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May 25, 2013
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Walter E. Williams Column: We're Destroying Our Republic with Reckless Greece-like Fiscal Abandon

By Walter E. Williams | May 30, 2012 | 07:30

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Our nation is rapidly approaching a point from which there's little chance to avoid a financial collapse. The heart of our problem can be seen as a tragedy of the commons. That's a set of circumstances when something is commonly owned and individuals acting rationally in their own self-interest produce a set of results that's inimical to everyone's long-term interest. Let's look at an example of the tragedy of the commons phenomenon and then apply it to our national problem.

Imagine there are 100 cattlemen all having an equal right to graze their herds on 1,000 acres of commonly owned grassland. The rational self-interested response of each cattleman is to have the largest herd that he can afford. Each cattleman pursing similar self-interests will produce results not in any of the cattlemen's long-term interest — overgrazing, soil erosion and destruction of the land's usefulness. Even if they all recognize the dangers, does it pay for any one cattleman to cut the size of his herd? The short answer is no because he would bear the cost of having a smaller herd while the other cattlemen gain at his expense. In the long term, they all lose because the land will be overgrazed and made useless.

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We can think of the federal budget as a commons to which each of our 535 congressmen and the president have access. Like the cattlemen, each congressman and the president want to get as much out of the federal budget as possible for their constituents. Political success depends upon "bringing home the bacon." Spending is popular, but taxes to finance the spending are not. The tendency is for spending to rise and its financing to be concealed through borrowing and inflation.

Does it pay for an individual congressman to say, "This spending is unconstitutional and ruining our nation, and I'll have no part of it; I will refuse a $500 million federal grant to my congressional district"? The answer is no because he would gain little or nothing, plus the federal budget wouldn't be reduced by $500 million. Other congressmen would benefit by having $500 million more for their districts.

What about the constituents of a principled congressman? If their congressman refuses unconstitutional spending, it doesn't mean that they pay lower federal income taxes. All that it means is constituents of some other congressmen get the money while the nation spirals toward financial ruin, and they wouldn't be spared from that ruin because their congressman refused to participate in unconstitutional spending.

What we're witnessing in Greece, Italy, Ireland, Portugal and other parts of Europe is a direct result of their massive spending to accommodate the welfare state. A greater number of people are living off government welfare programs than are paying taxes. Government debt in Greece is 160 percent of gross domestic product. The other percentages of GDP are 120 in Italy, 104 in Ireland and 106 in Portugal. As a result of this debt and the improbability of their ever paying it, their credit ratings either have reached or are close to reaching junk bond status.

Here's the question for us: Is the U.S. moving in a direction toward or away from the troubled EU nations? It turns out that our national debt, which was 35 percent of GDP during the 1970s, is now 106 percent of GDP, a level not seen since World War II's 122 percent. That debt, plus our more than $100 trillion in unfunded liabilities, has led Standard & Poor's to downgrade our credit rating from AAA to AA+, and the agency is keeping the outlook at "negative" as a result of its having little confidence that Congress will take on the politically sensitive job of tackling the same type of entitlement that has turned Europe into a basket case.

I am all too afraid that Benjamin Franklin correctly saw our nation's destiny when he said, "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic."

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.

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Comments

Another question:

Submitted by c5then on Wed, 05/30/2012 - 8:25am.

When the country is moving a break-neck speed toward the fiscal cliff that is widely acknowledged, can we afford to try and make small course corrections or do we need to pull the emergency break and spin into a 180 to avoid going over?

The loss of the Republic was seeded long ago with the twin abominations of the Federal Reserve Act and the Income Tax Act . Those two actions by a supposedly representational congress enabled the government to have first claim to every citizens income as they pursued their happiness and to inflate the value of the nation's currency instead of paying the government's debts in currency of equal value as when it was borrowed.

Fast forward 100 years, and we now have something akin to elected socialism where representatives are elected by a dependent population of whom almost 50% bear no cost of the government but instead get direct financial benefits from the government. Voting for fiscal conservatives is like voting to give themselves a pay cut.

Benjamin Franklin was indeed correct as he was so often, but the loss of the Republic happened long ago via creeping socialism. What we have to wonder now is does this generation have what it takes to recapture the republic, or will we be the last generation of the once great United States of America and see the economic collapse that is coming (but not inevitable) and the formal dissolution of this country?

 

Madison and Jefferson and Franklin built a Republic - Roberts killed it! 

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Republican House Failed

Submitted by giatn on Sat, 06/02/2012 - 4:51pm.

It was painful to read, after watching 18 months of arguing over the
budget, that the debt increased the most in this Congress than all
others. Boehner, Cantor and Ryan have shown themselves to
be just as mathematically challenged as Democrats. One would think
that the Congress would be embarrassed to introduce anything that
involved increased spending, but you would be dead wrong. I don't
care what the circumstances a 40% increase to the Ex-Im Bank borders
on criminal. Am I the only one who wonders where the appropriations
for the agencies are spent as it seems every issue or event requires
additional funding? Ryan earns the scorn of every Democrat and
Medicare recipient, but yet his budget merely "slows the growth" of spending. That's not austerity, especially considering that Obama rolled
all of the "emergency" one time spending necessitated by the recession
into the baseline. It's clear to me that functioning brain cells are
extinguished by every day spent in D.C.

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Stop Censoring The Gosnell Trial!

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