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May 2, 2007
Debt: An
Inescapable Concept - Social Debt
by Gary North, Ph.D.
Debt
is an inescapable concept. It is never a question
of debt or no debt. It is always a question of
which kind of debt, owed to whom.
We enter this world helpless. Our parents owe a
debt to us when we are born. They have obligations
to us. Every society operates in terms of this
principle. Parents who refuse to care for their
children are placed under social sanctions. They
are encouraged to provide care for their children:
positive sanctions. If they refuse, they are
punished in one way or another: negative
sanctions.
Humans are slow learners. It takes longer for
humans to reach maturity as a percentage of their
lifetimes than any other species. So, parenthood is
a long-term commitment.
Prior to the longer lifespans produced under
capitalism, one or more parents died of old age
before all of their children reached maturity.
Other family members would then step in and care
for younger children, usually older siblings.
Again, this was a debt relationship.
For parents who reached old age and became
incapacitated, their hope lay in their children,
usually their sons. The sons were expected to care
for their aged parents. This was a form of debt
repayment. The parents had honored their debt
obligations while the children were young. But once
the children reached maturity, they became debtors
to their parents.
Conclusion: Families stick together. The nature
of this bond rests on debt.
Human society is impossible without debt. We can
learn a great deal about a society by examining its
most pervasive forms of debt: who owes whom, for
how long, under what terms, at what interest
rate.
SOCIAL INSURANCE
Marriage in the West begins with a public
exchange of vows. This is the familiar pre-nuptial
agreement.
- I take you to be my (wife/husband), to have
and to hold from this day forward, for better or
for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness
and in health, to love and to cherish; from this
day forward until death do us part.
It is specific in its details, yet very broad.
It is permanent. It is public. It is administered
under the authority of an institution, either
church or state or both. It would be difficult to
devise a legally enforceable contract that is
broader in scope in so short a form.
We live in an era in which the rich party in a
marriage agreement insists on a longer pre-nuptial
agreement, drawn up by a lawyer, signed in private,
which limits the scope of the public vow. The
marriage ceremony never refers to this
debt-limitation contract, let alone requires both
parties to recite it. If one of the parties is a
celebrity, a tabloid newspaper may reprint brief
sections of a leaked copy.
Marriage vows throughout history have been by
far the most important form of social insurance.
The vows establish legal responsibility for dealing
with the vast majority of all crises that threaten
individuals. These vows are an application of a
foundational principle of production: the division
of labor.
- Two are better than one; because they have a
good reward for their labour. For if they fall,
the one will lift up his fellow: but woe to him
that is alone when he falleth; for he hath not
another to help him up. Again, if two lie
together, then they have heat: but how can one
be warm alone? (Ecclesiastes 4:9-11)
Without marriage vows, society could not exist.
People are too ready to break contracts. But this
contract goes beyond conventional business
relationships. It is universal. A violation calls
forth social pressures to see that the victim
receives protection.
Until the twentieth century, most health
insurance was provided by families. Home health
care was family-provided health care. There have
been hospitals for centuries in the West. The
hospital was an invention of the West in the late
medieval era. But hospitals have always served very
few people.
By decentralizing health care to families, and
by investing the family with socially enforceable
responsibility for performance of this socially
crucial service, every society has maintained
broad-based health care programs. These services
have not been administered by impersonal
bureaucrats doing things by the book. They have
been administered by close relatives who care
deeply about the outcome of the treatment.
We can say the same about life insurance, fire
insurance, and all other forms of insurance. Before
mathematicians in the West discovered the law of
large numbers and then built profit-seeking
insurance companies by means of statistical
formulas of risk, societies used families as the
means of benefiting from the as-yet undiscovered
science of risk-management.
Risk-management is a form of debt. People enter
into voluntary agreements by which they make
present payments, or agree to make future payments
under specific conditions. They in turn become
beneficiaries of others at a later date under
specific conditions. Without debt, society could
not exist.
FROM SUPPLEMENTS TO
SUBSTITUTES
The invention of insurance is one of the most
important inventions of all time. It began in the
late medieval era in the shipping industry.
Investors guaranteed the outcome of individual
voyages by receiving a fixed percentage of the
profits of multiple voyages. By spreading the risk
of a sunk or captured ship among many voyages,
investors extended foreign trade.
Fire insurance began in the late 1600's in
England. Life insurance began in the same era.
Families could pay a small premium to a company in
order to receive a large settlement in the case of
an unexpected catastrophic individual event.
Insurance policies supplemented the care offered by
families.
In the late nineteenth century, Otto von
Bismarck, the chancellor of Prussia, was successful
in promoting a state-subsidized old age retirement
system. That model spread to the West. In 1935, the
Social Security Act became law. The U.S. government
became the insurer of workers' old age. Initially,
it was promoted as an old age supplemental program,
but it soon became the public's expectation for
primary care.
We see here a shift from family responsibility
to state responsibility. What every society had
always seen as a responsibility of families, based
on personal loyalty and mutual benefits, became a
responsibility of taxpayers, based on loyalty to
the state and impersonal administration by salaried
bureaucrats. Old age care became depersonalized and
bureaucratized. The element of personal
responsibility began to recede in importance.
It is not random that the divorce rate in the
West rose alongside the spread of state-funded
insurance. When the benefits of an arrangement
fall, commitment to the arrangement declines. The
economic benefits associated with marriage were
removed from the family and handed to the state.
Dependence on the state replaces dependence on the
family. The state allows individuals to "divorce"
the state only by leaving its jurisdiction, which
is expensive. In contrast, price-competitive
no-fault family divorce is universal.
The debt relationship has been shifted from the
family to the state. This has made old age payments
a matter of pressure group politics. The same
process of depersonalization and bureaucratization
began with Medicare in 1965.
Society has not done away with debt. It has
merely shifted the locus of responsibility.
REDUCED SAFETY
The vast extension of private debt in the United
States has paralleled the extension of
state-insured debt. State-insured debt, unlike
family debt and private debt, is unfunded. No
capital has been created that can pay off debt
through productivity. There is no unfunded debt on
earth larger than Social Security/Medicare, which
is now in the range of $70 trillion.
The state has substituted promises to pay for
capital to pay. "Let them eat promises" is the
underlying lie of all state-funded insurance
contracts. The state extracts present purchasing
power -- which could have funded capital creation
-- and issues IOU's based on future state revenues.
These future revenues are not guaranteed, for there
is no agency capable of guaranteeing them. They
must be collected: through (1) taxes, (2) issuing
IOU's, and (3) money created by the central
bank.
We have therefore witnessed a massive creation
of unfunded debt in the West. The magnitude of this
unfunded liability is so large that the end is
sure: default. The only question is the form this
default will take.
I began with a statement: "Debt is an
inescapable concept." To this, I now add a
corollary: "Default is an inescapable concept."
By shifting the inescapable debt obligations of
families to the state, voters have undermined their
safety in the name of increasing their safety. They
sought supplemental protection from the burdens of
old age. They imagined that by voting themselves
safety through coercion, they could increase their
safety. But the opposite is now inescapable:
increased risk because of inescapable default. This
default will come in people's old age, when they
are least able to defend themselves. It has come at
the expense of family-owned capital or insurance
company-owned capital that could have supported
oldsters through production.
ADDED BURDEN
For those taxpayers who understand the low
discounted present value of a long-term government
promise, the cost of purchasing safety has risen.
They must find ways to purchase future security
with after-tax income.
The general public does not understand that a
great default is coming. This is why the American
household savings rate has fallen to zero in recent
years and has even gone negative in some periods:
the sale of assets to fund consumption. What had
been promised in 1935 as a supplemental program for
old age security has become the primary source of
most Americans' security. But the system is
statistically unsound.
On March 4, 2007, the Comptroller General of the
United States government, David Walker, appeared on
"60 Minutes." He is the government's senior
accountant. His message is grim.
Walker says we have promised almost unlimited
health care to senior citizens who never see the
bills, and the government already is borrowing
money to pay them. He says the system is
unsustainable.
"It's the number one fiscal challenge for the
federal government, it's the number one fiscal
challenge for state governments and it's the number
one competitive challenge for American business.
We're gonna have to dramatically and fundamentally
reform our health care system in installments over
the next 20 years," Walker tells Kroft.
And if we don't?
"And if we don't, it could bankrupt America. . .
."
http://www.garynorth.com/snip/165.htm
We are watching a slow-motion train crash. Most
voters know nothing of this. A minority nod their
heads: "We understand." But they don't understand.
Their thrift habits reveal the degree to which they
don't understand.
HEDGING AGAINST INFLATION
The easiest way for any national government to
conceal the looming default is through inflation.
It will sell its debt to its central bank, which
will create money out of nothing to purchase these
debt certificates. Then the government will spend
the newly created money. Prices will rise.
This will raise the cost of living escalator in
the Social Security payments. This will in turn
raise payments. But the budget-killing program is
Medicare, says Walker: five times the burden of
Social Security. With inflation, hospitals will
feel the pinch. They will face rising prices. They
will not receive comparable rising payments from
the government. The result will be rationed medical
care, just as we find in every system of socialized
medicine.
I look at the future and see a falling dollar.
What can you buy with a falling dollar? Less.
One strategy I have adopted to defend myself is
to buy a home with a fixed-rate mortgage. I will
pay off this debt with depreciating dollars.
I will begin drawing Social Security in a few
months. I will buy a larger home when the payments
begin. I want the income from Social Security to
pay off my mortgage. Because the mortgage is
fixed-rate, I lock in the monthly payment. This
lets me find something useful to do with the
depreciating value of the dollars I will receive
from the government. I can deduct the mortgage
interest payment from my gross income. Given the
fact that I am still in the labor market, I can use
this deduction.
Without the promise of Social Security income,
it would not make financial sense for a man age 65
to buy a home with a 30-year mortgage. But it does
make sense in a nation in which the Federal
government's bankruptcy is statistically
guaranteed, and in which the easiest way to default
is through inflation.
Default through inflation will affect all forms
of long-term fixed interest debt. Thus default will
not be confined to the United States government and
its bonds.
CONCLUSION
If you believe that my analysis of social debt
is accurate, you should take active and costly
steps to reduce your dependence on political
promises.
You should take steps to generate a stream of
future income that will increase with the fall in
the dollar's value.
You should take steps to increase your health,
because health care rationing is a sure thing. You
don't want to wait at age 75 or 80 for a
life-changing operation in a world of health-care
rationing. The rationers will say, "Too old." You
will not get to the front of the line.
Debt is inescapable. The question is this: Who
owes you what, under which conditions? Find out
now, before the debt comes due. Default is your
enemy.
-- Go To
Personal Debt --
Dr.
Gary North earned a Ph.D. in history and is one of
America's keenest economic analysts and
commentators. He supports the Austrian school of
economics and is a previous assistant to
libertarian congressman Dr. Ron Paul. Visit his
website at http://garynorth.com.
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