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Understanding the National Debt and Budget Deficit - YouTube
Channel: vlogbrothers
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Good morning Hank, it's Tuesday. So, one of the biggest issues in global politics these days
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is government debt and deficits, which is a particularly big deal in the United States
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because of the Presidential campaign and also because of the looming fiscal cliff.
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And Hank, as you'll no doubt remember, I received a bronze medal in economics
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at the 1994 Alabama State Academic Decathlon, meaning that in 1994,
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I was the third best seventeen-year-old economist among all C students in the state of Alabama,
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so not to brag or anything, but I'm pretty qualified to explain this stuff.
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Okay, so first we have to separate the ideas of debt and deficit.
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Debt is the total amount of our outstanding liabilities.
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Deficit , or occasionally surplus, is the difference between what the government spends and what it takes in.
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Right, so in the United States, our current national debt is around 16 trillion dollars,
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which sounds like a lot of money, and it is.
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But let's break this down.
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The largest single holder of U.S. government debt is actually the Federal Government itself
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because trust funds like Social Security buy government bons and so the interest goes from the U.S. government to a different part of the U.S.government,
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which is not borrowing as we usually imagine it.
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So if you take away that money, you're left with about 11 trillion dollars, which is still a fair bit of cash.
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Who owns that debt?
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China, you probably guessed, but in fact, no. The plurality of that debt is actually owned by us.
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Us being American individuals and institutions.
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China owns about 8% of our debt, Japan 7% and the UK, 1%.
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But it's important to note that the US also owns foreign debt, including about 235 billion dollars
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of sovereign debt in China and Hong Kong.
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Altogether, for every one dollar of US debt that's owned by a foreign country,
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we own about 89 cents of foreign debt.
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So you can't really think of government debt the same way you'd think about, like, a family
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owing money to a credit card company because in that situation, the family owes money to someone else.
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But in the case of US government debt, we mostly, indirectly or directly, owe money to ourselves.
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So our national debt is a very large number, but at least at the moment, it is not a very large problem.
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Like in 2011, we paid about 3% total interest on our debt. In 2012, it will be even less because our debt
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is incredibly cheap right now.
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I mean, Hank, in some ways, it is literally cheaper than free. Right now, the yield on a one year treasury bon
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is 0.17%. Okay, two very important things to note about the debt:
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First, China can't, like, call in our debt on a day of its choosing.
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If I buy a $100, one year treasury bon today, I'm going to get that $100 back, along with my 17 cents in interest
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in one year. I can't call after a month and be like, "Give me my money back!"
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So despite what you hear from a lot of political commentators, that is not really a risk
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to the US economy. Secondly, you may have heard people say, "The government should be run
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like a business. It should never spend more than it takes in."
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Yeah, no, that is not how businesses are run. Like, say that tomorrow, I invent a Marty McFly
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hovercraft skateboard. In that situation, I wouldn't wait twenty years until I've sold enough DFTBA posters
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to build my Marty McFly hoverboard factory. I would just borrow the money and build the factory immediately
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so I could start selling hoverboards and swim in a sea of hundred dollar bills.
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Actually, I would not swim in a sea of hundred dollar bills. I would hoverboard over that sea.
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Businesses spend more than they bring in all the time, as well they should
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and almost all economists agree that governments are similar. There are times when they need
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to run deficits. For instance, during a recession, government revenue goes down
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because wages stagnate and unemployment goes up. But government expenditures have to go up,
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like on unemployment benefits, for instance. So just to be clear, deficits are not inherently evil
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and our current debt, while it is very large, does not pose a threat to the American economy because we can
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pay it back with relative ease. I mean, it's not going to be free, but it's going to be like 2% of GDP.
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We've done it before!
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However, there is a huge future risk to us, because what if our debt stopped being cheap?
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What if people stopped believing that the US is the safest place to put their money and they start to
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buy bonds in, I don't know, like Brazil or China or Germany?
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Well, that would be very bad because most years, we run a budget deficit and so we would need to keep
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borrowing money at these higher interest rates, which would necessitate more deficits,
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and therefore more borrowing at progressively higher interest rates.
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And then we'd have to cut spending, which would slow growth and raise taxes,
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which would slow growth more, and then Greece.
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Except this might actually be much worse for us than it's been for Greece because the US enjoys all kinds of
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benefits from having the world's most trusted currency.
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Like, Hank, believe it or not, most US paper currency actually circulates outside the US
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and that's very helpful for us in terms of exchange rates and keeping our debt cheap
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and if we lost that, it would be devastating because we would just be a regular country again.
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Okay, so the federal deficit in 2011 was about 1.3 trillion. It'll be down a little bit this year to about a trillion.
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It'll be down further in 2013, no matter who is president, to about 900 billion.
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But most people think that number needs to continue to come down, or at some point, we are going to risk
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the spiraling higher interest rates.
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So there are two ways of doing this. This first is to print more money, like, oh, we need a hundred billion dollars
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to close the deficit? Look, I just made a hundred billion dollars using a printing press!
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That sounds like a fine idea, except that it will lead to inflation. Now a lot of people in comments will be saying
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that we should just return to the gold standard, which I think is a very bad idea, for the reasons I explain
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in the dooblydoo. However:
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In the broadest sense, our currency is already pegged to goods and services
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because if the amount of money in the world doubled tomorrow, the amount of stuff wouldn't,
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so you can imagine what would happen to the cost of everything: It would double.
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The second, and better, way to cut the deficit is to close the gap between what we take in
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and what we spend, and in times of economic expansion, this is actually quite easy
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because the tax base grows and the amount of money people make goes up, so they pay more taxes,
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so we can just have surpluses, as we did in the 1990s.
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But during slow recoveries, like the one we have right now, it is much more complicated.
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So, like, both President Obama and Governor Romney favored unspecified spending cuts,
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Governor Romney also favors a tax cut of 20% across the board,
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whereas President Obama thinks that we should increase taxes by rolling back the Bush era tax cut
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on income over $250,000. Neither of these plans is likely to eliminate the deficit,
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although, again, the deficit doesn't necessarily need to be eliminated.
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And no matter what political rhetoric you hear, neither of these plans is terribly radical either.
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President Obama wants to put the top marginal income tax rate at 39%.
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It was over 50% every year from 1945 until 1986.
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Mitt Romney wants to cut that tax rate to 28.5%, which is where it was in 1989.
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We can argue thoughtfully about what our policy position should be, but amid all the rhetoric and
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decontextualized statistics, I just want to underscore that while deficit reduction is important,
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it is not a crisis. The whole idea here is to keep it from becoming a crisis and one of the best ways to do that
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is to understand the problem without yelling about it, discuss things honestly without assuming
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that the people who disagree with you hate America.
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Hank, I'll see you on Friday.
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PS, friendly reminder, educational videos are allowed to be over four minutes.
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I'm still working on my punishment, sorry.
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