Americas True Debt -- The Fiscal Gap

width=130Texas Insider Report: DALLAS Texas  Our country is in far worse fiscal shape than its $14 trillion -- and rapidly growing -- official debt suggests.  Indeed that figure measures just a small portion of the governments total liabilities.  Why is that?  The answer is there is no answer and because there is no answer the deficit is not well defined says Laurence Kotlikoff a senior fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis. Generational accounting is a well-established methodology to measure the burden of government on specific generations.  A generational account for any given generation measures the generations remaining lifetime net tax bill as a present value -- what the generation will pay net of what it will receive all valued as of today.  This amount has to cover the governments official debt plus the present value of all future government purchases of goods and services (discretionary spending).  If it doesnt the difference thats not covered is called the fiscal gap.
  • The U.S. fiscal gap based on the Congressional Budget Offices long-term Alternative Fiscal Scenario is nowhere close to the $14 trillion official debt.
  • Indeed the U.S. fiscal gap is $211 trillion -- 15 times larger than the official debt.
This means that Congress and the president have been focusing on the molehill not the mountain in their recent contretemps over the debt ceiling. /With the retirement of the baby boomer generation millions will turn to Uncle Sam for Social Security Medicare and Medicaid benefits -- roughly $40000 on average per beneficiary per year.  This means the fiscal gap will increase exponentially in the coming years.  The fiscal gap needs to be zero for the United States fiscal policy to be sustainable says Kotlikoff.
  • Achieving this result via tax hikes alone would require an immediate and permanent increase in all federal tax rates (corporate personal income excise and estate and gift taxes) of 64 percent.
  • Alternatively the United States could immediately and permanently cut all non-interest spending by 40 percent.
Source: Laurence J. Kotlikoff Americas True Debt -- The Fiscal Gap National Center for Policy Analysis September 7 2011.
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