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Budget Deficit

Expected Interest Rate Hike Will Add $2 Trillion to the Deficit

So much for the idea that low interest rates meant the government could borrow endlessly with no consequences.

Eric Boehm | 9.20.2022 5:25 PM

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spending borrowing deficits debt Biden administration Federal Reserve rate hike interest rates inflation | Photo by Vladimir Solomianyi on Unsplash
(Photo by Vladimir Solomianyi on Unsplash)

Even after the federal government was piling up massive deficits under Presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump (and with the approval of both parties in Congress) during the 2010s, there was an emerging perspective among respected economists that challenged the traditional understanding of when the government should borrow and when it should pay down its debts.

Traditionally, during good times like the country enjoyed in the last decade—solid if not spectacular economic growth, relative peace, and historically low interest rates that made it easy for consumers and governments to borrow—policy makers would look to reduce spending and pay off debt. But those low interest rates created a new temptation. Maybe the government should just keep borrowing even when times are good?

"Sorry, deficit hawks: low interest rates are here to stay," Alan Cole, a former senior economist with Congress' Joint Economic Committee, titled a post on his Full Stack Economics blog in August 2021. "Countries, especially those that issue their own currency, can take advantage of low yields and borrow much more money at much lower rates than ever before," he wrote, noting that low interest rates had persisted throughout the 2008 economic collapse and the first year-plus of the pandemic. "This is our new normal," he argued, and market forces that might cause interest rates to return to levels seen in the 1990s were not likely "at least not in the next few decades."

Cole was hardly alone. Larry Summers and Jason Furman, top economic advisors to the Obama administration, published a paper in 2020 arguing that deficit concerns had hamstrung the federal government's ability to accomplish big things. As long as the cost of serving the federal debt remains below 2 percent, they argued, policy makers should not be restrained by the "traditional ideas of a cyclically balanced budget"—the idea that borrowing should rise in bad times and subside in good. Jared Bernstein, then a senior fellow at the progressive Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and now a member of President Joe Biden's White House Council of Economic Advisers, went a step further. In an October 2020 op-ed for The Washington Post, Bernstein argued that the "new dynamics" of debt opened not only economic opportunities but political ones. Democrats should embrace borrowing as a way to deliver for their constituents, Bernstein wrote, and disregard the politically motivated worries of the budget hawks.

This perspective wasn't limited to only liberals either. Larry Kudlow, a longtime conservative commentator and economic adviser to the Trump administration, dismissed Republicans' deficit-inflating policies in 2019 by calling the national debt "quite manageable" and "not a huge problem at all" during an interview with C-SPAN.

It's not quite fair to say that this emerging consensus believed the bill for heavy borrowing would never come due. More accurately, the argument was that the bill would always be reasonably affordable thanks to persistently low interest rates and that not spending the money would leave people worse off, so the added cost of borrowing would be worth it in the end.

That's an argument that might need to be reconsidered.

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve is reportedly expected to raise interest rates by 0.75 percent for the third time since June as the central bank continues to try to bring inflation under control. When the Fed hiked rates by 0.75 percent in June, Chairman Jerome Powell described that as "an unusually large" bump. It has become worryingly routine.

As a consequence of the sudden jumps in baseline interest rates, all types of borrowing are getting more expensive. That's especially true for the federal government, because most federal borrowing is executed on a short-term basis rather than being fixed for a longer period, as mortgages usually are.

Tomorrow's rate hike will add an estimated $2.1 trillion to the federal deficit over the next two years, according to an analysis from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), a nonprofit that advocates for lower deficits. That's $2 trillion that goes on the tab to be repaid even though no one ever benefitted from it. It helped to build no bridges, feed no hungry people, or make any business more profitable.

Even with low interest rates, the cost to service the size of the national debt was expected to balloon during the next few decades. Other than the cost of entitlements like Social Security and Medicare, the interest costs are the biggest driver of America's long-term deficit. Higher interest rates will compound that problem, as the CRFB has been detailing for months.

Biden and Congress have made the situation yet worse by continuing to borrow and spend even long after it became obvious that interest rates would have to rise to combat inflation caused in part by all the borrowing and spending. Despite what the White House claims, Biden has approved more than $4.8 trillion in new borrowing to finance the American Rescue Plan, student debt relief, and other initiatives.

"The progressives demanding new debt-financed programs to take advantage of low interest rates did not acknowledge that Washington is already on course to borrow $114 trillion over 30 years just to finance current programs," Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the conservative Manhattan Institute and a former Senate Republican budget staffer, tells Reason. 

"Essentially, Washington is committing to trillions in new, permanent debt obligations based on short-term adjustable interest rates," Riedl says. "Anyone with a mortgage can tell you how insane that is."

What the Biden administration and Democrats in Congress have done during the past 20 months is, in short, follow the outline drawn up by Cole, Furman, Bernstein, and others. As long as interest rates remain low, the argument went, the federal government would always be able to afford to keep borrowing. Interest rates didn't stay low.

Sorry, but the deficit hawks might have been right.

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NEXT: Study: New York City Apartments Being 'Defunded' by High Inflation, Rent Caps

Eric Boehm is a reporter at Reason.

Budget DeficitInterest ratesGovernment SpendingBiden AdministrationCongressDebtDeficits
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  1. BestUsedCarSales   3 years ago

    If only someone had predicted this.

    1. ElvisIsReal   3 years ago

      Now, now, there was simply no way to know!

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      2. Jonny Quest   3 years ago

        You'd have to be mind reader or something to have seen this coming.

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      Enfeebled president keeps delivering.

      1. Foo_dd   3 years ago

        the anointed orange one did his part too.

        1. 5.56   3 years ago (edited)

          The dark brown one and the current pale one did and do much worse though. But I don’t expect a tone-deaf, color blind leftist to see nuances.

  2. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    Biden is awesome. Best economy ever. Anyway Trump did worse stuff.

    #TemporarilyFillingInForButtplug

    1. JesseAz   3 years ago

      Foo_dd may have you beat as a shrike disciple.

  3. One-Punch_Man   3 years ago

    You know what would solve this? Spend more! Right Tony, and kiddie porner?

    1. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

      Kiddie porner would just blame Trump.

    2. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      MMT to the rescue!

  4. Mother's Lament   3 years ago

    "Expected Interest Rate Hike Will Add $2 Trillion to the Deficit"

    Does it even matter anymore? The world jumped from the plane without a parachute 2 years ago, may as well do some acrobatics before we hit.

    1. Commenter_XY   3 years ago

      That is a 6% jump in the deficit, overall. That has even worse long term implications since the interest cost is mushrooming because of inflation and the Fed's response to it.

      This will not end well.

  5. CE   3 years ago

    Maybe Congress shouldn't have spent 30 trillion dollars they didn't have. But then the citizens of the USA kept reelecting their Congressmen for spending more.

    1. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

      Democracy, voting, treasure, implosion.

    2. Was it something I said?   3 years ago

      I refuse to acknowledge this reality, because math is racist.

    3. AaronC   3 years ago

      It doesn't matter whom you elect to play, it's still the same game.

      Our democratic system incentivizes profligate government spending. People spend money on elections because it's an investment. They expect the politicians to use the power of the state to send the money back to them.

  6. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

    Tomorrow's rate hike will add an estimated $2.1 trillion to the federal deficit over the next two years,

    Fuck you, cut spending. Problem solved.

    1. NOYB2   3 years ago

      When interest exceeds tax revenues, no amount of cutting spending will help.

  7. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

    "The progressives demanding new debt-financed programs to take advantage of low interest rates did not acknowledge that Washington is already on course to borrow $114 trillion over 30 years just to finance current programs,"

    We are so fucked doomed. Buy gold and crypto and guns. And land if you can.

  8. Earth-based Human Skeptic   3 years ago

    Meh. What happened to that magic money thing? Didn't AOC use her expertise in economics to invent that?

    1. Quo Usque Tandem   3 years ago

      MMT: as long as a government prints its own money and controls interest rates, there’s no tomorrow.

  9. Iwanna Newname   3 years ago

    I demand that every American who makes less than $400,000 a year be sent a ten thousand dollar stimulus check to help offset the effects of this runaway inflation. Problem solved.

    1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

      But.. if...

      Aww, fuck it. I don't have kids.

      I'm in.

  10. Brophy   3 years ago

    Posting a lnk to a Tweet is feeble, especially when the Tweet is wrong.

  11. JFree   3 years ago

    Should be interesting times ahead.

  12. TJJ2000   3 years ago

    $2T / 134M working citizens = $14,925 per working citizen.

    1. Quicktown Brix   3 years ago

      This, and social security, is why we need to welcome all the immigrants we can...oh and human rights and stuff.

  13. n00bdragon   3 years ago

    If nothing else, it's reassuring to know that I (and many people here) were right all along, that we're not crazy, and that the chickens always come home to roost, eventually.

  14. SRG   3 years ago

    Traditionally, during good times like the country enjoyed in the last decade—solid if not spectacular economic growth, relative peace, and historically low interest rates that made it easy for consumers and governments to borrow—policy makers would look to reduce spending and pay off debt.

    ?? If interest rates are historically low, policy makers would - and should - be looking to borrow long-term, not pay off debt.

    Meanwhile, if rates rise faster than Social Security payments rise, the PV cost of Social Security declines. I didn't see any mention of that possibility in the article.

    1. DesigNate   3 years ago

      If any politician over the last 100 years had actually followed Keynes, I’d be willing to at least entertain his theory. Unfortunately they only saw the part about spending…

      1. Sevo   3 years ago

        Keynesian econ is exactly like Marxism in that both of them require the impossible:
        1) Keynes required governments to pay down debt in times of growth.
        2) Marx required the 'New Soviet Man' who cared about the welfare of the country rather than his own.

    2. NOYB2   3 years ago (edited)

      If interest rates are historically low, policy makers would – and should – be looking to borrow long-term, not pay off debt.

      You’re making the false assumption that “policy makers” have our best interest at heart; they don’t, they are driven by greed and self-interest, like all other market participants.

      Short term interest rates are usually significantly lower than long term interest rates, meaning that short term debt lets them spend more and makes deficits look smaller.

      1. 5.56   3 years ago

        “You’re making the false assumption that “policy makers” have our best interest at heart;”

        SomeRandomGit (SRG) is the kind of boot licking peasant that would assume that.

  15. Night Watchman   3 years ago

    Last night, my wife and I were rewatching some Remy videos. As we were laughing at "20 Trillion Reasons," my wife suddenly said- "wait- has it only been five years since we were at less than $20 Trillion in national debt?"

    Sigh.

  16. Naime Bond   3 years ago

    For all those crazy uncles who screamed about this and more for 20 years, over the Thanksgiving table - vindication is at hand.

  17. reason by insanity   3 years ago

    It took USA approx 220 years to amass $7 Trillion in debt, biden increased debt by $7Trillion in 18 months ...not to worry the Inflation Reduction Act is gonna fix all this

  18. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

    It will get to the point the government will not be able to pay the interest on the national debt, Of course they can always print more money at that point to pay the national debt, but that will lead to hyper-inflation, like a third world government.

  19. PeteRR   3 years ago

    We've sailed off the cliff and the bottom below is visible. Higher interest rates blowing up the amount to be paid each year on the national debt is not some mysterious thing. People have been talking about it for more than 30 years.

    There are no good outcomes with the current electorate and breed of politicians.

    1. NOYB2   3 years ago

      There are no good outcomes with the current electorate and breed of politicians.

      Oh, relative to society overall, there are always good outcomes for government employees, politicians, crony capitalists, and people receiving government handouts. The country may get poorer, but those people get relatively richer the deeper we fall.

  20. sowell_man   3 years ago

    Deficit or no deficit all government spending removes money from the private economy and spends it on something less efficient. It is almost never a good thing.

  21. Liberty Lover   3 years ago

    Some headlines since the beginning of 2022 TReason.com ignores.
    These include many liberal sites and news agencies:
    Americans have lost $4,200 in income under Biden

    The average American has lost more than $4,000 in annual income since President Biden took office due to soaring inflation and higher interest rates thus wiping out income gains under the previous administration ...

    Inflation has risen every month since President Biden took office

    The most obvious answer is one word: inflation. Over the past year, which is closely aligned with Biden's White House term, the Consumer Price Index has climbed rapidly..

    Joe Biden's Economy Is A Disaster.

    Aug 13, 2021 One factor is an imbalance between supply and demand. Emerging from the pandemic, we are in a period of high demand boosted by unprecedented government largesse.

    Gas prices have doubled since Biden took office

    The national average price of a gallon of gas has doubled since President Biden took office in January 2021 - a dubious milestone for the administration as it scrambles to tamp down inflation ahead...

    https://www.cbsnews.com › news › stocks-drop-recession-retirement-savings-401k-ira-3-trillion-2022

    Stock market's fall has wiped out $3 trillion in retirement savings ...

    Jun 17, 2022 The selloff has erased nearly $3 trillion from U.S. retirement accounts, according to Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College.

    saloon › My 401K has now lost 6 figures since Joe Biden took office…

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