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View Full Version : Debt -- Public and Private



ClydeR
06-11-2012, 11:41 AM
If you want to know why economic growth has been so tepid, here’s your answer. Four years after the storm hit, the economy is still deleveraging. And it’s very hard for any economy to grow when everyone is focused on increasing their savings.

Total domestic — public and private — debt as a share of the economy has declined for 12 quarters in a row after surging over the previous decade.

The rapid rise in federal debt over the past four years has distracted us from the big picture. The level of public debt is indeed worrisome, but it’s not as big a worry as the economy’s total level of debt — public and private.

Although we have a whole cottage industry devoted to warning us about the dangers of too much public debt, we don’t have any comparable Cassandras telling us about the dangers of too much private debt. Yet the history of the past 30 years (or 300) clearly shows that too much debt, of whatever variety, can pose a systemic risk to the national and global economies.

As much as we hear politicians, pundits, tea-party patriots and the Congressional Budget Office obsessing about government debt, it was excessive private debt — not public debt — that caused the 2008 financial meltdown. And it was private debt — some of it since transferred to the public — that lies behind the current European debt crisis. (Greece is unique in having a public sector that ran up spending while its private sector is rather conservative.)

As the political rhetoric about the federal deficit has heated up, we’ve lost sight of the progress that’s been made in bringing total debt back under control. The U.S. is actually doing much better than you’d think if you just listened to the conventional fears about how we’re rushing headlong into a debt Armageddon.

In fact, since the recession ended in June 2009, total U.S. debt has risen at the slowest pace since they began keeping records in the early 1950s. While Washington has taken on a lot of debt since then, the private sector has paid off, written off or dumped on the government almost as much.

More... (http://finance.yahoo.com/news/u-debt-load-falling-fastest-040045522.html)

When will these people ever learn? When you're looking at the economy and employment, only the private sector matters. It doesn't matter how badly the public sector is doing. But when you're looking at debt, only the public sector matters. That's the way conservatives think about it.

Parkbandit
06-11-2012, 12:31 PM
When will these people ever learn? When you're looking at the economy and employment, only the private sector matters. It doesn't matter how badly the public sector is doing. But when you're looking at debt, only the public sector matters. That's the way conservatives think about it.

If you create an environment that promotes the private sector, the public sector will be far better off.

If you create an environment that hinders the private sector, you get what we have currently.