Bush Blows The US Federal Overdraft
At the close of business on Friday, January 19, 2001, the Public Debt of the United States of America was recorded at
$5.7 trillion dollars. http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov and the total public debt subject to limitations was $5.95 trillion.
01/19/2001 ----- $5,727,776,738,304.64
On Saturday, January 20, 2001, George W. Bush became the 43rd President of the United States and under his watch the
public debt of the United States has skyrocketed to its current level of $7.3 trillion as of August 31, 2004.
(in millions)
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The current statutory limit on the public debt imposed by Congress is $7.384 trillion per Public Law 108-24, passed May
27, 2003. The Congressional Budget Office (http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=5773=2) estimates the current debt ceiling of $7.384 trillion will be reached during October of 2004, just a few weeks before
the election.
A review of semi-annual debt indicates it has remained on a continual upward path since the Bush administration has been
in office.
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Under normal circumstances Congress could increase the debt ceiling, but the conditions we’re currently operating under
are far from the norm.
(1) The debt ceiling has been raised again and again under George Bush, yet no matter how much it’s raised – it’s never
quite enough for a president that appears to spend money like a drunken sailor.
(2) 2004 is an election year – how can Bush convince the public that his economic policies are working when he can’t
stay within the current debt ceiling?
How does this administration avoid getting a Congressional bailout prior to the election?
The CBO claims Treasury will take the following ‘temporary financing measures’ including: “ceasing to issue certain securities held in the Thrift Savings Plan (a retirement savings and investment plan for
federal employees), suspending investments in the Civil Service Retirement Fund, and exchanging Treasury securities with
the Federal Financing Bank (a government entity that facilitates federal borrowing and whose securities are not subject
to the debt limit). In the most recent debt-limit crises, such measures have permitted the Treasury to remain below the
statutory limit for more than three months.”
So, it appears the creative accounting practices of the Treasury Department will save the day, and the debt ceiling may
not have to be raised until after the election. The problem with ‘creative accounting’ is sometimes you don’t quite get
the results you want.
On May 20, 2004 The General Accounting Office released report number GAO-04-526 “ Analysis of Actions Taken during the 2003 Debt Issuance Suspension Period”. The actual report is 63 pages long, but an excerpt follows indicating billions of dollars were lost in 2003 due to
actions taken by the Treasury Department to stay under the debt limit. The entire report may be read at the following
URL: (www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-526)
What GAO Found:
On February 20, 2003, Treasury determined that a debt issuance suspension period was in effect. A debt issuance
suspension period is any period for which the Secretary of the Treasury has determined that obligations of the United
States may not be issued without exceeding the debt ceiling. During this period, which lasted until May 27, 2003, the
Secretary took actions related to the Government Securities Investment Fund of the Federal Employees’ Retirement System
(the G- Fund), the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund (the Civil Service fund), and the Exchange Stabilization
Fund (ESF) to avoid exceeding the debt ceiling. Also, during fiscal year 2003, the Secretary initiated several actions
involving the Civil Service Fund, FFB, and the Treasury general fund that related to Treasury’s efforts to manage the
amount of debt subject to the debt ceiling. The Secretary took other actions to avoid exceeding the debt ceiling, such
as suspending the sales of State and Local Government Series Treasury obligations and recalling non-interest-bearing
deposits held by commercial banks as compensation for banking services provided to Treasury.
The actions taken, which were consistent with legal authorities provided to the Secretary and related to the G-Fund, the
Civil Service fund, and ESF, initially resulted in interest losses to the G-Fund and ESF and principal and interest
losses to the Civil Service fund. When the debt ceiling was increased to $7.4 trillion on May 27, 2003, the Secretary
fully invested the G-Fund’s investments and on May 28, 2003, fully restored the interest losses, as required by law. On
June 30, 2003, the Secretary fully compensated the Civil Service fund for principal and interest losses, as required by
law. The losses related to ESF could not be restored without special legislation. As a result, related ESF losses of
$3.6 million were not restored.
The actions initiated by Treasury in fiscal year 2003 that involved the early redemption of FFB debt obligations held by
the Civil Service fund and exchanges of obligations among the Civil Service fund, FFB, and the Treasury general fund
resulted in all three parties realizing gains or incurring losses. In some cases, GAO has been able to quantify the
gains or losses that occurred as a result of these transactions. For example, according to FFB estimates, the Civil
Service fund lost more than $1 billion in interest because of FFB’s redemption of FFB obligations held by the Civil
Service fund before their maturity date and unforeseen interest rate changes. In other cases, however, information
needed to understand the potential consequences of these actions will not be available for a number of years. The
Secretary currently lacks the statutory authority to restore such losses and has not developed documented policies and
procedures that can be used to minimize such losses in future actions that may be taken by Treasury that involve FFB and
an account with investment authority such as the Civil Service fund.
GAO recommends that the Secretary of the Treasury (1) seek statutory authority to restore Civil Service fund losses
associated with the October 2002 early redemption of Federal Financing Bank (FFB) obligations and (2) direct the Under
Secretary for Domestic Finance to document necessary policies and procedures for exchange transactions between FFB and a
federal government account with investment authority and seek any statutory authority necessary to implement the
policies and procedures. Treasury agreed with our recommendations and has already taken certain steps to document the
policies and procedures.”
George Bush promised to bring honor and integrity into the Whitehouse. Using creative accounting to extend the amount of
time it takes to reach the debt ceiling may be a smart move politically, but it certainly cannot be considered
honorable, especially when actions taken result in billions of dollars in losses.
Unfortunately, not everyone understands the long term consequences of increasing the debt ceiling. When the federal
government collects less in taxes than it spends each year on programs, it’s called “deficit spending”, and the
government has to borrow money to pay the difference. The government borrows money by selling Treasury bonds to both
financial institutions and individuals. Over a period of time the Treasury bonds are paid off, with interest to the
buyers.
The National Debt is then the total of the money borrowed to cover deficits, plus the interest owed.
During the first three years that President Bush has been in office, interest alone on the national debt has totaled
more than a trillion dollars, with another $309 billion paid in interest during the first 11 months of 2004 (http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdint.htm)
The $1.3 trillion dollars paid in interest during the Bush years would pay for a lot of programs in this country.
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©2004 Patricia Johnson
Patricia Johnson is a freelance writer and CEO of Articles and Answers. Visit us online at www.ArticlesandAnswers.com