It isn’t even really, really big.
It’s much bigger, and more dangerous, in actual fact, than politicians are willing to acknowledge.
Think of the biggest number you can.
Yeah. It’s bigger than that.
The Congressional Budget Office says that if we continue at our current rate spending, we’ll “chalk up nearly $7 trillion in red ink over the next 10 years,” according to Reuters.
Because that number’s not even close to the size of the real problem we have. $7 trillion is just a fraction of the liabilities of the government as it doesn’t take into account all the “off-the-book” items.
You might remember “off-the-book” accounting. It made a stunning debut in the Enron scandal.
Oh.
You thought politicians fixed that problem? They did. The “fix” doesn’t apply to government accounting; it just applies to the rest of us.
While experts usually peg the unfunded portion of pension liabilities at around $1 trillion, that number is based on reports from public pension managers who are anxious to downplay the size of the gap in pension liabilities.
If real-world accounting methods are used to gauge the pension gap- you know, the methods that private pension managers have to use to stay out of prison- the states owe about $3 trillion to pension funds that they don’t have.
Because, still, our problem is much bigger than that.
The IMF yesterday called upon the U.S. government to “make explicit its guarantees of the housing-finance market and bring them fully onto the government balance sheet.”
Forbes’ Bill Bonner reckons the “total bailout bill…may exceed $20 trillion.”
So far that’s $7, plus $3, plus $20 trillion.
But wait. It gets worse.
Bill Gross, the manager of the world’s largest mutual fund, did calculations that includes all the liabilities of the government he could think of- Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare- and figured a deficit of around $75 trillion more or less.
Gross “has been selling Treasuries because they have little value within the context of a $75 trillion total debt burden,” he said, as reported in Bloomberg.
Fellow investor Warren Buffet agrees with Gross. He’s told investors to stay away from U.S. government securities.
"If you ask me if the U.S. Dollar is going to hold its purchasing power fully at the level of 2011, 5 years, 10 years or 20 years from now, I would tell you it will not," Buffet said to overseas investors in March.
$75 trillion is a number that would stagger even the late Carl Sagan.
Written out it's $75,000,000,000,000.00 if you are keeping box-score at home.
So, what’s a measly $2 or $3 trillion more or less, in a figure like that?
Just the pension problem, that’s what.
Our real problem, unfortunately, is much bigger than that.
http://finance.townhall.com/columnists/johnransom/2011/04/07/the_mother_of_all_bankruptcies/page/full/
1 comment:
The biggest default in the history of the world.
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