Friday, March 19, 2010

Get Ready for a Test of Social Cohesion, Says Moody's

It isn't immediately clear how soon debt service will become a major business issue in the United States, but it is clear it will be. Moody's analysts, looking at sovereign debt loads in the United States, say there is no way to "grow" our way out of the problem.

“Growth alone will not resolve an increasingly complicated debt equation,” Moody’s says. “Preserving debt affordability” (the ratio of interest payments to government revenue) “at levels consistent with Aaa ratings will invariably require fiscal adjustments of a magnitude that, in some cases, will test social cohesion.”

Note the phrase "at levels that will test social cohesion." What Moody's means is that, to keep its credit rating, given the fact that economic growth, even robust growth, would not grow tax revenues enough to take care of the problem, the federal government likely will have to cut spending, though it also will try to raise taxes.

And that is going to lead to protests, anger and unrest.

But there will not be a choice. If the United States does not act to preserve its credit rating, it will be more costly to borrow money, driving the debt burden even higher and threating yet another round of downgrades.

Such a downgrade also would force an immediate reduction in debt-financed spending. And that is precisely what the United States currently is doing: spending more than it raises in taxes and borrowing to support the shortfall.

Moody’s says the United States and other major Western nations, particularly Britain, have moved “substantially” closer to losing their current ratings. The ratings are “stable,” but “their ‘distance-to-downgrade’ has in all cases substantially diminished,” Moody's says.

source

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