Last modified on April 9, 2019, at 18:29

Obama administration deficit spending

Cummulative Obamunism deficits.
Source: Congressional Budget Office.

The Obama administration deficit spending is government deficit spending which is occurred at unprecedented levels. The Obama administration fiscal policy is burying Americans under a mountain of debt. Persistent deficit financing, along with tax increases in hard economic times, are known job killers that stifle growth and choke job creation, even according to Keynesian economic theory.


Source: White House Office of Management and Budget

Obamanomics

Main article: Obamanomics

The Obama deficits were unquestionably the largest on record and represented an explosion of debt owed to foreign investors -- capital that must be exported in the future. The deficit under President Obama for the year ending September 30, 2011 was reported by the administration as $1,300 billion dollars (or $1.3 trillion).

Incease in Public Debt

President Obama's record deficits stemmed from the $787 billion failed Economic stimulus, "hundreds of billions"[1] on so-called healthcare reform, and the $80 billion[2] UAW bailout, which added to President George W. Bush's proposed $700 billion deficit[3] in 2008. President Obama's claim "I had a $1.3 trillion deficit wrapped in a bow, waiting for me at the Oval Office"[4] is unsupported by the facts.

Reliance on foreign investors

Federal Debt held by foreign and international investors.

More than $6 trillion[5] in debt is held by foreign investors. Two failed Stimulus packages in the past three years from the Democratic Congress were an incredible waste of resources for what the President later admitted were non-existent "shovel ready" jobs at a time they were needed for the private sector to create jobs. Rather, a large foreign debt was created which must be repaid before any benefit ever trickle's down to working families.

"There’s no such thing as shovel-ready projects," President Obama later admitted as Unemployment & Debt spiraled out of control.[6]

Downgrade of U.S. credit worthiness

The Chinese credit rating agency, Dagong Global, downgraded the long term sovereign credit rating of the United States from “AAA” to “AA” in 2010[7] and further downgraded it to “A-” in 2015,[8] which reflects the U.S. deteriorating debt repayment capability.

The New York Times reports officials from China to Germany to Brazil suggest " Washington's addiction to debt has greatly diminished its credibility." Jeffrey E. Garten of the Yale School of Management remarked, "the U.S. is reinforcing views in France and China, among others, that the entire monetary system is a political toy of a dysfunctional U.S. political system."[9]

Martin Feldstein notes the Obama administration's aim to monetize the debt is "a dangerous gamble with only a small potential upside benefit and substantial risks of creating asset bubbles that could destabilise the global economy." Feldstein continues, "The greatest danger will then be to leveraged investors, including individuals who bought these assets with borrowed money and banks that hold long-term securities. These risks should be clear after the recent crisis driven by the bursting of asset price bubbles. Although the specific asset prices that are now rising are different from last time, the possibility of damaging declines when bubbles burst is worryingly similar."[10]

Sarah Palin worries about the resulting inflation as well. "All this pump priming will come at a serious price. And I mean that literally: everyone who ever goes out shopping for groceries knows that prices have risen significantly over the past year or so. Pump priming would push them even higher."[11]

See also

External links

Below are some articles and videos on the Obama administration's reckless fiscal policy:

Articles:

Videos:

References