The Price of the Housing Bubble
The Weird Battle Over the Debt Ceiling
By DEAN BAKER

Policy debates in 
Washington are moving ever further from reality as a small elite is 
moving to strip benefits that the vast majority need and support. The 
battle over raising the debt ceiling is playing a central role in this 
effort.
The United States is currently running extraordinarily
 large budget deficits. The size of the annual deficit peaked at 10 
percent of GDP in 2009, but it is still running at close to 9.0 percent 
of GDP in 2011. The reason for the large deficits is almost entirely the
 downturn caused by the collapse of the housing bubble. This can be 
easily seen by looking at the projections for these years from the 
beginning of 2008, before government agencies recognized the housing 
bubble and understood the impact that its collapse would have on the 
economy.
At the beginning of 2008 the Congressional Budget 
Office (CBO), the country's most respected official forecasting agency, 
projected that the budget deficit in 2009 would be just 1.4 percent of 
GDP. The reason that the deficit exploded from 1.4 percent of GDP to 
10.0 percent had nothing to do with wild new spending programs or 
excessive tax cuts. This enormous increase in the size of the deficit 
was entirely the result of the fallout from the housing bubble.
Remarkably, both Republicans in Congress and President
 Obama have sought to conceal this simple reality. The Republicans like 
to tell a story of out-of-control government spending. This is supposed 
to be a long-standing problem (in spite of the fact that Republicans 
have mostly controlled the government for the last two decades) that 
requires a major overhaul of the budget and the budgetary process. They 
are now pushing, as they have in the past, for a constitutional 
amendment requiring a balanced budget.
It might be expected that President Obama would be 
anxious to correct the misconception about the budget, but this would 
not fit his agenda either. President Obama is relying on substantial 
campaign contributions from the business community to finance his 
re-election campaign. Many business people are anxious to see the major 
government social programs (Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid) 
rolled back. They see the crisis created around the raising of the debt 
ceiling as a unique opportunity to accomplish this goal.
In order to advance their agenda, President Obama also
 has an interest in promoting the idea of the deficit as being a chronic
 problem. Plus, it gives him an opportunity to blame the deficit on the 
fiscal choices of his predecessor, President Bush. Therefore, in his 
address to the country on July 25, he told the public that as a result 
of President Bush's tax cuts, his wars, and his Medicare prescription 
drug benefit, the deficit was on a track to be more than $1 trillion in 
2009.
This is more than five times as large as the actual 
figure projected by CBO.  However, President Obama's distortion 
preserved the idea of the deficit as a chronic problem, while also 
getting in an attack on the Republicans. It also allows him to avoid 
talking about the housing bubble. This is a topic that he seems anxious 
to avoid, since many large contributors to his re-election and to the 
Democratic Party profited enormously from the bubble.
The claim that the deficit is a chronic problem and 
not primarily the result of a severe cyclical downturn also opens the 
door for cuts to the country's major social welfare programs. These cuts
 are hugely unpopular. All three major programs enjoy overwhelming 
support among people in all demographic groups, including conservative 
Republicans. There is no way that an ambitious politician would ever 
suggest major cuts to these programs apart from a crisis.
In this respect, the crisis over the debt ceiling is 
the answer to the prayers of many people in the business community. They
 desperately want to roll back the size of the country's welfare state, 
but they know that there is almost no political support for this 
position. The crisis over the debt ceiling gives them an opportunity to 
impose cutbacks in the welfare state by getting the leadership of both 
political parties to sign on to the deal, leaving the opponents of cuts 
with no plausible political options.
To advance this agenda they will do everything in 
their power to advance the perception of crisis. This includes having 
the bond-rating agencies threaten to downgrade U.S. debt if there is not
 an agreement on major cuts to the welfare state.
In principle, the bond-rating agencies are only 
supposed to assess the likelihood that debt will be repaid. However, 
they showed an extraordinary willingness to allow profit to affect their
 ratings when they gave investment grade ratings to hundreds of billions
 of dollars of mortgage-backed securities during the housing bubble. 
Given their track record, there is every reason in the world to assume 
that the bond-rating agencies would use downgrades or the threat of 
downgrades for political purposes.
This means that the battle over the debt ceiling is an
 elaborate charade that is threatening the country's most important 
social welfare programs. There is no real issue of the country's 
creditworthiness of its ability to finance its debt and deficits any 
time in the foreseeable future. Rather, this is about the business 
community in general, and the finance sector in particular, taking 
advantage of a crisis that they themselves created to scale back the 
country's social welfare system. They may well succeed.
Dean Baker is the co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research 
(CEPR). He is the author of Plunder and Blunder: The Rise and Fall of the 
Bubble Economy and False Profits: Recoverying From the Bubble Economy. 
This column was originally published by Al Jazeera.
 http://www.counterpunch.org/baker07282011.html


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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