I seem to remember a thread where you said public debt should not be taken in to consideration when discussing this!
Originally Posted by WTF
I'm getting tired of discussing this. We've already destroyed your arguments and are going around in circles. Ronald Reagan deserves his sainthood.
However you do have a good point, above. About 43% of federal intragovernmental debt is owed to the social security trust funds. On the other hand, a lot of intragovernmental debt is owed to the Fed, and undoubtedly should come off.
When you look at the net amount the government has to pay to finance the debt, the net interest expense, the right number to use is debt held by the public. I'd also argue that markets react to the net debt number. For currencies, it's the external debt, public and private, that's of primary concern, and intragovernmental debt is internal. Now, if a central bank like the Fed goes on a buying binge, admittedly interest rates should go down, all else being equal. But still, as far as the public's demand for government securities goes, and its effect on interest rates, the
level of
net debt is what markets would look at, not the level of gross debt.
So anyway, irrespective of social security, in determining whether the national debt is too high, I think it makes more sense to focus on the net number. But yes, you've got a good point, the part of the intragovernmental debt that's held by the Social Security Trust Funds will have to be used to shore up the Ponzi scheme at some point.