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I hope you're not trying to claim that U.S. has no assets? In any event,
so far it hasn't issued stock, either ![]() Dave wrote: It has no assets that are specifically earmarked to pay its bonds. For most of our history, the US has very definitely had "assets specifically earmarked" to pay all public debts.... ever heard of Fort Knox? ... A US bond holder is just another creditor. If the bonds were asset backed, bond holders would be entitled to all of the proceeds of sale of the specific assets ahead of other creditors. Is that the way they work those loans to South American countries? With regard to Bush's SS plan, the simple & honest way to accomplish what they claim is to increase the allowed deduction for retirement contributions, be it IRA or 401K etc etc, and begin a schedule of scaling back SS benefits to match projected income. If they start in 10 years it should be very easy & gradual. Might even be able to give the average working stiff a tax break on his SS tax bite. Not that far different from what's being proposed. But forget about reducing the SS tax bite. Ain't a gonna happen. Why not? Isn't that one of President Bush's cardinal principles? And one KEY difference between increasing the IRA deduction and Bush's SS plan is that Bush & Cheney would not control who gets to pocket the fees & loads from increasing everybody's IRA. To be fair, another key difference is that many people do not save any money and would not take the benefit (although as a real conservative, I believe that's their problem). Diverting their SS taxes is a way of forcing them to save.... gee another great gov't program interfering with people's lives... BTW as far as AARP goes, ever hear the saying "fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me"? President Bush fooled them badly on the Medicare bill. And so of course that makes AARP the target of a Karl Rove smear campaign... which you seem happy to parrot... I've long seen AARP for what it is--an interest group run by its managers, for its' managers' benefit, and with its' managers' agendas, with access to "members" being its principal "product." And up until the SS plan hit the fan, they were quite supportive of President Bush... but of course, it's always "what have you done for me lately?" If an insurance company's investments were limited to bonds of that insurance company, how much faith would you have in its ability to pay on policies and annuities in the event of a downturn in its fortunes? That depends greatly on how it laddered it's bonds. Nope. Makes no difference. If the insurance company can't repay the money it borrowed when it issued the bonds, it's gonna be in hot water trying to pay its policies and annuities. You got it backwards again, Dave. If an insurance company *buys* bonds... properly laddered... then they would have no trouble at all with cash flow for payouts. They wouldn't get as high a return as with other investments, though. Fortunately, state insurance commissions don't let insurance companies do anything so foolish. So foolish as what, invest in bonds??? Maybe where you're from, that's considered foolish. Here in NC insurance companies are darn well allowed to invest in US treasury bonds (the most secure investment available... is that sinking in yet?). Maybe you mean that insurance comapnies are not allowed to invest *all* their funds in US bonds. You're confused here, Doug. What the insurance commissioners prohibit is an insurance company's investing in bonds issued by the insurance company. So why did you try to say that they are forbidden to invest in US bonds? But if the foreign gov't starts printing money like crazy, then you not only have the risk of getting nothing (gotta cash youor bonds in person) or getting a double whammy when you change your funny money at a US bank. Wrong. I run the risk of getting nothing from that bond issuer. That too... which I said... Y'know, it's kinda funny. You go charging off toward the sunrise, insisting at full throttle that I'm wrong... then a few posts later, you're repeating what I said earlier as though it should be a great revelation! Not really. The US Treasury bond is *the* *most* *secure* and *safe* investment possible. That means your foreign bonds carry a *higher* risk of default. Besides, they have to do something with the money, and Uncle Sam has to borrow from somebody. Basic portfolio theory, Doug. While each particular country's bonds may have a higher risk of default, the risk of losing the total investment is far less than the risk for any single country, perhaps even including the country whose bonds are (at present) "the most secure and safe investment possible." Key word "perhaps" However, I'm not arguing against the wisdom of diversification, other than to say (again) that this is a special case. Besides, do you *really* want a US gov't agency investing it's surplus money in the bonds of foreign countries? I don't think I've made any representations about the likelihood of a US default. Other than suggesting foreign bonds as a safer alternative? Other than advocating a vague plan that does not get the majority out of US treasuries anyway, but the biggest reason for it is that US Treasuries are "empty promises" and "worthless IOUs"? Simply trying to inject a note of realism, Doug. Really? How realistic is the expectation that the US is going to default? You'd be better off worrying about meteor impacts. ... The SS Act is a promise to pay. Bonds are promises to pay--nothing more. Backing the promise to pay SS benefits with a promise to pay on bonds is no more than saying the guvmint is less likely to break the one promise than it is to break the other promise. Largely smoke and mirrors. Nope, it is entirely a question of the reliability of the gov't. Since President Bush is claiming that the risk of US default is high, maybe I should take him seriously... that may be the new Republican plan. Maybe you are worried about default because you know how sneaky & unreliable Bush & Cheney are. DSK |