Fiscal (in)stability: Behind the ticking time bomb of US debt
First, the good news: The U.S. economy, as measured by GDP growth, is in decent shape and Americans are feeling more optimistic about where it is headed.
Now, the bad news: The countrys finances are a mess, have been for a long time, and are only getting worse. Consider that rising interest rates mean that the federal government now spends more on interest payments on its debt than it does on national defense.
That state of the countrys fiscal house and how its likely affecting the Federal Reserves interest rate decisions was a central theme at the 2024 圖泬窪蹋Economic Summit. In introducing the events opening panel session, Mark Duggan, the Trione Director at the Stanford Institute for Economy Policy Research, told the nearly 530 business leaders, policymakers and academics in the audience that, fiscal stability is foundational to the range of economic issues examined throughout the daylong Summit.
There are many challenges, said Duggan, who is also The Wayne and Jodi Cooperman Professor of Economics at Stanfords School of Humanities and Sciences. Our national debt is ballooning. Social Security is facing insolvency. Our aging population and declining birth rates are posing some unique challenges, and our countrys politics are arguably more polarized than ever.
The price of political gridlock
The session explored what could be done to ward off a full-blown fiscal crisis. The biggest threat, experts say, is if investors no longer think of the U.S. as a safe haven for their money. If that happens, the country would no longer be able to borrow to pay off its debts and other obligations.
When could that tipping point come? asked Greg Ip, the The Wall Street Journals chief economics commentator who facilitated the conversation. As the ratio of U.S. debt to GDP has continued to climb, many experts thought it would have happened by now. The panelists agreed that, while no one really knows when the crisis will hit, they said it will happen unless meaningful steps are taken to shore up the countrys balance sheet.
We totally know how to fix this, said Maya MacGuineas, the president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget. She was joined on the panel by Phillip Swagel, director of the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, and William Gale, a prominent economist at the Brookings Institution.
The problem, MacGuineas said, boils down to the lack of political will to make hard choices around cutting spending and/or raising taxes. People just have politicians telling them they can have it all and not pay for it, she said.
And, like a homework deadline, the longer we wait to get it done, the more difficult the assignment gets and the more unpleasant it gets, Swagel said.
Possible solutions
The speakers didnt lack ideas for how to repair the countrys broken finances.
MacGuineas and Ip, for example, pointed to . Swagel highlighted the CBOs list of that he likened to the fiscal equivalent of a Cheesecake Factory menu. There was talk, too, of raising revenue through new forms of taxation, such as a carbon tax, consumption tax, or value-added tax.
There was even discussion of how a Congressional commission could be convened to come up with proposals that could help break the political logjam in a fiscal emergency.
I would like to see a commission where the Republicans pick the Democrats and the Democrats pick the Republicans, Gale said. Thats because both parties know who on the other side they can work with.
If you can get the people in the middle talking to each other, you have some chance of success, he said.