

Men leave. Working-age men have been dropping out of the labor force for decades. The disappearance quickened when construction and manufacturing jobs vanished in the recession from December 2007 through June 2009. Until the 1960s, more than 80% of men worked.

Women stay. The trend of women getting jobs offset the loss of working men until the late 1990s. The share of women holding jobs rose from 36% in 1960 to 57% in 1995, then leveled off. The rate was 56% in 2010.

The aging of 77 million Baby Boomers born from 1946 through 1964 from children to workers to retirees is changing the relationship between workers and dependents.

Retirees generally are more costly to support than children.

The average public school education costs $10,000 a year. The average retiree gets $25,000 a year in benefits — $13,000 in Social Security and Medicare benefits of $12,000.

In all, taxpayers will spend about $125,000 educating a child and $500,000 caring for a senior, in today’s dollars at current life expectancies, according to federal education and retirement program data. The costs are paid differently, too. State and local governments, through sales and property taxes, pay most education expenses. The federal government, though income taxes, pays most retiree costs.

“No matter how wealthy you are, you have a problem if half the population is not working and depending on those who are,” says John Goodman, president of the conservative National Center for Policy Analysis. “Wherever you look, we’ve overpromised.”

Economist Eileen Applebaum of the liberal Center for Economics and Policy Research says the real problem is a lack of jobs. Another 25 million people would work in a healthy economy, and incentives such as child care assistance could help, she says: “We’re getting richer. We can afford things. We just need to fix what needs to be fixed.”

US Lacks Credibility on Debt – IMF

Editor’s Note: What is totally amazing to me is how the IMF can suggest the acceleration of the US to third world status without even one whimper from the media. The idea that the US economy is ‘sufficiently strong’ to be able to withstand significant austerity measures is an absolute joke.

The US lacks a “credible strategy” to stabilise its mounting public debt, posing a small but significant risk of a new global economic crisis, says the International Monetary Fund.

In an unusually stern rebuke to its largest shareholder, the IMF said the US was the only advanced economy to be increasing its underlying budget deficit in 2011, at a time when its economy was growing fast enough to reduce borrowing.

The latest warning on the deficit was delivered as Barack Obama, the US president, is becoming increasingly engaged in the debate over ways to curb America’s mounting debt.

To meet the 2010 pledge by the Group of 20 countries for all advanced economies – except Japan – to halve their deficits by 2013, the US would need to implement tougher austerity measures than in any two-year period since records began in 1960, the IMF said.

In its twice-yearly Fiscal Monitor, the IMF added that on its current plans the US would join Japan as the only country with rising public debt in 2016, creating a risk for the global economy.

Carlo Cottarelli, head of fiscal affairs at the Fund, said: “It is a risk that if it materialises would have very important consequences… for the rest of the world. So it is important that the US undertakes fiscal adjustment in a way sooner rather than later.”

At the moment, the US had outlined less than half of the tax increases and spending cuts necessary to bring its public debt down in the medium term, the IMF calculated. “More sizeable reductions in medium-term deficits are needed and will require broader reforms, including to social security and taxation,” the IMF said.

The IMF said the US economy “appears sufficiently strong” to withstand greater austerity measures and tax increases, adding that the benefit of last year’s stimulus package “is likely to be low relative to its costs”.

Having narrowly averted a government shutdown last week through a deal with congressional Republicans to cut $38.5bn in spending from this year’s budget, Mr Obama will on Wednesday unveil his plans to rein in America’s long-term deficits, which are driven by popular programmes like Medicare, Medicaid and social security.

The debate over US fiscal policy is expected to intensify in the coming weeks and months, as the US hits its congressionally mandated debt limit of $14,300bn. Without approval by lawmakers to increase it, the US could face potential default as early as July, and so far Republicans and Democrats remain some distance from reaching a deal.

US Debt Jumps $54 Billion in Week Preceding Deal to Cut $38 Billion

The federal debt increased $54.1 billion in the eight days preceding the deal made by President Barack Obama, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D.-Nev.) and House Speaker John Boehner (R.-Ohio) to cut $38.5 billion in federal spending for the remainder of fiscal year 2011, which runs through September.

The debt was $14.2101 trillion on March 30, according to the Bureau of the Public Debt, and $14.2642 on April 7.

Since the beginning of the fiscal year on Oct. 1, 2010, the national debt has increase by $653.4 billion.

Proposed Budget to ‘Pay Off’ National Debt?

Editor’s Note: Now this would make a good April Fool’s joke. $4 Trillion in cuts over 10 years.. $400 Billion a year – that doesn’t even cover the interest paid on the national debt each year. These guys have got to be kidding. Not to mention the structural defects in Social Security and Medicare. They think that by changing the source of funding it all goes away. This type of economic gymnastics is why we’re in this mess in the first place.

The Republican budget proposal will eliminate the national debt while still preserving costly entitlement programs like Medicare and Social Security, Rep. Paul Ryan told CNBC.

US Capitol Building with cash

Speaking just hours before the spending plan gets its formal introduction before Congress, Ryan, head of the House Budget Committee, said the debt will peak at 74.5 percent of gross domestic product in 2014 and then drop from there.

“We’ve got to show the country that we can get this situation under control and grow the economy, and that’s what we’re doing,” he said. “So whether (Democratic Senate Majority Leader) Harry Reid is willing to pass this bill or Barack Obama is ready to sign it, I don’t know the answer to that question.

“What I do know is I can’t look my kids and my constituents in the eyes with my conscience being clear and not know that I didn’t do everything I could to try and fix this problem before it got out of control.”

Among the key tenets in a budget resolution to be presented are fundamental changes to the way Medicare and Medicaid are financed. The resolution forestalls action on Social Security, though Ryan said he expects a bipartisan agreement on that issue later this year.

More broadly, the plan contains provisions that Ryan has said will slash $4 trillion from federal spending over the next decade.

 

The resolution is necessary as a potential shutdown looms over Washington and Congress must approve raising the national debt limit.

Ryan acknowledged the political obstacles he will face both from Democrats and some members of this own party who may bristle at the aggressive spending cuts involved.

“The problem in Washington is, they take any honest and sincere attempt to fix this problem and use it as a political weapon against you in the next election,” he said. “We can’t let that deter us.”

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