The U.S. Government's Bad Credit Means Higher Costs for Us All
Federal officials ignore repeated warnings, and we all pay the price.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen got huffy earlier this month after Fitch Ratings lowered the credit rating of the United States. Insisting that the downgrade is "arbitrary and based on outdated data," she assured the world that "Treasury securities remain the world's preeminent safe and liquid asset, and that the American economy is fundamentally strong."
Of course, it's Yellen's thankless job to blow sunshine up the asses of the world's financial markets even as the U.S. government ignores constant warnings that its fiscal policies are reckless. But blow though she will, nobody seems to find her especially convincing.
Poor Federal Credit Means Higher Mortgage Rates
"US mortgage rates jumped above 7% in a week that government bond yields spiked following a surprise decision by Fitch Ratings to lower the nation's credit rating," Bloomberg's Augusta Saraiva reports. "Mortgage rates are benchmarked to 10-year Treasury yields, and those hit the highest level of the year last week after Fitch stripped US government debt of its prized AAA rating."
That makes sense. Fitch lowered the credit rating (as it warned it might) because the U.S. government is perceived as an increasingly risky borrower, and riskier borrowers have to pay more to lenders.
"The rating downgrade of the United States reflects the expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years, a high and growing general government debt burden, and the erosion of governance relative to 'AA' and 'AAA' rated peers over the last two decades that has manifested in repeated debt limit standoffs and last-minute resolutions," Fitch noted. Among other concerns, it pointed to the current debt-to-GDP ratio of 112.9 percent and growing budget deficits.
This is the second time the U.S. has been dinged; Standard & Poor's downgraded U.S. credit in 2011.
"When you lower the rating of a government, they're always very upset," John Chambers, who headed S&P's sovereign rating committee in 2011, told Reuters earlier this year. "We think we've been vindicated with the passage of time."
Credit rating agencies aren't the only observers concerned about U.S. finances. Earlier this year, the Congressional Budget Office's long-term budget outlook foresaw the budget deficit rising from 5.8 percent of GDP this year to 10 percent in 2053 while federal debt increases to 181 percent of GDP over that time (it has since boosted its estimate for this year's deficit). But the CBO's official forecasts are based on mandatory and rather rosy assumptions, so it publishes alternative scenarios; some of those see debt rising above 250 percent of GDP.
"The reduction of the US credit rating is overdue in light of the long and enthusiastic abandonment of fiscal soundness in Washington DC, recently abetted by monetary policy authorities," writes economist Peter C. Earle of the American Institute for Economic Research. His take is that the credit downgrade is well-deserved given that "the median debt-to-GDP ratio of AAA rated sovereign debt issuers is currently 39.3 percent; for AA rated issuers, 44.7 percent. The current US debt-to-GDP ratio is 112.9 percent."
The hike in bond yields and subsequent rise in mortgage rates caught some people off-guard since there was no comparable reaction after the Standard & Poor's downgrade. But that took place in different economic times when the U.S. government had more room to maneuver.
Changing Times and Eroding Credibility
"Private investment was subdued, unemployment at 9%, underlying inflation below the Federal Reserve's 2% target and interest rates stuck at around zero," Grep Ip comments about the last downgrade at The Wall Street Journal. "Today's circumstances are just the opposite. Private investment is healthy, unemployment near a 53-year low at 3.5%, and interest rates above 5% as the Fed combats inflation roughly double its 2% target."
Ip warns that the "global saving glut—the wall of money in search of safe assets that kept yields down a decade ago—is no more" and that investors may fear the government will use "inflation to reduce the real value of its debts, which raises interest rates today."
Economist John Cochrane, a Senior Fellow of Stanford's Hoover Institution and an adjunct scholar with the Cato Institute, agrees that "Fitch is right to downgrade the US." He also warns that inflation has eroded the U.S. government's credibility as a borrower.
"Inflation is the economic equivalent of a partial default. The debt was sold under a 2% inflation target, and people expected that or less inflation. The government borrowed and printed $5 Trillion with no plan to pay it back, devaluing the outstanding debt as a result," he cautions. "Yes, this is not a formal default. And a formal default would have far reaching financial consequences that inflation does not have. Still, for a bondholder it's the same thing."
Having been burned by the U.S. government's policies, investors perceive it as an increasingly risky borrower, just as Fitch (and S&P in 2011) say. As a result, they demand a greater price to loan the feds money—hence higher bond yields. And since 10-year Treasury yields serve as benchmarks for other borrowing rates, such as mortgages, that means higher cost for average Americans who have little say in D.C.'s financial shenanigans but have to suffer the consequences.
"Steady Deterioration in Standards of Governance" With High Costs for Everybody
That doesn't mean that Treasury yields and mortgage rates are destined to rise in an unbroken line—other factors are in play. But as Fitch points out, "there has been a steady deterioration in standards of governance over the last 20 years, including on fiscal and debt matters," and "there has been only limited progress in tackling medium-term challenges related to rising social security and Medicare costs due to an aging population." The U.S. government has put itself on a path of unsupportable expenditures funded by growing debt accumulated at rising expense.
"Such high and rising debt would slow economic growth, push up interest payments to foreign holders of U.S. debt, and pose significant risks to the fiscal and economic outlook," according to the CBO.
That means unpleasant consequences not just for government officials, but for those of us who live in the economy they hobble. The government will have to pay more to borrow, and so will we. We'll do so in a country less prosperous than it should have been.
Janet Yellen may resent Fitch's credit-rating downgrade, but the public has even more reason to resent the continuing fiscal irresponsibility of the federal government and the costs it inflicts on the wider world. Without radical reforms to the way government officials handle our money, Fitch's action will be just one more unheeded warning along the way to an unpromising future.
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Not ALL of us pay the price.
The ones causing the damage never even notice, sitting in one of their multiple homes, flying around in private (corporate, government) jets, and dining in fine restaurants.
Please take a careful look at the flag of the Commonwealth of Virginia.
Sic Semper Tyrannis?
That’s why we need to make them hurt.
But the rig count!
Frankly, at this point, the government's spending problem has gotten so bad and so out of control that I'd just as soon they spent like there's no tomorrow and broke the budget, the dollar ceased to be the world's reserve currency, and the government had to default on all those T-bills. It's beyond repair.
Yeah, it's too late to avoid a total collapse. Might as well party down until the cops show up.
I've been of the opinion for a while that absent significant reductions in federal spending a default is inevitable. And the further they manage to kick the can down the road, the worse it's going to be when it does finally happen.
Not at all. If the US government were to balance its budget and stop passing new anti-growth laws, it would get its fiscal house in order within a decade: markets are excellent figuring out how to circumvent existing regulations, and rapid growth takes care of the debt.
It takes a lot of effort by federal, state, and local governments every year to keep the US in debt and to keep the economy in shackles.
If the US government were to balance its budget...
There is not a chance in Hell of that happening.
It’s not beyond repair. We just need to cleanse the people making this happen from our country. The budget is fixable. The money supply is fixable. Just getting rid of the woke/green/payoff spending would likely balance the budget immediately, or at leas tin a handful of years.
Ask yourselves this. Are the rights and lives of the Marxist progressives worth your own rights and survival?
I dont know guys. If we just reluctantly vote for a party campaigning on increased spending to stop mean tweets, I think we can turn this around. Mean tweet debt index is the primary driver of debt after all.
More spending to stop inflation!
The inflation reduction act already passed. If anything we are brainstorming for the sequel.
Like, a debt reduction act that increases borrowing.
I favor an omnibus revenge bill that involves taking Democrat’s and RINO’s stuff along with their freedom.
>>This is the second time the U.S. has been dinged; Standard & Poor's downgraded U.S. credit in 2011.
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Bankrupting and Destroying Nations is what [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] do..... As-if that's not history repeating itself yet again.
Now; Who brought the [Na]tional So[zi]alist ideology to USA politics and destroyed the USA and can that disease be cured? That's the only thing that will make the USA great again.
Worst part is history shows the socialist F'er's tendency is to double-down on socialism bringing about hyper-inflation, war to conquer and consume greener pastures, killing to save resources, poverty for everyone and domestic partisan battles that literally ends in anarchy and chaos and overwhelming crime.
Please leftards; GROW-UP before it's too late. Learn that you don't have any right (government-gun granted or not) to other people's labors and you alone need to take responsibility for yourself while insisting everyone has the same Individual Liberty and Justice for all.... Not some spoiled brat POS childish whining about your successful neighbor or why you think you have a ?right? to STEAL whatever you cry about long enough. GROW-UP or MOVE your *ss out of here.
....Conclusion: GUNS don't make sh*t and gun-force is the only tool in governments toolbox. Governments are for ensuring Liberty from criminals and Justice in case a criminal steals from you....... THEY ARE NOT there to STEAL for you and commit crimes against anyone who makes or has something you want.
Appealing to the left is pointless. Just annihilate them.
"That means unpleasant consequences not just for government officials, but for those of us who live in the economy they hobble."
Bad news for borrowers, but isn't it also good news for lenders? For every borrower, there must be a lender. Aren't the lenders (whose actions are often shielded by being too big to fail) the beneficiaries of higher costs?
Reason always takes the side of the rentiers in economic issues. Owners of debt in this case. What gives?
You might be confused because this is Tuccille, who occasionally peers beyond the veil of the beltway at actual libertarian thought.
No, not necessarily. Money and loans are in many ways like other goods.
When the cost of a good goes up, sellers need to raise prices, which causes a decrease in demand and substitutions. Profits per unit sold increase, but units sold decrease. Overall, the market shrinks and so does total profit.
"which causes a decrease in demand and substitutions. "
Are you anticipating a decrease in the demand for borrowed money? Either private or public?
It will once your fellow travelers are gone.
I doubt it.
There, fixed your two errors.
(1) The root cause of the problem isn't "bad credit", it's excessive government spending.
(2) The vast majority of Americans don't give a f*ck because they don't have to pay for this; it's only the top 20% who pay net taxes. That's why American voters keep voting for this. (I suspect Tuccille isn't familiar with this because he's likely not in that income bracket.)
The US government gives US voters what they want, and this is what they want right now; as with credit cards and foods, American voters don't care about long term consequences.
New data from the IRS find that the top 25 percent of earners paid nearly 89 percent of all income taxes in 2020. This is the highest share of income taxes paid seen in the tax data available going back to 1980. Lower income earners carry little of the overall income tax burden, with the bottom 50 percent of earners owing 2.3 percent of the national share.
Details: https://www.ntu.org/foundation/tax-page/who-pays-income-taxes
So that's why my next car will cost $100,000.... $90,000 of it will go to the government.
the top 25 percent of earners paid nearly 89 percent of all income taxes in 2020.
Which is fair, since they have nearly all the money.
No, they don’t.
If you want to get pedantic, it's more like the top .1% who control most of the wealth, but they of course are included in the top 25%.
Maybe stop insisting on STEALING it and instead ask why your not one of them or what you can do to become one of them. HOW did they end up will nearly all the money and why do they keep getting richer the more you try to STEAL from them. Simple Criminalistic minds are no benefit to anyone but themselves.
Either they got that money from armed-theft (gov-grants) and do nothing or they produce something extremely needed and have market-value that stealing $ doesn’t change. They’ll just pass the cost onto the consumer.
There is nothing ‘fair’ about armed-robbing anyone who becomes a success (or anyone for that matter) especially when they are making everyone’s life better (producing). In fact it’s a guaranteed equation to creating a zero-sum resources environment (ZERO new resources).
it’s only the top 20% who pay net taxes
Bullshit. All workers with wage income pay 15.3% in Social Security and Medicare taxes. Low-income workers without dependents who don't benefit from itemizing deductions pay 10%-22% (depending on bracket) on income over the standard deductions and exemptions. Only the very poorest workers without dependents pay no net income tax (after EITC), but of course the still pay the 15.3% FICA tax.
Agree with Vernon about taxes. Everything is more or less true for most citizens. I see that things are a little worse in Canada. There is always something to compare when you look at real things. As governments tackle ephemeral issues like the number of genders, there is a growing demand for steel doors among residents - https://www.elegantentrydoors.ca/entry-steel-doors/ Why do you think this is happening? People need reliability and security.