If you’ve been listening to any news lately, you know that Financial Armageddon looms if the politicians in D.C. don’t suddenly agree to a plan to raise the debt ceiling. Pretty much everybody agrees that such a thing is unthinkable. The only problem is that it happened 32 years ago — and it wasn’t a big deal.
If you own U.S. government debt, it’s a big deal whether you get paid of not. The security of knowing that the government is going to pay you is the reason so many people (and governments) lend so much to the feds. But in 1979, the government faced a somewhat similar crisis that led to lack of money to pay bondholders for awhile. And what happened? Not much.
Politicians and media like to scare you. Politicians like to scare you because scared people are motivated to support them on whatever crusade they’re on this week. Media like to scare you because it keeps you watching.
(If you really want to learn how the budget process is supposed to work — though I can’t imagine why you would — this week’s episode of the excellent EconTalk podcast covers it in more detail than normal people will care.)
In the great new culture war over Thanksgiving shopping, I’m neutral
Love & Hope — Episode 9:
My programming from childhood still equates blame with shame
We’re all going to die, but what do you want to do before you die?
A broken heart is devastating, but closing yourself to love is worse
Another ‘Atlas Shrugged’ moment: ‘Reasonable Profits Board’ proposed
Student scolded for saving a life; School doesn’t ‘condone heroics’
Change sometimes happens slowly, not in the grand leap that we want