The coming debt battle
Citing a phony "crisis," the GOP wants to gut Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. Democrats can't let them
BY JAMES K. GALBRAITH
In the tense run-up to Hurricane Sandy, I clicked on one of those headlines that appears on the right side of the screen: Civilization May Not Survive This, Economist Says.
Once there, I knew Id been had. It was about
the public debt. It cited one Lawrence Kotlikoff of Boston University, one of Americas most talented artificers, who estimates the true fiscal gap is $211 trillion when unfunded entitlements like Social Security and Medicare are included. Compared to that, whats a thousand mile-wide hurricane?
That the looming debt and deficit crisis is fake is something that, by now, even the most dim member of Congress must know. The combination of hysterical rhetoric, small armies of lobbyists and pundits, and the proliferation of billionaire-backed front groups with names like the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget is not a novelty in Washington. It happens whenever Big Money wants something badly enough.
Big Money has been gunning for Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid for decades since the beginning of Social Security in 1935. The motives are partly financial: As one scholar once put it to me, the payroll tax is the Mississippi of cash flows. Anything that diverts part of it into private funds and insurance premiums is a meal ticket for the elite of the predator state.
more:
http://www.salon.com/2012/11/08/the_coming_debt_battle/