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  • St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank Document says "U.S. going bankrupt"



    Here is a mirror link:


  • #2
    Thanks Steve!
    Meet us in the future, not the pasture

    Comment


    • #3
      post the docs HR.

      You have a bad case of Savickitis...

      Your right button should clear it up.
      Originally posted by Kristy
      Dude, what in the fuck is wrong with you? I'm full of hate and I do drugs.
      Originally posted by cadaverdog
      I posted under aliases and I jerk off with a sock. Anything else to add?

      Comment


      • #4
        Uhuhuhuhuhuh...

        This isn't more of that Arctic Beacon or Prison Planet crap, is it?

        Comment


        • #5
          It's obvious that an economic disaster is coming to this country. You can't keep dumping billions into a useless war (and Cheney's Halliburton retirement account), giving "tax cuts" to those who dodge paying taxes in the first place, allow your friends to rape the entire economy with obscene gas prices, outsourcing jobs to India, and selling out the country to China and expect business as usual to continue on.


          The latest word I hear on the possible collapse is 2008. The BCE will desparately try to push that into 2009 so they, and the whore media, can blame it on whichever Democrat wins the White House.

          They might not even Diebold the 2008 election. Who cares if the Democrats win in a landslide, if they get blamed for the new "Great Depression" caused by a decade of BCE crimes and waste.
          Eat Us And Smile

          Cenk For America 2024!!

          Justice Democrats


          "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by LoungeMachine
            post the docs HR.

            You have a bad case of Savickitis...

            Your right button should clear it up.
            YOU post the docs.

            Let me see you post a .pdf file in this thread.

            Come on....

            I am waiting....

            *HR69 waits patiently*

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Nickdfresh
              Uhuhuhuhuhuh...

              This isn't more of that Arctic Beacon or Prison Planet crap, is it?
              Look at the link.

              I doubt Arctic Beacon or Prison Planet is hosted by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Hardrock69
                YOU post the docs.

                Let me see you post a .pdf file in this thread.

                Come on....

                I am waiting....

                *HR69 waits patiently*


                Okay smartass......

                It took me all of 15 seconds


                Is the United States Bankrupt?
                Laurence J. Kotlikoff
                the financial markets have a long and impressive
                record of mispricing securities; and that financial
                implosion is just around the corner.
                This paper explores these views from both
                partial and general equilibrium perspectives. The
                second section begins with a simple two-period
                life-cycle model to explicate the economic meaning
                of national bankruptcy and to clarify why
                government debt per se bears no connection to a
                country’s fiscal condition. The third section turns
                to economic measures of national insolvency,
                namely, measures of the fiscal gap and generational
                imbalance. This partial-equilibrium analysis
                strongly suggests that the U.S. government is,
                indeed, bankrupt, insofar as it will be unable to
                pay its creditors, who, in this context, are current
                and future generations to whom it has explicitly
                or implicitly promised future net payments of
                various kinds.
                The world, of course, is full of uncertainty.
                The fourth section considers how uncertainty
                changes one’s perspective on national insolvency
                and methods of measuring a country’s long-term
                fiscal condition. The fifth section asks whether
                immigration or productivity improvements arising
                either from technological progress or capital
                Is the U.S. bankrupt? Or to paraphrase the
                Oxford English Dictionary, is the United
                States at the end of its resources, exhausted,
                stripped bear, destitute, bereft, wanting in
                property, or wrecked in consequence of failure
                to pay its creditors?
                Many would scoff at this notion. They’d point
                out that the country has never defaulted on its
                debt; that its debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product)
                ratio is substantially lower than that of Japan and
                other developed countries; that its long-term
                nominal interest rates are historically low; that
                the dollar is the world’s reserve currency; and
                that China, Japan, and other countries have an
                insatiable demand for U.S. Treasuries.
                Others would argue that the official debt
                reflects nomenclature, not fiscal fundamentals;
                that the sum total of official and unofficial liabilities
                is massive; that federal discretionary spending
                and medical expenditures are exploding; that the
                United States has a history of defaulting on its
                official debt via inflation; that the government has
                cut taxes well below the bone; that countries holding
                U.S. bonds can sell them in a nanosecond; that
                Is the United States bankrupt? Many would scoff at this notion. Others would argue that financial
                implosion is just around the corner. This paper explores these views from both partial and general
                equilibrium perspectives. It concludes that countries can go broke, that the United States is going
                broke, that remaining open to foreign investment can help stave off bankruptcy, but that radical
                reform of U.S. fiscal institutions is essential to secure the nation’s economic future. The paper
                offers three policies to eliminate the nation’s enormous fiscal gap and avert bankruptcy: a retail
                sales tax, personalized Social Security, and a globally budgeted universal healthcare system.
                Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review, July/August 2006, 88(4), pp. 235-49.
                Laurence J. Kotlikoff is a professor of economics at Boston University and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.
                © 2006, The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Articles may be reprinted, reproduced, published, distributed, displayed, and transmitted in
                their entirety if copyright notice, author name(s), and full citation are included. Abstracts, synopses, and other derivative works may be made
                only with prior written permission of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 235
                deepening can ameliorate the U.S. fiscal condition.
                While immigration shows little promise, productivity
                improvements can help, provided the government
                uses higher productivity growth as an
                opportunity to outgrow its fiscal problems rather
                than perpetuate them by effectively indexing
                expenditure levels to the level of productivity.
                We certainly have seen major changes in
                technology in recent decades, and these changes
                have coincided with major increases in measured
                productivity. But whether or not technology will
                continue to advance is an open question. There is,
                however, a second source of productivity improvements,
                namely, a rise in capital per worker (capital
                deepening), to consider. The developed world is
                not saving enough and will not be saving enough
                to generate capital deepening on its own. However,
                China is saving and growing at such extraordinarily
                high rates that it can potentially supply the
                United States, the European Union, and Japan
                with huge quantities of capital. This message is
                delivered in Fehr, Jokisch, and Kotlikoff (2005),
                which simulates the dynamic transition path of
                the United States, Japan, the European Union, and
                China. Their model suggests that China can serve
                as America’s saver and, consequently, savior,
                provided the U.S. government lets growth outpace
                its spending and provided China is permitted to
                invest massive sums in our country. Unfortunately,
                recent experience suggests just the opposite.
                The final section offers three radical policies
                to eliminate the nation’s enormous fiscal gap and
                avert bankruptcy. These policies would replace
                the current tax system with a retail sales tax,
                personalize Social Security, and move to a globally
                budgeted universal healthcare system implemented
                via individual-specific health-insurance
                vouchers. The radical stance of these proposals
                reflects the critical nature of our time. Unless the
                United States moves quickly to fundamentally
                change and restrain its fiscal behavior, its bankruptcy
                will become a foregone conclusion.
                FISCAL INSOLVENCY IN A
                TWO-PERIOD LIFE-CYCLE MODEL
                Consider a model in which a single good—
                corn—is produced with labor and capital in either
                an open or closed economy. Corn can be either
                consumed or used as capital (planted to produce
                more corn). Agents work full time when young
                and consume when old. There is no change over
                time in either population or technology. The population
                of each cohort is normalized to 1.
                Let wt stand for the wage earned when young
                by the generation born in year t, rt for the return
                on capital at time t, and ht for the amount the
                government receives from the young and hands
                to the old at time t.
                The generation born at time t maximizes its
                consumption when old, ct + 1, subject to
                (1)
                If the economy of this country, called
                Country X, is open and agents are free to borrow,
                ht can exceed wt. However, consumption can’t be
                negative, hence,
                (2)
                The left-hand side of (2) is generation t’s remaining
                (in this case, entire) lifetime fiscal burden—
                its generational account. Equation (2) says that
                the government can’t extract more from a generation
                than its lifetime resources, which, in this
                model, consists simply of lifetime earnings.
                Suppose that, to keep things simple, the
                economy is small and open and that the wage
                and interest rates are positive constants equal to
                w and r, respectively. Also suppose that starting
                at some time, say 0, the government announces a
                policy of setting ht equal to h forever and that
                (3)
                meaning that the generational accounts of all
                generations starting with the one born at time 0
                exceed their lifetime resources.
                The old at time 0 have a generational account
                (remaining lifetime fiscal burden) of –h. These
                oldsters, who may have voted for the government
                based on the promise of receiving h, represent the
                creditors in this context. But the government can’t
                deliver on its promise. The young may be fanatically
                devoted to the government, worship the
                h
                h
                r
                w t −
                +
                >
                1
                ,
                h
                h
                r
                w t
                t
                t
                t −
                +
                + £
                +
                1
                1 1
                .
                c
                r
                w h
                h
                r
                t
                t
                t t
                t
                t
                +
                +
                +
                + +
                £ − ++
                1
                1
                1
                1 1 1
                .
                Kotlikoff
                236 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                elderly, and care little for themselves, but they
                cannot beg, borrow, or steal this much corn to give
                to the government. The government can go hat in
                hand to foreign lenders, but to no avail. Foreign
                lenders will realize the government won’t be able
                to repay.
                The most the government can do for the elderly
                is to set h equal to (1 + r)w/r. Let’s assume the
                government does this. In this case, the government
                impoverishes each generation of young from
                time 0 onward in order to satisfy the claims of
                time-0 oldsters. In the words of the Oxford English
                Dictionary, we have a country at the end of its
                resources. It’s exhausted, stripped bear, destitute,
                bereft, wanting in property, and wrecked (at least
                in terms of its consumption and borrowing capacity)
                in consequence of failure to pay its creditors.
                In short, the country is bankrupt and is forced to
                reorganize its operations by paying its creditors
                (the oldsters) less than they were promised.
                Facing the Music
                The point at which a country goes bankrupt
                depends, in general, on its technology and preferences
                as well as its openness to international trade.
                If, for example, agents who face confiscatory lifetime
                fiscal burdens refuse to work, there will be
                no lifetime resources for the government to appropriate.
                Consequently, the government must further
                limit what it can pay its creditors.
                As a second example, consider what happens
                when an open economy, which has been transferring
                (1 + r)w/r to the elderly on an ongoing basis,
                suddenly, at time 0, becomes closed to international
                trade and credit. In this case, the government
                can no longer pay the contemporaneous
                elderly the present value of the resources of all
                current and future workers. Instead, the most it
                can pay the time-t elderly is the current young’s
                resources, namely wt. The reason is simple. The
                time-t young have no access to foreign loans, so
                they can’t borrow against their future receipt of
                h in order to hand the government more at time t
                than wt.
                Clearly the loss of foreign credit will require
                the government to renege on much of its commitment
                to the time-t oldsters. And if the government
                was initially setting h below (1+ r)w/r, but above
                wt, the inability to borrow abroad will plunge the
                country into bankruptcy, assuming the government
                sets h as high as possible. But bankruptcy may
                arise over time even if h is set below w0. To see
                this, note that capital per worker at time 1, k1, will
                equal w0 – h. If w(k1) < w0, where w(kt) (with
                w¢( ) > 0) references the wages of generation t,
                the country will find itself in a death spiral for
                sufficiently high values of h or sufficiently low
                values of w0.1 Each period’s capital stock will be
                smaller than the previous period’s until t*, where
                h $ wt*, making kt*+1 = 0, at which point the jig
                is up, assuming capital as well as labor is required
                to produce output.
                In short, general equilibrium matters. A policy
                that looks sustainable based on current conditions
                may drive a country broke and do so on a permanent
                basis. Of course, policymakers may adjust
                their policies as they see their country’s output
                decline. But they may adjust too little or too late
                and either continue to lose ground or stabilize
                their economies at very unpleasant steady states.
                Think of Argentina, which has existed in a state
                of actual or near-bankruptcy for well neigh a
                century. Argentina remains in this sorry state for
                a good reason. Its creditors—primarily each successive
                generation of elderly citizens—force the
                government to retain precisely those policies that
                perpetuate the country’s destitution.
                Does Official Debt Record or Presage
                National Bankruptcy?
                Since general equilibrium considerations
                play a potentially critical role in assessing policy
                sustainability and the likelihood of national bankruptcy,
                one would expect governments to be hard
                at work developing such models or, at a minimum,
                doing generational accounting to see the potential
                burden facing current young and future generations.
                That’s not the case. Instead, governments
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 237
                1 If h is sufficiently large, there will be no steady state of the economy
                featuring a positive capital stock. In this case, the economy’s capital
                stock will converge to zero over time, starting from any initial
                value of capital. If h is not so large as to preclude a steady state
                with positive capital, the economy will feature two steady states,
                one stable and one unstable. The capital stock in the stable steady
                state will exceed that in the unstable steady state. In this case, the
                economy will experience a death spiral only if its initial capital
                stock is less than that in the unstable steady state.
                around the world rely on official debt as the
                primary indicator of fiscal solvency. So do the
                International Monetary Fund, World Bank,
                Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
                Development, and virtually all other monitors
                of economic policy, including most academic
                economists.
                Unfortunately, the focus on government debt
                has no more scientific basis than reading tea leaves
                or examining entrails. To see this, let’s return to
                our small open and entirely bankrupt Country X,
                which, when we left it, was setting h at the maximally
                expropriating value of (1+ r)w/r. Can we
                use Country X’s debt to discern its insolvency?
                Good question, particularly because the word
                “debt” wasn’t used at all in describing Country X’s
                fiscal affairs. Neither, for that matter, were the
                words “taxes” or “transfer payments.” This, by
                itself, indicates the value of “debt” as a precursor
                or cursor of bankruptcy, namely, zero. But to drive
                the point home, suppose Country X calls the h it
                takes from the young each period a “tax” and the
                “h” it gives to the old each period a “transfer payment.”
                In this case, Country X never runs a deficit,
                never has an epsilon worth of outstanding debt,
                and never defaults on debt. Even though it is as
                broke as broke can be, Country X can hold itself
                out as debt-free and a model of fiscal prudence.
                Alternatively, let’s assume the government
                continues to call the h it gives the time-0 elderly
                a transfer payment, but that it calls the h it takes
                from the young in periods t $ 0 “borrowing of
                mth less a transfer payment of (mt – 1)h” and the
                h it gives generation t when it is old at time t +1
                “repayment of principal plus interest in the
                amount of mth(1+r) less a net tax payment of
                –h + mth(1+r).” Note that no one’s generational
                account is affected by the choice of language. However,
                the outstanding stock of debt at the end of
                each period t is now mth.
                The values of mt can be anything the government
                wants them to be. In particular, the government
                can set (use words such that)
                (4)
                In this case, official debt is negative; i.e., the
                m m g m t+= t(+ ) = − g>r 1 0 1 , 1, and .
                government “runs” a surplus that becomes infinitely
                large relative to the size of the economy.
                And because g > r, the present value of the time-t
                surplus as t goes to infinity is infinite.
                Alternatively, the government can set (use
                words such that) mt+1 = m(1+ g), m0 = 1, and g > r.
                In this case, official debt becomes infinitely large
                and the present value of government debt at time
                t as t goes to infinity is infinite. So much for the
                transversality condition on government debt!
                Thus, the government of bankrupt Country X
                is free to say it’s running a balanced budget policy
                (by saying mt – 0 for t $ 0); a surplus policy, where
                the surplus becomes enormous relative to the size
                of the economy; or a debt policy, where the debt
                becomes enormous relative to the size of the
                economy. Or it could pick values of the mts that
                change sign from one period to the next or, if it
                likes, on a random basis. In this case, Country X
                would “run” deficits as well as “surpluses”
                through time, with no effect whatsoever on the
                economy or the country’s underlying policy.
                But no one need listen to the government.
                Speech, or at least thought, is free. Each citizen of
                Country X, or of any other country for that matter,
                can choose her own language (pattern of the mts)
                and pronounce publicly or whisper to herself that
                Country X is running whatever budgetary policy
                most strikes her fancy. Citizens schooled on
                Keynesian economics as well as supply siders,
                both of whom warm to big deficits, can choose
                fiscal labels to find fiscal bliss. At the same time,
                Rockefeller Republicans (are there any left and
                do they remember Rocky?) can soothe their souls
                with reports of huge surpluses and fiscal sobriety.
                To summarize, countries can go bankrupt,
                but whether or not they are bankrupt or are going
                bankrupt can’t be discerned from their “debt”
                policies. “Debt” in economics, like distance and
                time in physics, is in the eyes (or mouth) of the
                beholder.2
                Kotlikoff
                238 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                2 By economics, I mean neoclassical economics in which neither
                agents nor economic institutions are affected by language. Kotlikoff
                (2003) provides a longer treatment of this issue, showing that the
                vapidity of conventional fiscal language is in no way mitigated by
                considerations of uncertainty, time consistency, distortions, liquidity
                constraints, or the voluntary nature of payments to the government.
                ECONOMIC MEASUREMENT OF
                THE U.S. FISCAL CONDITION
                As suggested above, the proper way to consider
                a country’s solvency is to examine the lifetime
                fiscal burdens facing current and future
                generations. If these burdens exceed the resources
                of those generations, get close to doing so, or simply
                get so high as to preclude their full collection,
                the country’s policy will be unsustainable and
                can constitute or lead to national bankruptcy.
                Does the United States fit this bill? No one
                knows for sure, but there are strong reasons to
                believe the United States may be going broke.
                Consider, for starters, Gokhale and Smetters’s
                (2005) analysis of the country’s fiscal gap, which
                measures the present value difference between
                all future government expenditures, including
                servicing official debt, and all future receipts. In
                calculating the fiscal gap, Gokhale and Smetters
                use the federal government’s arbitrarily labeled
                receipts and payments. Nevertheless, their calculation
                of the fiscal gap is label-free because alternative
                labeling of our nation’s fiscal affairs would
                yield the same fiscal gap. Indeed, determining
                the fiscal gap is part of generational accounting;
                the fiscal gap measures the extra burden that
                would need to be imposed on current or future
                generations, relative to current policy, to satisfy
                the government’s intertemporal budget constraint.
                The Gokhale and Smetters measure of the
                fiscal gap is a stunning $65.9 trillion! This figure
                is more than five times U.S. GDP and almost twice
                the size of national wealth. One way to wrap one’s
                head around $65.9 trillion is to ask what fiscal
                adjustments are needed to eliminate this red hole.
                The answers are terrifying. One solution is an
                immediate and permanent doubling of personal
                and corporate income taxes. Another is an immediate
                and permanent two-thirds cut in Social
                Security and Medicare benefits. A third alternative,
                were it feasible, would be to immediately
                and permanently cut all federal discretionary
                spending by 143 percent.
                The Gokhale and Smetters study is an update
                of an earlier, highly detailed, and extensive U.S.
                Department of the Treasury fiscal gap analysis
                commissioned in 2002 by then Treasury Secretary
                Paul O’Neill. Smetters, who served as Deputy
                Assistant Secretary of Economic Policy at the
                Treasury between 2001 and 2002, recruited
                Gokhale, then Senior Economic Adviser to the
                Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, to work with
                him and other Treasury staff on the study. The
                study took close to a year to organize and complete.
                Gokhale and Smetters’s $65.9 trillion fiscalgap
                calculation relies on the same methodology
                employed in the original Treasury analysis. Hence,
                one can legitimately view this figure as our own
                government’s best estimate of its present-value
                budgetary shortfall. The $65.9 trillion gap is all
                the more alarming because its calculation omits
                the value of contingent government liabilities
                and relies on quite optimistic assumptions about
                increases over time in longevity and federal
                healthcare expenditures.
                Take Medicare and Medicaid spending, for
                example. Gokhale and Smetters assume that the
                growth rate in these programs’ benefit levels
                (expenditures per beneficiary at a given age) in
                the short and medium terms will be only 1 percentage
                point greater than the growth rate of real
                wages per worker. In fact, over the past four years,
                real Medicare benefits per beneficiary grew at an
                annual rate of 3.51 percent, real Medicaid benefits
                per beneficiary grew at an annual rate of 2.36
                percent, and real weekly wages per worker grew
                at an annual rate of 0.002 percent.3
                Medicare and Medicaid’s benefit growth over
                the past four years has actually been relatively
                modest compared with that in the past. Table 1,
                taken from Hagist and Kotlikoff (forthcoming),
                shows real benefit levels in these programs grew
                at an annual rate of 4.61 percent between 1970
                and 2002. This rate is significantly higher than
                that observed during the same period in Germany,
                Japan, and the United Kingdom. Given the introduction
                of the new Medicare prescription drug
                benefit, which will start paying benefits in 2006,
                one can expect Medicare benefit growth to
                increase substantially in the near term.
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 239
                3 See https://www.cms.hhs.gov/researchers/...mpendium/2003/
                03pg4.pdf from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid website
                and http://a257.g.akamaitech.net/7/257/2422/17feb20051700/
                www.gpoaccess.gov/eop/2005/B47.xls from the 2005 Economic
                Report of the President.
                How are the Bush administration and Congress
                planning to deal with the fiscal gap? The answer,
                apparently, is to make it worse by expanding
                discretionary spending while taking no direct
                steps to raise receipts. The costs of hurricanes
                Katrina and Rita could easily total $200 billion
                over the next few years. And the main goal of the
                President’s tax reform initiative will likely be to
                eliminate the alternative minimum tax.
                This administration’s concern with long-term
                fiscal policy is typified by the way it treated the
                Treasury’s original fiscal gap study. The study
                was completed in the late fall of 2002 and was
                slated to appear in the president’s 2003 budget
                to be released in early February 2003. But when
                Secretary O’Neill was ignominiously fired on
                December 6, 2002, the study was immediately
                censored. Indeed, Gokhale and Smetters were told
                within a few days of O’Neill’s firing that the study
                would not appear in the president’s budget. The
                timing of these events suggests the study itself
                may explain O’Neill’s ouster or at least the timing
                of his ouster. Publication of the study would, no
                doubt, have seriously jeopardized the passage of
                the administration’s Medicare drug benefit as well
                as its third tax cut.
                For their part, the Democrats have studiously
                avoided any public discussion of the country’s
                long-term fiscal problems. Senator Kerry made
                no serious proposals to reform Social Security,
                Medicare, or Medicaid during the 2004 presidential
                campaign. And his Democratic colleagues
                in Congress have evoked Nancy Reagan’s mantra—
                “Just say no!”—in response to the president’s
                repeated urging to come to grips with Social
                Security’s long-term financing problem.
                The Democrats, of course, had eight long years
                under President Clinton to reform our nation’s
                most expensive social insurance programs. Their
                failure to do so and the Clinton administration’s
                censorship of an Office of Management and
                Budget generational accounting study, which was
                slated to appear in the president’s 1994 budget,
                speaks volumes about the Democrats’ priorities
                and their likely future leadership in dealing with
                our nation’s fiscal fiasco.
                The fiscal irresponsibility of both political
                parties has ominous implications for our children
                and grandchildren. Leaving our $65.9 trillion bill
                for today’s and tomorrow’s children to pay will
                roughly double their average lifetime net tax rates
                (defined as the present value of taxes paid net of
                transfer payments received divided by the present
                value of lifetime earnings).
                Table 2, taken from Gokhale, Kotlikoff, and
                Sluchynsky (2003), presents the average lifetime
                net tax rates now facing couples who are 18 years
                of age and work full time. The calculations incorporate
                all major tax and transfer programs and
                assume that the couples work full time through
                age 64, experience a 1 percent annual real earnings
                growth, have children at ages 25 and 27, purchase
                a house scaled to their earnings, and pay college
                tuition scaled to their earnings. The table shows
                that average lifetime net tax rates are already
                fairly high for middle and high earners, who, of
                course, pay the vast majority of total taxes.
                The table also presents marginal net work tax
                rates. These are not marginal tax rates on working
                full time (versus not working at all). They are
                not marginal net tax rates on working additional
                hours. They are computed by comparing the
                present value of additional lifetime spending one
                can afford from working full time each year from
                age 18 through age 64 and paying net taxes with
                the present value of additional lifetime spending
                Kotlikoff
                240 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                Table 1
                Average Annual Benefit Growth Rates,
                1970-2002
                Country Rate (%)
                Australia 3.66
                Austria 3.72
                Canada 2.32
                Germany 3.30
                Japan 3.57
                Norway 5.04
                Spain 4.63
                Sweden 2.35
                United Kingdom 3.46
                United States 4.61
                SOURCE: Hagist and Kotlikoff (forthcoming).
                one can afford in the absence of any taxes or
                transfers.
                Clearly, these marginal net tax rates are very
                high, ranging from 54.0 percent to 80.6 percent.
                The rates are highest for low-income workers. For
                such workers, working full time can mean the
                partial or full loss of the earned income tax credit
                (EITC), Medicaid benefits, housing support, food
                stamps, and other sources of welfare assistance.
                Going to work also means paying a combined
                employer-employee Federal Insurance Contribution
                Act (FICA) tax of 15.3 percent and, typically,
                state (Massachusetts, in this case) income taxes
                and federal income taxes (gross of EITC benefits).
                Together with David Rapson, a graduate student
                at Boston University, I am working to develop
                comprehensive measures of lifetime marginal net
                taxes on working additional hours and saving
                additional dollars. Our early work suggests quite
                high marginal net taxes on these choices as well.
                The point here is that trying to double the
                average lifetime net tax rates of future generations
                would entail layering additional highly distortive
                net taxes on top of a net tax system that is already
                highly distortive. If work and saving disincentives
                worsen significantly for the broad middle class,
                we’re likely to see major supply responses of the
                type that have not yet arisen in this country. In
                addition, we could see massive emigration. That
                sounds extreme, but anyone who has visited
                Uruguay of late would tell you otherwise. Uruguay
                has very high net tax rates and has lost upward
                of 500,000 young and middle-aged workers to
                Spain and other countries in recent years. Many of
                these émigrés have come and are still coming from
                the ranks of the nation’s best educated citizens.
                Given the reluctance of our politicians to raise
                taxes, cut benefits, or even limit the growth in
                benefits, the most likely scenario is that the government
                will start printing money to pay its bills.
                This could arise in the context of the Federal
                Reserve “being forced” to buy Treasury bills and
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 241
                Table 2
                Average Net Full-time Worker Tax Rates
                Multiple of Initial total household Average lifetime Marginal net
                minimum wage earnings (2002 $) net tax rate (%) tax rate (%)
                1 21,400 –32.2 66.5
                1.5 32,100 14.8 80.6
                2 42,800 22.9 72.2
                3 64,300 30.1 63.0
                4 85,700 34.4 59.1
                5 107,100 37.8 57.5
                6 128,500 41.0 57.5
                7 150,000 42.9 57.0
                8 171,400 44.2 56.6
                9 192,800 45.1 56.1
                10 214,200 45.7 55.7
                15 321,400 48.4 55.2
                20 428,500 49.6 54.7
                30 642,700 50.8 54.2
                40 857,000 51.4 54.0
                NOTE: Present values are actuarial and assume a 5 percent real discount rate.
                SOURCE: Gokhale, Kotlikoff, and Sluchynsky (2003).
                bonds to reduce interest rates. Specifically, once
                the financial markets begin to understand the
                depth and extent of the country’s financial insolvency,
                they will start worrying about inflation and
                about being paid back in watered-down dollars.
                This concern will lead them to start dumping their
                holdings of U.S. Treasuries. In so doing, they’ll
                drive up interest rates, which will lead the Fed to
                print money to buy up those bonds. The consequence
                will be more money creation—exactly
                what the bond traders will have come to fear.
                This could lead to spiraling expectations of
                higher inflation, with the process eventuating in
                hyperinflation.
                Yes, this does sound like an extreme scenario
                given the Fed’s supposed independence, our recent
                history of low inflation, and the fact that the dollar
                is the world’s principal reserve currency. But the
                United States has experienced high rates of inflation
                in the past and appears to be running the same
                type of fiscal policies that engendered hyperinflations
                in 20 countries over the past century.
                INCORPORATING UNCERTAINTY
                The world, of course, is highly uncertain. And
                the fiscal gap/generational accounting discussed
                above fails to systematically account for that
                uncertainty. There are two types of uncertainties
                that need to be considered in assessing a country’s
                prospects for bankruptcy. The first is uncertainty
                in the economy’s underlying technology and
                preferences. The second is uncertainty in policy.
                Let’s take the former first. Specifically, let’s
                return to our two-period model but assume that
                the economy is closed to international trade. And
                let’s assume that at time 0 the economy appears
                to be going broke insofar as the government has
                set a permanent level of h such that the economy
                will experience a death spiral in the absence of
                any changes in technology. Thus, k1 = w0 – h,
                and w(k1) < w0, where w( ) references the wagegeneration
                function based on existing technology.
                Now suppose there is a chance, with probability
                a, of the economy’s technology permanently
                changing, entailing a new and permanent wagegeneration
                function, w*( ), such that w*(k1) > w0.
                If this event doesn’t arise, assume that technology
                permanently remains in its time-0 configuration.
                Further assume that w(k1) < h, so that if technology
                doesn’t change, the government will go bankrupt
                in period 1.
                How should an economist observing this
                economy at time 0 describe its prospects for
                bankruptcy? One way, indeed, the best way, is to
                simply repeat the above paragraph; that is, take
                one’s audience through (simulate) the different
                possible scenarios.
                But what about generational accounting?
                How does the economist compare the lifetime
                burden facing, for example, workers born in
                period 1 with their capacity to meet that burden?
                Well, the burden that the government wants to
                impose, regardless of the technology, entails taking
                away h from generation 1 when the generation is
                young and giving h back to the generation when
                it’s old. Because in the regular (the non *) state
                the government will, by assumption, do its best
                by its claimants (the time-1 elderly), generation
                1 can expect to hand over all their earnings when
                young and receive nothing when old (because the
                capital stock when old will be zero). This is a
                100 percent lifetime net tax rate.
                In the * state, the lifetime net tax rate will be
                lower. Suppose it’s only 50 percent. Should one
                then form a weighted average of the 100 percent
                and 50 percent lifetime net tax rates with weights
                equal to (1 – a) and a, respectively? Doing so
                would generate a high average net tax rate, but one
                below 100 percent. Reporting that generation 1
                faces a high expected net tax rate conveys important
                information, namely, that the economy is
                nearing bankruptcy. But citing a figure less than
                100 percent may also give the false impression
                that there is no absolutely fatal scenario.
                Note that agents born at time 1 can’t trade in
                a market prior to period 1 in order to value their
                lifetime wages and lifetime fiscal burdens. If such
                a contingent claims market existed, there would
                be market valuations of these variables (but no
                trades because all cohort members are assumed
                identical). In this case, we could compare the
                value of claims to future earnings with the negative
                value of claims to future net taxes. But again, this
                comparison might fail to convey what one really
                wants to say about national bankruptcy, namely,
                Kotlikoff
                242 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                the chances it will occur and the policies needed
                to avoid it. How about uncertainty with respect to
                future policy? Well, the same considerations just
                mentioned appear to apply for that case as well.
                In my view, the best way for generational
                accounting to accommodate uncertainty is to
                establish lifetime fiscal burdens facing future
                generations under different scenarios about the
                evolution of the economy and of policy. This will
                necessarily be partial-equilibrium analysis. But
                that doesn’t mean that the projections used in
                generational accounting have to be static and
                assume that neither policy nor economic variables
                change through time. Instead, one should
                use general equilibrium models to inform and
                establish policy projection scenarios to which
                generational accounting can then be applied.
                In thinking about uncertainty and this proposed
                analysis, one should bear in mind that the
                goal of long-term fiscal analysis and planning is
                not to determine whether the government’s intertemporal
                budget constraint is satisfied, per se.
                We know that no matter what path the economy
                travels, the government’s intertemporal budget
                constraint will be satisfied on an ex post basis. The
                manner in which the budget constraint gets satisfied
                may not be pretty. But economic resources
                are finite, and the government must and will
                ultimately make someone pay for what it spends.4
                Thus, in the case of the United States, one
                could say that there is no fiscal problem facing
                the United States because the government’s intertemporal
                budget constraint is balanced once one
                takes into account that young and future generations
                will, one way or other, collectively be forced
                to pay $65.9 trillion more than they would have
                to pay based on current tax and transfer schedules.
                But the real issue is not whether the constraint is
                satisfied. The real issue is whether the path the
                government is taking in the process of satisfying
                the constraint is, to put it bluntly, morally and
                economically nuts.
                The above point bears on the question of
                valuing the government’s contingent liabilities.
                The real economic issue with respect to contingent
                liabilities is the same as that with respect to any
                government liability. The real issue is not how to
                value those liabilities, but rather who will pay
                them, assuming they end up having to be paid.
                The economy could operate with perfect statecontingent
                claims markets so that we could tell
                precisely the market value of the government’s
                contingent claims and see clearly that the government’s
                budget constraint was satisfied—that the
                market value of all of the government’s statecontingent
                expenditures were fully covered by
                the market value of its state-contingent receipts.
                But this knowledge would not by itself tell us how
                badly generation X would fare were state Y to
                eventuate. Pricing risk doesn’t eliminate risk.
                And what we really want to know is not just the
                price at which, for example, the Pension Benefit
                Guarantee Corporation can offload its contingent
                liabilities, but also who will suffer and by how
                much when the Corporation fails to do so and
                ends up getting hit with a bill.
                CAN IMMIGRATION,
                PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH,
                OR CAPITAL DEEPENING SAVE
                THE DAY?
                Many members of the public as well as officials
                of the government presume that expanding
                immigration can cure what they take to be fundamentally
                a demographic problem. They are wrong
                on two counts. First, at heart, ours is not a demographic
                problem. Were there no fiscal policy in
                place promising, on average, $21,000 (and growing!)
                in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid
                benefits to each American age 65 and older, our
                having a much larger share of oldsters in the
                United States would be of little economic concern.
                Second, it is mistake to think that immigration
                can significantly alleviate the nation’s fiscal problem.
                The reality is that immigrants aren’t cheap.
                They require public goods and services. And they
                become eligible for transfer payments. While most
                immigrants pay taxes, these taxes barely cover
                the extra costs they engender. This, at least, is the
                conclusion reached by Auerbach and Oreopoulos
                (2000) in a careful generational accounting analysis
                of this issue.
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 243
                4 This statement assumes that the economy is dynamically efficient.
                A different and more realistic potential cure
                for our fiscal woes is productivity growth, which
                is supposed to (i) translate into higher wage growth
                and (ii) expand tax bases and limit requisite tax
                hikes. Let’s grant that higher rates of productivity
                growth raise real average wages even though the
                relationship between the two has been surprisingly
                weak in recent decades. And let’s accept
                that higher real wages will lead to larger tax bases
                even though it could lead some workers to cut
                back on their labor supply or retire early. This
                isn’t enough to ensure that productivity growth
                raises resources on net. The reason, of course, is
                that some government expenditures, like Social
                Security benefits, are explicitly indexed to productivity
                and others appear to be implicitly
                indexed.
                Take military pay. There’s no question but that
                a rise in general wage levels would require paying
                commensurately higher wages to our military
                volunteers. Or consider Medicare benefits. A rise
                in wage levels can be expected to raise the quality
                of healthcare received by the work force, which
                will lead the elderly (or Congress on behalf of the
                elderly) to push Medicare to provide the same.
                Were productivity growth a certain cure for the
                nation’s fiscal problems, the cure would already
                have occurred. The country, after all, has experienced
                substantial productivity growth in the
                postwar period, yet its long-term fiscal condition
                is worse now than at any time in the past. The
                limited ability of productivity growth to reduce
                the implied fiscal burden on young and future generations
                is documented in Gokhale and Smetters
                (2003) under the assumption that government
                discretionary expenditures and transfer payments
                are indexed to productivity.
                But the past linkage of federal expenditures to
                real incomes need not continue forever. Margaret
                Thatcher made a clean break in that policy when
                she moved to adjusting British government-paid
                pensions to prices rather than wages. Over time,
                the real level of state pensions has remained relatively
                stable, while the economy has grown. As a
                result of this and other policies, Great Britain is
                close to generational balance; that is, close to a
                situation in which the lifetime net tax rates on
                future generations will be no higher than those
                facing current generations.
                Assuming the United States could restrain
                the growth in its expenditures in light of productivity
                and real wage advances, is there a reliable
                source of productivity improvement to be tapped?
                The answer is yes, and the answer lies with China.
                China is currently saving over a third of its national
                income and growing at spectacularly high rates.
                Even though it remains a developing country,
                China is saving so much that it’s running a current
                account surplus. Not only is China supplying
                capital to the rest of the world, it’s increasingly
                doing so via direct investment. For example,
                China is investing large sums in Iran, Africa, and
                Eastern Europe.5
                Although China holds close to a half trillion
                U.S. dollars in reserves, primarily in U.S. Treasuries,
                the United States sent a pretty strong message
                in recent months that it doesn’t welcome Chinese
                direct investment. It did so when it rejected the
                Chinese National Petroleum Corporation’s bid to
                purchase Unocal, a U.S. energy company. The
                Chinese voluntarily withdrew their bid for the
                company. But they did so at the direct request of
                the White House. The question for the United
                States is whether China will tire of investing only
                indirectly in our country and begin to sell its
                dollar-denominated reserves. Doing so could have
                spectacularly bad implications for the value of
                the dollar and the level of U.S. interest rates.
                Fear of Chinese investment in the United
                States seems terribly misplaced. With a national
                saving rate running at only 2.1 percent—a postwar
                low—the United States desperately needs foreigners
                to invest in the country. And the country
                with the greatest potential for doing so going forward
                is China.6
                Fehr, Jokisch, and Kotlikoff (2005) develop a
                dynamic, life-cycle, general equilibrium model
                to study China’s potential to influence the transition
                paths of Japan, the United States, and the
                European Union. Each of these countries/regions
                is entering a period of rapid and significant aging
                Kotlikoff
                244 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                5 See www.atimes.com/atimes/China/GF04Ad07.html;

                special-reports-storypage.jsp?id=310; and

                6 The remainder of this section draws heavily on Fehr, Jokisch, and
                Kotlikoff (2005).
                that will require major fiscal adjustments. But
                the aging of these societies may be a cloud with
                a silver lining coming, in this case, in the form of
                capital deepening that will raise real wages.
                In a previous model that excluded China
                (Fehr, Jokisch, and Kotlikoff, 2004), my coauthors
                and I predicted that the tax hikes needed to pay
                benefits along the developed world’s demographic
                transition would lead to a major capital shortage,
                reducing real wages per unit of human capital by
                one-fifth over time. A recalibration of our original
                model that treats government purchases of capital
                goods as investment rather than current consumption
                suggests this concern was overstated. With
                government investment included, we find much
                less crowding-out over the course of the century
                and only a 4 percent long-run decline in real
                wages. One can argue both ways about the true
                capital-goods content of much of government
                investment, so we don’t view the original findings
                as wrong, just different.
                Adding China to the model further alters,
                indeed, dramatically alters, the model’s predictions.
                Even though China is aging rapidly, its saving
                behavior, growth rate, and fiscal policies are
                currently very different from those of developed
                countries. If successive Chinese cohorts continue
                to save like current cohorts, if the Chinese government
                can restrain growth in expenditures, and if
                Chinese technology and education levels ultimately
                catch up with those of the West and Japan,
                the model looks much brighter in the long run.
                China eventually becomes the world’s saver and,
                thereby, the developed world’s savior with respect
                to its long-run supply of capital and long-run
                general equilibrium prospects. And, rather than
                seeing the real wage per unit of human capital
                fall, the West and Japan see it rise by one-fifth by
                2030 and by three-fifths by 2100. These wage
                increases are over and above those associated
                with technical progress, which we model as
                increasing the human capital endowments of
                successive cohorts.
                Even if the Chinese saving behavior (captured
                by its time-preference rate) gradually approaches
                that of Americans, developed-world real wages
                per unit of human capital are roughly 17 percent
                higher in 2030 and 4 percent higher at the end of
                the century. Without China they’d be only 2 percent
                higher in 2030 and, as mentioned, 4 percent
                lower at the end of the century.
                What’s more, the major outflow of the developed
                world’s capital to China predicted in the
                short run by our model does not come at the cost
                of lower wages in the developed world. The reason
                is that the knowledge that their future wages will
                be higher (thanks to China’s future capital accumulation)
                leads our model’s workers to cut back
                on their current labor supply. So the short-run
                outflow of capital to China is met with a commensurate
                short-run reduction in developed-world
                labor supply, leaving the short-run ratio of physical
                capital to human capital, on which wages positively
                depend, actually somewhat higher than
                would otherwise be the case.
                Our model does not capture the endogenous
                determination of skill premiums studied by
                Heckman, Lochner, and Taber (1996) or include
                the product of low-skill-intensive products. Doing
                so could well show that trade with China, at least
                in the short run, explains much of the relative
                decline in the wages of low-skilled workers in the
                developed world. Hence, we don’t mean to suggest
                here that all United States, European Union,
                and Japanese workers are being helped by trade
                with China, but rather that trade with China is,
                on average, raising the wages of developed-world
                workers and will continue to do so.
                The notion that China, India, and other
                developing countries will alleviate the developedworld’s
                demographic problems has been stressed
                by Siegel (2005). Our paper, although it includes
                only one developing country—China—supports
                Siegel’s optimistic long-term macroeconomic
                view. On the other hand, our findings about the
                developed world’s fiscal condition remain troubling.
                Even under the most favorable macroeconomic
                scenario, tax rates still rise dramatically
                over time in the developed world to pay baby
                boomers their government-promised pension and
                health benefits. However, under the best-case
                scenario, in which long-run wages are 65 percent
                higher, the U.S. payroll tax rates are roughly 40
                percent lower than they would otherwise be.
                This result rests on the assumption that, while
                Social Security benefits are increased in light of
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 245
                the Chinese-investment-induced higher real wages,
                federal government healthcare benefits are not;
                that is, the long-run reduction in payroll tax rates
                is predicated on outgrowing a significant share
                of our healthcare-expenditure problems.
                FIXING OUR FISCAL
                INSTITUTIONS7
                Determining whether a country is already
                bankrupt or going bankrupt is a judgment call.
                In my view, our country has only a small window
                to address our problems before the financial
                markets will do it for us. Yes, there are ways out
                of our fiscal morass, including Chinese investment
                and somehow getting a lid on Medicare and
                Medicaid spending, but I think immediate and
                fundamental reform is needed to confidently
                secure our children’s future.
                The three proposals I recommend cover taxes,
                Social Security, and healthcare and are interconnected
                and interdependent. In particular, tax
                reform provides the funding needed to finance
                Social Security and healthcare reform. It also
                ensures that the rich and middle class elderly
                pay their fair share in resolving our fiscal gap.
                Tax Reform
                The plan here is to replace the personal
                income tax, the corporate income tax, the payroll
                (FICA) tax, and the estate and gift tax with a
                federal retail sales tax plus a rebate. The rebate
                would be paid monthly to households, based on
                the household’s demographic composition, and
                would be equal to the sales taxes paid, on average,
                by households at the federal poverty line with the
                same demographics.
                The proposed sales tax has three highly progressive
                elements. First, thanks to the rebate, poor
                households would pay no sales taxes in net terms.
                Second, the reform would eliminate the highly
                regressive FICA tax, which is levied only on the
                first $90,000 of earnings. Third, the sales tax would
                effectively tax wealth as well as wages, because
                when the rich spent their wealth and when
                workers spent their wages, they would both pay
                sales taxes.
                The single, flat-rate sales tax would pay for
                all federal expenditures. The tax would be highly
                transparent and efficient. It would save hundreds
                of billions of dollars in tax compliance costs. And
                it would either reduce or significantly reduce
                effective marginal taxes facing most Americans
                when they work and save.
                The sales tax would also enhance generational
                equity by asking rich and middle class older
                Americans to pay taxes when they spend their
                wealth. The poor elderly, living on Social Security,
                would end up better off. They would receive the
                sales tax rebate even though the purchasing power
                of their Social Security benefits would remain
                unchanged (thanks to the automatic adjustment
                to the consumer price index that would raise
                their Social Security benefits to account for the
                increase in the retail-price level).
                The sales tax would be levied on all final
                consumption goods and services and would be
                set at 33 percent—high enough to cover the costs
                of this “New New Deal’s” Social Security and
                healthcare reforms as well as meet the government’s
                other spending needs. On a tax-inclusive
                basis, this is a 25 percent tax rate, which is a lower
                or much lower marginal rate than most workers
                pay on their labor supply. The marginal tax on
                saving under the sales tax would be zero, which
                is dramatically lower than the effective rate now
                facing most savers.
                Social Security Reform
                My second proposed reform deals with Social
                Security. I propose shutting down the retirement
                portion of the current Social Security system at
                the margin by paying in the future only those
                retirement benefits that were accrued as of the
                time of the reform. This means that current retirees
                would receive their full benefits, but current
                workers would receive benefits based only on
                their covered wages prior to the date of the reform.
                The retail sales tax would pay off all accrued
                retirement benefits, which eventually would equal
                zero. The current Social Security survivor and
                disability programs would remain unchanged
                except that their benefits would be paid by the
                sales tax.
                Kotlikoff
                246 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                7 This section draws heavily from Ferguson and Kotlikoff (2005).
                In place of the existing Social Security retirement
                system, I would establish the Personal
                Security System (PSS)—a system of individual
                accounts, but one with very different properties
                from the scheme proposed by the president. All
                workers would be required to contribute 7.15
                percent of their wages up to what is now the
                earnings ceiling covered by Social Security (i.e.,
                they’d contribute what is now the employee FICA
                payment) into an individual PSS account. Married
                or legally partnered couples would share contributions
                so that each spouse/partner would receive
                the same contribution to his or her account. The
                government would contribute to the accounts of
                the unemployed and disabled. In addition, the
                government would make matching contributions
                on a progressive basis to workers’ accounts,
                thereby helping the poor to save.
                All PSS accounts would be private property.
                But they would be administered and invested by
                the Social Security Administration in a marketweighted
                global index fund of stocks, bonds, and
                real-estate securities. Consequently, everyone
                would have the same portfolio and receive the
                same rate of return. The government would guarantee
                that, at retirement, the account balance
                would equal at least what the worker had contributed,
                adjusted for inflation; that is, the government
                would guarantee that workers could not
                lose what they contributed. This would protect
                workers from the inevitable downside risks of
                investing in capital markets.
                Between ages 57 and 67, account balances
                would be gradually sold off each day by the Social
                Security Administration and exchanged for
                inflation-protected annuities that would begin
                paying out at age 62. By age 67, workers’ account
                balances would be fully annuitized. Workers who
                died prior to age 67 would bequeath their account
                balances to their spouses/partners or children.
                Consequently, low-income households, whose
                members die at younger ages than those of highincome
                households, would be better protected.
                Finally, under this reform, neither Wall Street nor
                the insurance industry would get their hands on
                workers’ money. There would be no loads, no
                commissions, and no fees.
                Healthcare Reform
                My final proposed reform deals not just with
                our public healthcare programs, Medicare and
                Medicaid, but with our private health-insurance
                system as well. That system, as is well known,
                leaves some 45 million Americans uninsured. My
                reform would abolish the existing fee-for-service
                Medicare and Medicaid programs and enroll all
                Americans in a universal health-insurance system
                called the Medical Security System (MSS). In
                October of each year, the MSS would provide each
                American with an individual-specific voucher to
                be used to purchase health insurance for the following
                calendar year. The size of the voucher
                would depend on the recipients’ expected health
                expenditures over the calendar year. Thus, a 75
                year old with colon cancer would receive a very
                large voucher, say $150,000, whereas a healthy
                30 year old might receive a $3,500 voucher.
                The MSS would have access to all medical
                records concerning each American and set the
                voucher level each year based on that information.
                Those concerned about privacy should rest easy.
                The government already knows about millions
                of Medicare and Medicaid participants’ health
                conditions because it’s paying their medical bills.
                This information has never, to my knowledge,
                been inappropriately disclosed.
                The vouchers would pay for basic in- and outpatient
                medical care, prescription medications,
                and long-term care over the course of the year. If
                you ended up costing the insurance company
                more than the amount of your voucher, the insurance
                company would make up the difference. If
                you ended up costing the company less than the
                voucher, the company would pocket the difference.
                Insurers would be free to market additional
                services at additional costs. The MSS would, at
                long last, promote healthy competition in the
                insurance market, which would go a long way to
                restraining healthcare costs.
                The beauty of this plan is that all Americans
                would receive healthcare coverage and that the
                government could limit its total voucher expenditure
                to what the nation could afford. Unlike
                the current fee-for-service system, under which the
                government has no control of the bills it receives,
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 247
                the MSS would explicitly limit the government’s
                liability.
                The plan is also progressive. The poor, who
                are more prone to illness than the rich, would
                receive higher vouchers, on average, than the rich.
                And, because we would be eliminating the current
                income-tax system, all the tax breaks going to the
                rich in the form of non-taxed health-insurance
                premium payments would vanish. Added together,
                the elimination of this roughly $150 billion of
                tax expenditures, the reduction in the costs of
                hospital emergency rooms (which are currently
                subsidized out of the federal budget), and the
                abolition of the huge subsidies to insurers in the
                recent Medicare drug bill would provide a large
                part of the additional funding needed for the MSS
                to cover the entire population.
                Eliminating the Fiscal Gap
                A 33 percent federal retail-sales tax rate would
                generate federal revenue equal to 21 percent of
                GDP—the same figure that prevailed in 2000.
                Currently, federal revenues equal 16 percent of
                GDP. So we are talking here about a major tax hike.
                But we’re also talking about some major spending
                cuts. First, Social Security would be paying only
                its accrued benefits over time, which is trillions
                of dollars less than its projected benefits, when
                measured in present value. Second, we would be
                putting a lid on the growth of healthcare expenditures.
                Limiting excessive growth in these expenditures
                will, over time, make up for the initial
                increase in federal healthcare spending arising
                from the move to universal coverage. Third, we’d
                reduce federal discretionary spending by one-fifth
                and, thereby, return to the 2000 ratio of this spending
                to GDP. Taken together, these very significant
                tax hikes and spending cuts would, I believe,
                eliminate most if not all of our nation’s fiscal gap.
                CONCLUSION
                There are 77 million baby boomers now ranging
                from age 41 to age 59. All are hoping to collect
                tens of thousands of dollars in pension and healthcare
                benefits from the next generation. These
                claimants aren’t going away. In three years, the
                oldest boomers will be eligible for early Social
                Security benefits. In six years, the boomer vanguard
                will start collecting Medicare. Our nation
                has done nothing to prepare for this onslaught of
                obligation. Instead, it has continued to focus on
                a completely meaningless fiscal metric—“the”
                federal deficit—censored and studiously ignored
                long-term fiscal analyses that are scientifically
                coherent, and dramatically expanded the benefit
                levels being explicitly or implicitly promised to
                the baby boomers.
                Countries can and do go bankrupt. The United
                States, with its $65.9 trillion fiscal gap, seems
                clearly headed down that path. The country needs
                to stop shooting itself in the foot. It needs to adopt
                generational accounting as its standard method
                of budgeting and fiscal analysis, and it needs to
                adopt fundamental tax, Social Security, and
                healthcare reforms that will redeem our children’s
                future.
                REFERENCES
                Auerbach, Alan and Oreopoulos, Philip. “The Fiscal
                Effects of U.S. Immigration: A Generational
                Accounting Perspective,” in James Poterba, ed.,
                Tax Policy and the Economy. Volume 14. Cambridge,
                MA: MIT Press, 2000, pp. 23-56.
                Fehr, Hans; Jokisch, Sabine and Kotlikoff, Laurence J.
                “The Role of Immigration in Dealing with the
                Developed World’s Demographic Dilemma.”
                FinanzArchiv, September 2004, 60(3), pp. 296-324.
                Fehr, Hans; Jokisch, Sabine and Kotlikoff, Laurence J.
                “Will China Eat Our Lunch or Take Us to Dinner?
                Simulating the Transition Paths of the U.S., the
                EU, Japan, and China.” NBER Working Paper No.
                11668, National Bureau of Economic Research,
                October 2005.
                Ferguson, Niall and Kotlikoff, Laurence J. “Benefits
                Without Bankruptcy—The New New Deal.” The
                New Republic, August 15, 2005.
                Gokhale, Jagadeesh and Smetters, Kent. “Measuring
                Social Security’s Financial Problems.” NBER
                Working Paper No. 11060, National Bureau of
                Economic Research, January 2005.
                Kotlikoff
                248 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                Gokhale, Jagadeesh and Smetters, Kent. Fiscal and
                Generational Imbalances: New Budget Measures
                for New Budget Priorities. Washington, DC: The
                American Enterprise Press, 2003.
                Gokhale, Jagadeesh; Kotlikoff, Laurence J. and
                Sluchynsky, Alexi. “Does It Pay to Work?”
                Unpublished manuscript, January 2003.
                Hagist, Christian and Kotlikoff, Laurence J. “Who’s
                Going Broke?: Comparing Healthcare Costs in
                Ten OECD Countries.” Milken Institute Review
                (forthcoming).
                Heckman, James; Lochner, Lance and Taber,
                Christopher. “Explaining Rising Wage Inequality:
                Explanations with a Dynamic General Equilibrium
                Model of Labor Earnings with Heterogeneous
                Agents.” Review of Economic Dynamics, January,
                1998, 1(1), pp. 1-58.
                Kotlikoff, Laurence J. Generational Policy. Cambridge,
                MA: MIT Press, 2003.
                Siegel, Jeremy J. The Future for Investors: Why the
                Tried and the True Triumph Over the Bold and the
                New. New York, NY: Crown Publishing Group,
                2005.
                Kotlikoff
                FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW JULY/AUGUST 2006 249
                250 JULY/AUGUST 2006 FEDERAL RESERVE BANK OF ST. LOUIS REVIEW
                Originally posted by Kristy
                Dude, what in the fuck is wrong with you? I'm full of hate and I do drugs.
                Originally posted by cadaverdog
                I posted under aliases and I jerk off with a sock. Anything else to add?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by FORD
                  It's obvious that an economic disaster is coming to this country. You can't keep dumping billions into a useless war (and Cheney's Halliburton retirement account), giving "tax cuts" to those who dodge paying taxes in the first place, allow your friends to rape the entire economy with obscene gas prices, outsourcing jobs to India, and selling out the country to China and expect business as usual to continue on.


                  The latest word I hear on the possible collapse is 2008. The BCE will desparately try to push that into 2009 so they, and the whore media, can blame it on whichever Democrat wins the White House.

                  They might not even Diebold the 2008 election. Who cares if the Democrats win in a landslide, if they get blamed for the new "Great Depression" caused by a decade of BCE crimes and waste.
                  I said this stuff a long time ago, man. Yet when I said it like 4 years ago you all thought I was talking shit.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by LoungeMachine
                    Okay smartass......

                    It took me all of 15 seconds


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                    Kotlikoff
                    236

                    Right on dude. I was unaware it was possible to copy and paste text from a .pdf file.

                    Learn something new every day.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Hardrock69
                      Right on dude. I was unaware it was possible to copy and paste text from a .pdf file.

                      Learn something new every day.


                      LMMFAO


                      Yeah, but it coulda used some editing


                      Still a good find, HR
                      Originally posted by Kristy
                      Dude, what in the fuck is wrong with you? I'm full of hate and I do drugs.
                      Originally posted by cadaverdog
                      I posted under aliases and I jerk off with a sock. Anything else to add?

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Yup!

                        Comment

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