Why the US is always hitting a "debt ceiling" - YouTube

Channel: Vox

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These grades aren’t for students.
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They’re for businesses.
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Based on how likely the company is to pay its debts back.
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A company like Microsoft has the best grade possible: AAA.
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Since they have a long history of paying people on time.
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"The Internet is about driving profitability."
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But a newer company like Tesla, has a BB rating.
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"Fundamentally changed the equation."
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"You've got to have an all electric vehicle."
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And that affects their interest rates.
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Microsoft pays its investors 2.5%.
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Tesla pays a bit more at 5.3%.
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The riskier the grade, the higher the interest rate.
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But it’s not just companies that have grades: countries do, too.
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The United States, for a really long time, had a AAA rating.
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Until...
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“Lawmakers have just two days to raise the nation's debt ceiling and avoid a catastrophic--"
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“Default on its loans, which could create turmoil in the US economy and worldwide.”
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The US has a weird thing called “the debt ceiling” which is just a limit
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on how much debt the country can take on.
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If the national debt reaches that limit, the US might not be able to pay its investors.
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The US regularly comes close to hitting it
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but the government always ends up raising it.
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Until 2011, when it almost didn’t.
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After that, the US was downgraded by a credit agency for the first time, due to quote
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“political risks.”
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Since then, Congress and the president have had to raise it 7 more times.
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It’s becoming an almost annual task.
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And of course, it always goes super swell
.
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"The entire basis of the Republican strategy is we're gonna shut down the government
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or cause economic chaos if we don't get 100% of what we want."
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"This isn't some damn game!"
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"My Republican friends need to stop playing Russian roulette--"
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"Russian roulette with the economy."
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In the last 20 years, the US has borrowed more and more money.
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The national debt is at an all-time high.
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But how should we feel about this debt?
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And what happens if we don’t pay it back?
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The US national debt is nearing 29 trillion dollars, with a capital T.
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Depending on when you watch this, it might already be there.
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It’s best not to look at it as a number
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but instead as a comparison to the size of the economy.
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You’ll see the US takes on more debt when the country spends a lot: because of wars,
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or because of investments needed during recessions and
 now, pandemics.
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And the department in charge of all this is the US Treasury.
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They collect taxes and spend them to fund the government.
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And, for the record, it's Congress and the President who decide how much taxes should
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be, and where the money should be spent.
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The Treasury just handles the flow of money.
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But for—essentially, ever—they approve more spending than they bring in with taxes.
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So the Treasury has to make up that difference by taking on debt.
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And it does that by selling bonds.
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They can vary, but generally it works like this:
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You buy a $1,000 30-year bond at a locked-in 2% interest rate.
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Every year the Treasury sends you $20, the 2% interest you’ve earned.
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And after 30 years, you can cash out the bond and get your $1,000 back.
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It’s a win-win situation.
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The US gets money to fund the government and you make some profit on a safe investment.
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More than a third of these bonds — and therefore the total US debt — are owned by Americans
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and American companies.
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Investors, and also banks, local governments
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and even pension funds keep their money in bonds.
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And the largest part is owned by the federal government.
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Yes, the federal government owns part of the federal government’s debt.
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The money for Social Security is actually kept in bonds.
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So is the money for Medicare.
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And federal pensions.
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The Federal Reserve has bonds, too.
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Foreign investors only own a quarter of the US debt.
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And while Chinese investors used to have the largest share
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Japanese investors actually own more now.
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They own around 4% of all US debt.
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And it is a lot of debt.
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Of all the developed countries, the US has the fourth largest debt
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compared to the size of the economy.
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So is this
 bad?
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The really, really frustrating answer is we don't know.
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Debt has pros and cons.
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One question is what are you doing with the debt?
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When you're in an economic recession or an emergency not only should you borrow
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you should borrow a lot.
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But what you shouldn't do is borrow when your economy is strong and the political inconvenience
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of paying for things is too high.
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Another really important question is what are interest rates?
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FURMAN: In recent years, interest rates have been very low.
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FURMAN: That tends to make it easier to borrow and to sustain that borrowing.
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FURMAN: Where we are now doesn't make me, as of now, very nervous.
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I worry about the debt a lot more than he does.
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While all countries take on debt, only these two have debt ceilings.
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Denmark’s, however, is kept so high they’re not going to come close to hitting it.
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Unlike the United States, where the government is constantly having to raise the debt ceiling
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to pay for spending they already approved.
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That’s the big problem with the debt limit, is it's internally contradictory.
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FURMAN: The government passes a law that says you have to spend 10.
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It passes a law that you can only collect 8 in taxes and then it passes another law
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saying you're not allowed to borrow 2.
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If the US does hit the debt ceiling, it would mean the Treasury couldn’t issue any more bonds.
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So, no more debt revenue.
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Taxes would still be coming in, but that’s not enough to cover all these responsibilities.
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So maybe they stop paying federal employees.
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Or stop sending money for programs.
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But at some point, they won’t be able to pay the interest to these investors
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or cash out Social Security bonds.
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That’s called a default.
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It’s never happened...
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yet.
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You couldn't do more to sabotage your financial system than default.
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Interest rates could rise based on a reassessment that the United States was considerably riskier
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than people had thought before.
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When government bond interest rates go up, that usually means that other interest rates
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are going up.
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If you borrow for anything, whether it's for a dishwasher, or a car, college, or your credit
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card, that's going to become more costly.
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We're going to lose jobs.
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Wages won't go up as high.
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We could be like these countries and just not have a debt limit.
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Or have one so high it’s never a threat to the economy.
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Because if Congress and the President really want to take on less debt
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they can change the tax system.
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Or reduce spending.
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The debt limit does make sense if you are a functioning Congress, you're saying we need
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to put in place some policy to make sure that we don't borrow more than we mean to
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or we stop and we pause and we check on the borrowing.
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That certainly isn't how it is working.
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The simplest thing would just be to repeal it
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and be like almost every other country in the world.
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Even if the US never actually defaults on its debt, just the mere political fights and
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“will they or won’t they” unease could make the United States
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a less desirable place to invest.
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It's long been seen as this kind of the safest asset that you can invest in, and so
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that's given the U.S. a lot of advantages.
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But the more our political system is so polarized and dysfunctional, the more that it becomes
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a little bit questioned of whether the US should have the incredible advantage
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that it has thus far.