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Policy

Let Me Take My Chances on the Wall of Debt

Matt Welch | 7.15.2010 10:30 AM

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The Washington Post today lays out one of the biggest dice-rolls of our times:

A massive wave of borrowing will start cresting this year when the U.S. and European governments sell an estimated $4 trillion in new bonds. The surge will course through the world financial system for several years as countries, corporations and banks borrow record amounts of money to repair the damage from the financial crisis and pay back loans from the boom that preceded it.

One crucial concern about the nascent economic recovery is whether markets can smoothly absorb that new debt, or whether it will force less-creditworthy governments into a Greek-style crisis, push weaker banks and corporations into default, and possibly trigger another downturn.

Analysts are split on the prospects. Large amounts of cash around the world and the expectation of continued low interest rates have some predicting a trouble-free outcome, while the sheer level of debt involved has others spooked about a destructive competition for credit. But that wall of debt has become a source of concern among economists at the International Monetary Fund and others who are trying to anticipate where the next crisis might arise.

Whole thing here; link via the Twitter feed of Rep. Paul Ryan.

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Matt Welch is an editor at large at Reason.

PolicyEconomicsFederal ReserveInflationDebt
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  1. The World   15 years ago

    7 come 11!

    1. John   15 years ago

      Mamma needs a new pair of shoes.

      1. Ska   15 years ago

        I'll just play the don't pass. And maybe some don't comes if things are going that way.

        1. John   15 years ago

          That is a smart move. Sadly, Obama is calling in his last mark and laying everything on the sucker bets.

          1. Ska   15 years ago

            What do you mean getting paid 30:1 on something with the a 1 in 36 chance is a sucker's bet?

            1. John   15 years ago

              Mathematics is racist. Only racism prevents those center bets from paying off for Obama.

  2. Jordan   15 years ago

    Attempting to fight debt deflation is futile. Just ask Japan where that road leads.

    1. Yonemoto   15 years ago

      Uhm, what happens when private debt has been paid off?

  3. R C Dean   15 years ago

    Note that the best case scenario is that trillions in capital gets locked sucked out of the private/productive economy and locked up in low-interest government bonds.

    That's the best case. It just goes downhill from there.

  4. Bob   15 years ago

    You can go with the crazy people in the crooked house.

  5. Mike M.   15 years ago

    I will gladly pay you someday for trillions and trillions of hamburgers today.

  6. DADIODADDY   15 years ago

    we be so fucked...

    1. Warren   15 years ago

      doom

  7. P Brooks   15 years ago

    Have they made shorting U S government debt illegal yet?

  8. Old Mexican   15 years ago

    Large amounts of cash around the world and the expectation of continued low interest rates have some predicting a trouble-free outcome[...]

    Most likely the same assholes that were prescribing low interest rates to prop-up the housing market and who did not see the bubble coming.

  9. P Brooks   15 years ago

    What do you mean getting paid 30:1 on something with the a 1 in 36million chance is a sucker's bet?

  10. MP   15 years ago

    This smells suspiciously like the work of ... KRUGABE!.

  11. I, Kahn O'Clast   15 years ago

    Central Banks will print money to finance much of this borrowing and take the debt on their own books in exchange for cash. This will lead to a period of higher inflation which will bailout the sick housing and commercial property sectors, whittle away the real cost of the debt as it will be issued at rates below that of future inflation and, if governments are smart, will lead to an erosion of the real cost of public programs such as social security where they will keep increases in payments to below the rate of inflation.

    Presto problem solved.

    1. R C Dean   15 years ago

      Is there anything double digit inflation can't do?

      1. Yonemoto   15 years ago

        He forgot to mention that keeping people on a rolling treadmill of devaluing money gently encourages people to invest in riskier propositions they normally wouldn't invest in, thus stimulating the economy.

        1. CrackertyAssCracker   15 years ago

          Are you saying that is a bug or feature?

      2. Cosmotarian Oligarch   15 years ago

        Don't get too cocky about inflation coming down the pipe...we need to force some good bi-partisian austerity packages first...we can't balance this budget with mere budget cuts or gold-bug-pleasing-inflation...we have to raise taxes. This is the only solution that will please all serious thinkers.

        All libertarians know that the VAT is the most scientifically efficient tax and that is better than the income tax so I recommend you put a VAT in place. If that won't fly then we can accept a CO2 tax...you have the freedom to choose either one!

        1. Cosmotarian Oligarch   15 years ago

          We will let you enjoy your inflation if you will pass a VAT/CO2 tax....until then we are going to be tightening the screws.

  12. Old Mexican   15 years ago

    A massive wave of borrowing will start cresting this year when the U.S. and European governments sell an estimated $4 trillion in new bonds [...] Large amounts of cash around the world and the expectation of continued low interest rates have some predicting a trouble-free outcome.

    And that's the key to this whole game, kiddies, as the central banks debase the currencies to keep the interest rates low to give a big "Fuck You!" to all those lenders that still think government paper is "safe and secure."

  13. Fluffy   15 years ago

    Is this headline some kind of Richard and Linda Thompson reference?

    Do. Not. Like. Do not like hippie references on these pages. With a name like Reason...

    1. Worrierking   15 years ago

      I caught the Thompson reference and was quite pleased. Nice job, Matt.

    2. aaron   15 years ago

      Richard Thompson is a hippie now?

    3. Apple   15 years ago

      Have you even listened to Shoot Out The Lights?

  14. P Brooks   15 years ago

    But- based on our carefully selected basket of assets, prices are plunging!

    It's a super mega deflationary spiral, and we hafta doooooooo something, or we're all gonna perish! The sky is falling, and we have to prop it up with giant stacks of money.

    1. Warren   15 years ago

      DoooM

      1. Tim   15 years ago

        Dume?

  15. The Gobbler   15 years ago

    What this world needs a Day of Jubilee. Back in Old Testament times, every 50 years, all debts were wiped out. No one owed anyone anything. I'd look up the relevant passages, but the bible gateway search engine appears to be down.

    1. Mike M.   15 years ago

      I'm amazed there are entities out there that are still dumb enough to buy all these notes.

      It's so obvious that at some point they're going to be left holding the bag. I don't think we could possibly pay off this debt even if we really wanted to, at least not decimating the value of the currency.

      1. Cosmotarian Oligarch   15 years ago

        We don't want you to pay it off....EVER. We want 100% of your income to go to paying interest to us....and we are well on our way to reaching that goal...we'll need to ban guns somewhere along the way.

  16. Tim   15 years ago

    Coke machine circa 2020:

    INSERT PAYMENT AND MAKE SELECTION. THIS MACHINE ACCEPTS ONE THOUASAND AND FIVE THOUSAND DOLLAR BILLS.

  17. Cosmotarian Oligarch   15 years ago

    I promise that my friends and I are willing to do our part and absorb 10's of trillions of the peoples debt as long as all of you do the responsible thing and just pass a CO2 tax or a VAT...you can pick either one! Don't be unreasonable. Your interest payments will soon rise to be about 50-80% of your national budgets and you MUST pay these bills for your wasteful spending. You are under obligation to pay us, please show that you are honorable signers of the social contract...if you refuse to pay this interest we will be forced to create the appropriate Hegelian crisis and believe me...you don't want that.

  18. Prince Of Whales   15 years ago

    I, sir Charles, criticize denialist for intimidating people from "adopting the precautionary measures necessary to avert environmental collapse".

    A CO2 tax is the only way to avert collapse you bastards...stop pushing your paranoid anti-government crap...it is time to get serious about saving the world by putting new worldwide taxes in place.

  19. Keynestard   15 years ago

    Government borrowing isn't borrowing, borrowing.

    1. Little Caesar   15 years ago

      Pizza, pizza.

      1. Whoopie   15 years ago

        Government borrowing, borrowing is more like rape, rape than pizza, pizza.

  20. Frank   15 years ago

    What about a "Wall of Debt" with a lion?

  21. Robert Heinlein   15 years ago

    $100 placed at 7 percent interest compounded quarterly for 200 years will increase to more than $100,000,000 ? by which time it will be worth nothing.

  22. Steve Premo   15 years ago

    Love the Richard Thompson reference. You guys rock.

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