Major factor in fiscal
crisis: Repub. fiscal irresponsibility (documentation)
Unprecedented massive U.S. national debt, trade deficits, capital
outflow and wealth transfer to other countries, and redistribution
of wealth from poor and middle class to the ultra- rich.
(documentation)
- At the time after the recently announced major
fiscal bailouts, the outstanding U.S. Public Debt was $ 10.7 trillion, which is $34,950 per
citizen.
- 100% of this debt was responsibility of 3
administrations: Reagan, Bush I,
and Bush II.
- The national debt is increasing by $3.42
billion per day.
4.
Adding
unfunded Medicaid,
Social Security, Medicare, and similar obligations for the
current population, this figure rises to a total of $59.1 trillion, or $516,348
per household.[6] These large
trust fund surpluses have been spent by the Bush Administrations and now
represent unfunded liabilities [8].
- Additionally, losses from the
falling value of subprime mortgage assets have reached hundreds of
billions worldwide. Subprime mortgages
totaled $600 billion in 2006, accounting for about one-fifth of
the U.S. home loan market[7]. Unsecured risk insurance by agencies
involved in packaging risky investments added large amounts to the
losses. Credit card
debt is on its all time high. The
Federal Reserve reported that revolving consumer credit has risen 7.4%
from the same period last year. Outstanding
credit card debt hit $937.5 billion. "AMERICAN credit card debt is
growing at the fastest rate in years, a fact that may signal coming
trouble for the banks that issue them... The annual growth rate has now
been over 7 percent for three months running, the first such stretch since
2001. In late
January of 2008, Bank of America executives said credit card delinquencies
in California, Florida, Arizona, and Nevada—states with high foreclosure
rates—increased five times as fast as in other states. Average debt on credit accounts and
fixed-payment accounts such as auto loans climbed to $16,600, up from
$15,500 last April, according to the credit reporting agency Experian.
Credit card companies have responded by raising interest rates on
struggling customers, causing additional difficulties for such consumers.
[9]
- Additionally, the 2007 U.S. trade deficit was over $739 billion and the debt is rapidly accumulating.
- The major factor in U.S. trade deficits is fuel imports; the U.S. is 70% dependent on oil imports, plus large
amounts for natural gas and coal.
The debt and deficits are a major drain on the value of the dollar,
and result in a massive transfer of U.S. wealth to other countries and economic
decline.
- The annual trade deficit is 35% larger than
total Social Security spending, 50% larger than total defense
spending, and 250% higher than Medicare spending.
- Since 1952, the international reserve
position of the U.S. has fallen 95%, from 50% of the world total to 2.4%.
- The U.S. manufacturing base has declined 60%, while import
ratios increased by a factor of 5.
- There has been a huge transfer of wealth from
the middle class and the poor to the ultra-rich; with increased gap
between rich and poor, and increasing inequities and joblessness.
- In both cities and suburbs
where overall poverty rates rose from 1999 to 2005, child poverty
rates rose faster. The income
of the top 1% in income increased 14%, while that of the lower
90% declined.
13. The 2008 fiscal bailout packages include
federal obligations of $7.4 trillion in addition to previous debt (10)
Sources: (1) http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/
(2) http://zfacts.com/p/480.html
(3) summary: www.flcv.com/natdebt.html
(4) www.brookings.edu/reports/2006/12poverty_berube.aspx
(5) http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/03/29/business/income.4.php
(6)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_public_debt
(7) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subprime_lending
(8) www.flcv.com/TFhist.html
(9) http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/01/consumer-debt-s.html
bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/01/consumer-debt-s.htmlhttp://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/01/consumer-debt-s.htmlhttp://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2008/01/consumer-debt-s.html
(10) The Cost Of "Rescuing" The US
Financial System: 7.4 Trillion Dollars And Counting www.informationclearinghouse.info/article21311.htm
& www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=arEE1iClqDrk
Policies that led to
current situation:
The same fiscal policies
were responsible in all 3 administrations- huge tax breaks to the rich and
political supporters, borrowing from social security and similar trust
funds, huge military spending increases, huge fiscal bailout due
to lax regulation and mismanagement, cuts to programs affecting the
poor, failure to address energy dependency)