Claudette Konola
 
The GAO just released an update to its long term projections about the health of the U.S. economy. The report indicates that the long term outlook is improved from its last analysis, but a structural imbalance still exists.

The GAO has published simulations of the economy since 1992. The model produces two projections, a baseline projection, and an alternative projection. In any projection, the assumptions of the analyst are key to understanding and evaluating the conclusions.

In the case of the baseline projection, the GAO follows the CBO’s baseline projections of August 2011 for the first 10 years, then projects most spending  will maintain a constant relationship to GDP. Interest on the national debt, and Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid payments use projections supplied by Social Security and Medicare trustees.  Adjustments were made in accordance with the deficit reduction plan passed by congress when they increased the debt ceiling.

The alternative projection adjusts the baseline projection with assumptions that congress will continue to act in a fashion similar to the way they have always acted. If tax loopholes are set to expire, the alternative projection assumes that congress will not allow them to expire, but rather will extend them. If reimbursement exceptions for providers of Medicare and Medicaid services are set to expire, the alternative projection assumes that congress will extend them.

In the baseline case, spending on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid trends up to about 15% of GDP, then remains relatively constant. In the alternative, and more realistic projection, spending on the three programs trends up to 14.5% by 2013, and almost 20% by 2080.

The report concludes:” The United States recently suffered from the most severe recession since the end of World War II. The economic downturn along with the federal government’s response to it and other actions taken to stabilize financial markets contributed to a rapid buildup in federal debt held by the public—increasing from roughly 36 percent of GDP at the end of 2007 to roughly 62 percent at the end of 2010—adding to the size and urgency of the federal government’s long-term fiscal challenge. Our simulations show that the Budget Control Act of 2011 will help reduce deficits. However, the longer-term fiscal challenge remains.”

The largest drivers in the long term are retiring Baby Boomers and the GOP’s continuing determination to repeal “ObamaCare” even though it has cost reductions for Medicare and Medicare built into it. Personally, I ‘d like to see some of the military spending cut so that Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are available to all Americans. Holding it steady at its current percentage of GDP is folly, considering that we already spend more on our military than the rest of the world combined.

Homework

Long Term Fiscal Outlook, Updated Fall 2011
 
 
Two reports have come out in the past two weeks that criticize the philosophy that governments have to tighten their belts at the same time that families are tightening their belts. Belt tightening usually means that the wearer has lost weight. In this case the lost weight is because of starvation.

The first report was commissioned by Colorado’s legislature to analyze the future of Colorado. The report is shocking. Within 12 years the only thing Colorado will be able to pay for are the three major programs: K-12, Healthcare, and Prisons. Within 13 years even those programs will need massive cuts. Lawmakers are cautioned that there is no way to tighten Colorado’s belt enough to save any program other than the big three. Good luck if you want to sue somebody; there won’t be a court. Good luck if you want to send your kids to college; there won’t be a public system of higher education in Colorado. Good luck if you are injured in a motorcycle accident and can’t get out of your wheel chair; there won’t be any public assistance for you. Grover Norquist won, and he didn’t even need to drown government in a bathtub. TABOR is killing Colorado.

The second report was issued by a UN think tank, UNCTAD. Post-crisis Policy Changes in the World Economy blasts the austerity focus of governments worldwide. It blames the slow recovery on the lack of demand for goods and services all over the world. Its opening paragraph says, “… in most developed economies private demand is subdued due to stagnating wages and little improvement in employment. The recent shift towards fiscal and monetary tightening represents a major risk for the global economy.”

The UNCTAD report demands that financial reform include a separation of investment banking and commercial banking as insurance against the excesses of the financial industry that caused the mortgage crash with which we are still suffering.  It almost feels like I’m beating a dead horse, but I’ve been saying for a very long time that the US financial system needs more, not less regulation. Yet even the “grass roots” Tea Party is against any financial regulation. Maybe because the “grass roots” were fertilized with a load of crap from the Koch Brothers, who recently hosted a conference in Vail, where billionaire Charles Koch called the 2012 elections the mother of all wars.

This is the mother of all wars. The elite of the world have declared war on workers. It is time for workers to unite and fight back. There are way more of us than there are of them, even if about 20% of us have been brainwashed into swallowing the kool-aide offered by the Koch Brothers, Americans for Prosperity (What a joke), and ALEC. Stop voting against yourselves. In the words of James Hoffa, “Let’s take these son of bitches out.”

Homework

University of Denver Report on Colorado's Economic Future

UN Report on the World's Economic Future

Mother Jones Story About Vail Conference

Tea Party's Hissy Fit over James Hoffa's Comments