This post was published in the Wilson Times May 1,
2020.
If you’re pleased with your
pandemic stimulus check, just wait until the payments come due. As someone who
paid federal taxes last year, you qualified for a $1,200 stimulus check; you
don’t even have to sign away all your privacy rights. If you gave up your bank
account number, you get a direct deposit into your account instead of a paper
check with Donald J. Trump’s name on it.
Do a little math, though. If
everyone is getting $1,200 ($2,400 for two-earner households), how much money
does that total, and where is it coming from? The stimulus checks sent to
individual taxpayers were part of a $3 trillion bill that included payments to
small businesses, supplemental unemployment payments, cash for state and local
governments and hospitals. The individual checks were estimated at about $209
billion.
This generosity comes on the
heels of the 2017 tax cuts, which added more than $1 trillion to the budget
deficit, even as the economy was bursting at the seams and little of the tax
cuts went to people who would spend it on basics.
If these numbers sound
familiar, you may recall an earlier stimulus package in 2008-09, which involved
payments and tax changes boosted by the Bush and Obama administrations. In
addition to one-time payments of up to $1,200 for couples, plus $300 per child,
this stimulus included a pause in payroll taxes (that support Social Security
and Medicare with 6% of wages). The Bush administration spent $120 billion to
prop up the economy.
The money must have helped,
although surveys showed a lot of recipients saved their stimulus money instead
of spending it as intended. Even so, the economy had been zooming for a decade
until the Corona Virus pandemic caused an economic collapse.
Because this year’s stimulus
package was financed with borrowed money, this fiscal year’s federal budget
deficit is expected to be $3.7 trillion. That’s 3,700,000,000,000 dollars. It’s
more money than you can imagine. As Everett Dirksen famously said, “A billion
here, a billion there, pretty soon you’re talking real money.”
The government’s stimulus
package in the 2008-09 Great Recession and the current economic reactions to
the COVID-19 pandemic were needed to prevent a total collapse of the global
economy. But neither Congress nor the White House sought to offset the stimulus
with tax increases or spending cuts. Annual deficits have increased the
national debt and debt-to-income ratio to near-suicidal levels.
The relief package for
America’s worst depression, in the 1930s, included government jobs to put
people (mostly men) back to work in an economy that had no job openings. The
Civilian Conservation Corps and the Works Progress Administration built or
improved roads, national parks and buildings, including the Wilson County
Public Library, a WPA project. In 1936, the federal deficit was $4 billion. In
that case, the federal stimulus created an asset — government buildings, roads
and parks — that added to the government’s worth.
We’ll never go back to the
pre-New Deal federal budgeting, but the deficits we’ve run up every year since
2000 will have to be repaid by our children and grandchildren. The federal debt
at the end of World War II was $259 billion. It has not fallen below $300
billion since 1962. This year, it is expected to top $24 trillion — more
than the total value of the nation’s output (GDP).
Enjoy your stimulus check,
or give it away to charities in need. But you might want to have a talk with
your grandchildren. They (and their grandchildren) will have to pay for the
nation’s stimulated economy.
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