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A Positive Approach To A US Government Default
By Bill Bonner | Published  07/19/2011 | Currency , Futures , Options , Stocks | Unrated
A Positive Approach To A US Government Default

Who can honestly say that he is not enjoying the show?

Clowns to the left of us, jokers to the right…it’s fun, isn’t it?

Yesterday, the Dow fell and gold rose above $1,600 to a new record high. The euro fell, but against the dollar it is still more than 50% higher than it was when it was introduced 10 years ago.

In Europe, the world’s leading bankers and financial policymakers try to figure out how to avoid doing what comes naturally – going broke.

And in America, politicians scramble to raise the debt ceiling level before it is too late.

The big question is: who will default first? The Europeans? Or the Americans?

Larry Summers, former US Treasury Secretary, warned on TV that failing to raise the debt limit would be worse than after the Lehman bankruptcy in 2008. Ben Bernanke told Congress the same thing.

In Europe, the IMF and the rest of the financial elite have the same message. Don’t let Greece default, or there is a serious risk of “contagion,” and financial catastrophe. Larry Summers even crossed the ocean to give bad advice to the Europeans:

“No big financial institution in any country [should] be allowed to fail.”

On both sides of the Atlantic, the situation is about the same. The geniuses and scam-artists who run the big banks want to keep the honey pots open as long as possible. But there are pressures – mostly from the middle classes, who feel they have been ripped off – to put on the lid.

In Europe, the Germans resist giving more money to the spendthrift Greeks and Portuguese. In America, Tea Party activists want to bring an end to Big Government by cutting off its source of funds. They want to hold the line on the debt limit. Many would be happy to see the nation default.

And here at The Daily Reckoning, we stand with the Tea Party and the Germans. We’d like to see the US government default. Why?

-- Because the feds have already done enough damage with their borrowing; it’s time they lived within their means…

-- Because we already have enough zombies, supported by borrowed funds…

-- Because it will be less painful to stop the debt build up now than later…

-- And because we just want to see what happens when the zombies run out of fresh meat.

Finally, at least some people in Congress are getting serious about cutting spending.

WASHINGTON (AP) – One of the Senate’s staunchest budget-cutters unveiled Monday a massive plan to cut the nation’s deficit by $9 trillion over the coming decade, including $1 trillion in tax increases opposed by most of his fellow Republicans.

The plan by Sen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., is laced with politically perilous proposals like raising to 70 the age at which people can claim their full Social Security benefits. It would cut farm subsidies, Medicare, student aid, housing subsidies for the poor, and funding for community development grants. Coburn even takes on the powerful veterans’ lobby by proposing that some veterans pay more for medical care and prescription drugs.

Coburn would also eliminate $1 trillion in tax breaks over the coming decade, earning him an immediate rebuke from Americans for Tax Reform, an anti-tax organization with which Coburn has had a running feud. He would block taxpayers from claiming the mortgage interest deduction on second homes and limit it to homes worth $500,000. He would also ease taxpayers into higher tax brackets more quickly by using a smaller measure of inflation to adjust the brackets.

Coburn would cut $1 trillion from the Pentagon budget over a decade. He would block military retirees from the Tricare Prime health care plan, the option with the lowest out-of-pocket cost, saving $115 billion, and he would raise the prescription drug co-payment under the program, as well as require higher out-of-pocket fees. He also would reduce the fleet of aircraft carriers from 11 to 10 and Navy air wings from 10 to nine.

“I have no doubt that both parties will criticize portions of this plan, and I welcome that debate,” Coburn told reporters. “But it’s not a legitimate criticism until you have a plan of your own.”

This fellow, Coburn, has the right idea. Throw away the scalpel. Get a chain saw. He’d raise the Medicare eligibility age to 69…and cut $1 trillion out of the Pentagon budget. He needs a much bigger chainsaw…but at least he’s on the job.

Bill Bonner is the President of Agora Publishing. For more on Bill Bonner, visit The Daily Reckoning.