Quote:
Originally Posted by finnbow
Once again, you conflate a government shutdown with a sovereign debt default, thereby confirming my point. Indeed, the pending debt ceiling debate is about whether to pay for budgetary items already approved by bipartisan Congressional votes. IOW, the GOP is threatening to default on our sovereign debt if we pay the bills for programs that they themselves already approved.
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Good Lord. You've twisted yourself up in so many knots on this one, you're absolutely lost on this. YOU are the one who connected the use of the debt limit as a pathway to "stiffing our creditors". Let me see if I can help you get back on track.
1) We were initially discussing the use of the debt limit as a lever in negotiations. You were critical of that strategy, insisting that Biden was right for not negotiating on it.
2) I think where I lost you was post 61.
2) While criticizing the use of the debt limit as a negotiation tool you insisted in post 62 that some Repubs were advocating "stiffing our creditors". This is the first link that YOU made between federal payment obligations and the Republican negotiating tactic of not negotiating on the debt ceiling.
3) I seem to have lost you with my "...not paying our bills..." comment. I'll restate it here. We're absolutely not paying our bills. This is where your economic literacy is apparently challenged. So, let me water it down for you.
I go to the store, and I buy a new laptop. I pay for the laptop with my Visa card. Did the store get paid? Sure. Have I paid my bill yet? No. The obligation to pay has shifted from the store to Visa: I still owe the credit card company for the laptop.
I realize I don't have the money to pay Visa. I go to my bank and take out a loan, and use the money to pay Visa. Have I paid for the laptop yet? No. The obligation for making the payment has simply shifted from paying the store to paying Visa and then paying the bank.
Of course, there has been a shitload of inefficiencies and additional costs associated with making that payment, including the interest on the balance which may have incurred interest or late fees from VISA, and now will certainly incur interest and potential late fees from the bank. At this point, not only has the bill not been paid - it's simply been shifted between creditors - that bill is now getting more expensive by the day with the interest and additional inefficiencies with create indirect costs.
This is EXACTLY what's happening, and it's why our debt continues to balloon. A certain percentage of the Fed's budgeted expenditures don't get paid for, which is why the federal debt goes up
every year.
There, does that help a bit? Is the statement "We're not paying our bills..." now making more sense, or do you still reject this very simple economics lesson as "bullshit" as you did in post 62?
3) By the way, I stated that I wasn't aware of anyone who advocated stiffing creditors. You were challenged to name the Republican(s) who were advocating this. You didn't/wouldn't/couldn't).
4) "Conflating the budget limit" with "the government shutdown" is something that you started accusing me of in post 64. That's actually a pretty lame debate tactic and something I never said or even implied.
5) Point of fact, it's the Dems who always roll out specters of government shutdowns and all matters of fiscal armageddon when budget negotiations involving the debt limit happen. Here are your friends at the
Brookings Institution doing just that. What's under-reported is the reminder that there's always been a fallback plan in these instances: temporary spending packages that kick the can down the road. And the GOP has already put that on the table as a fallback option, which is why I'm skeptical about either siding being ready or able to do the hard work of getting spending under control.
Quote:
Originally Posted by finnbow
The GOP's $2 trillion tax cut was passed over 2 years before COVID showed up. 
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We're talking about budget deficits and debt, and you bring up tax policy? OK, whatever. You're still apparently still clinging to the idea that a reduction in tax rates = a reduction in tax revenue. And you call me an economic illiterate? LOL!
Federal Revenue, Fiscal 2017 (which would be the last Obama-era budget year): $3.32 trillion
Federal Revenue, Fiscal 2021 (the last Trump Era budget): $4.05 trillion
Could you please help me find the $2 trillion tax cut in those numbers?