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Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Hepatitis / January 2006

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U.S. In Technical Default

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Alan - 30 Jan 2006 09:21 GMT
http://financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/2006/0127b.html

by Dr. M
(AKA Dr. Chris Martenson)
January 27, 2006

In a shocking development, the Treasury Department website is openly stating
that as of January 24, 2006 our national debt stood at $8,185.3 billion and on
January 26th at $8,190.5 billion.

http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdpenny.htm

Yet the US national debt ‘ceiling’, the maximum amount of debt the US government
may hold at any one time, stands at $8,184 billion – a full $5.5 billion less.
Although called upon by John Snow, Congress has not yet passed an expansion of
the debt ceiling and so the US government is now operating in technical default.

You may recall that when last the debt ceiling was approached in the months
surrounding the 2004 elections, the Treasury department furiously employed every
accounting trick in the book (and then some) to avoid breaching the limit. They
even went so far as to take the unprecedented step of borrowing $14 billion from
the Federal Financing Bank to cover up the shortfall.

But they never breached the ceiling.

On January 24th they breached it brazenly and openly and with nary an
accompanying explanation. Neither have any lawmakers have broached this
indelicate subject.

I suppose we could write this off as merely an unsurprising development from a
government that no longer bothers to even appear to be adhering to rules, laws
and procedures, let alone actually doing so.

But the silence is all the more troubling because there is an unprecedented
level of government borrowing on the books for 1Q06 with next 2 weeks (Feb 1st
to Feb 9th) an especially busy period of time. An ambitious ~$70-$80b in
Treasury paper will hit the market.

The federal government does not have the legal authority to borrow above the
statutory debt limit, which raises the prospect of emergency congressional
action to avoid a full-fledged default.

Congress will probably attach a rider to a “must-pass” defense appropriation
bill and ironically title it “The Fiscal Responsibility Amendment of 2006”. And
if they do, $50 says they do it very late on Friday night.

Since the debt ceiling has been raised 50 times over the past 40 years, hoping
for some rational debate on the matter would be an extravagant indulgence. Time
spent wishing pigs could fly would offer a far better potential return.

Another odd facet of this story is the deafening silence from the financial
press (and I use that term loosely) regarding this matter. Leaving aside the
issue of a technical default, one wonders why questions aren’t being asked about
the rate of debt accumulation and whether it’s sustainable.

The last debt-ceiling adjustment was $800 billion and was passed in November
2004. Now, on January 24th 2006, it is entirely gone. $800 billion in only 16
months for an average of $50B a month.

Factoring out the plundering of excess social security contributions, the US
government borrowed $52B in 3Q05, $96B in 4Q05 and expects to borrow $171B in
1Q06. A trend nearly as mind-boggling as the soon to be discontinued M3 series.

Why do I even bother to pen such distressing factoids?

Because in all my time studying economics I have determined only one thing;
there’s no free lunch. Pay now or pay later but pay we will.

Or, more accurately, we hope that our kids will, and not stiff us for the bill.
But if they did, who could blame them?

I, for one, would not be shocked.

http://financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/2006/0127b.html

Alan

"Can't you see we're still here,
Can't you see we're still here,
Singing loud; Singing clear,
We shall not go under,
We're still here."

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Alan - 30 Jan 2006 09:47 GMT
> http://financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/2006/0127b.html
>
[quoted text clipped - 73 lines]
>
> http://financialsense.com/fsu/editorials/2006/0127b.html

http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/

http://lordcerneabbas.blogspot.com/2006/01/every-competent-analyst-predicts.html

Lord Cerne Abbas

To rebel is right, to disobey is a duty, to act is necessary !

http://www.veloceraptor.free-online.co.uk/identity.html

http://www.veloceraptor.free-online.co.uk/mylinks.html

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