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Not So Good, but Not So Bad
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14226 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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Date : |
7 / 1988 |
3,100 Words |
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Robert Eisner Robert Eisner is the William R. Kenan Professor of Economics
at Northwestern University and is the author of How Real Is
the Federal Deficit? He is currently president of the American
Economic Association. |
There are some troubles in the U.S. economic paradise, and some of them are serious. But they are not the ones attracting most of the rhetoric in financial and certain political circles.
We hear a great deal about the national debt, the budget deficit, the trade deficit, the decline in personal saving, the falling dollar, and the United States becoming "the world's greatest debtor nation." Much of what is said, though, is misleading, based on faulty measures and analysis, and not properly focused on the real issues--the standard of living of the American people, now and in the future.
Going back to the days of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Republicans have been attacking Democrats for running budget deficits. With the huge deficits of the Reagan era, Democrats had a chance to get even. But amid all the finger-pointing, there has been little effort to see just what the issue is all about, how debt and deficits are calculated and how they have really affected the economy. Some of the key facts are eye-opening.
First, debt and deficits are both in mind-boggling figures. The federal debt is now counted in trillions, that is, thousands of billions of dollars, the deficit in hundreds of billions. But the numbers are too large to be meaningful in themselves. They have to be taken in relation to something.
While many attempts to think of government debt in the same terms as one may think of personal debt are misleading, there is one standard common to both. The debt must be viewed in relation to income. If an individual borrows from a bank to buy a
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