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 | What Fiscal Cliff? Time to Call Their Bluff By Ellen Brown Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, December 26, 2012 The “fiscal cliff” has all the earmarks of a false 
	flag operation, full of sound and fury, intended to extort concessions from 
	opponents.  Neil Irwin of the 
	Washington Post calls it
	
	“a self-induced austerity crisis.”  David 
	Weidner in the Wall Street Journal calls it
	
	simply theater, designed to pressure politicians into a budget deal:   
	 The cliff is really just a trumped-up annual budget 
	discussion. . . . The most likely outcome is a combination of tax increases, 
	spending cuts and  kicking the 
	can down the road.   Yet the media coverage has been “panic-inducing, 
	falling somewhere between that given to an approaching hurricane and an 
	alien invasion.”  In the summer 
	of 2011, this sort of media hype succeeded in causing the Dow Jones 
	Industrial Average to plunge nearly 2000 points. 
	But this time the market is generally ignoring the cliff, either 
	confident a deal will be reached or not caring. 
	 The goal of the exercise seems to be to dismantle 
	Social Security and Medicare, something a radical group of conservatives has 
	worked for decades to achieve.  
	But with the recent Democratic victories, demands for “fiscal 
	responsibility” may just result in higher taxes for the rich, without 
	gutting the entitlements.   The problem is that no deal is going to be 
	satisfactory.  If we go over the 
	cliff, taxes will be raised on everyone, and GDP is predicted to drop by 3%. 
	If a deal is reached, taxes will be raised on some people, and some 
	services will be cut.  But the 
	underlying problems – high unemployment and a languishing economy – will 
	remain.  More effective 
	solutions are needed. 
	
	
	 
	Be Careful What You 
	Wish for: 
	Fiscal Hostage-Taking 
	Could Backfire Taxpayers and governments that are pushed too far 
	have been known to resort to more radical measures, and there are some on 
	the table that could fix the problem at its core. 
	Here are a few that are receiving media attention: 1. A financial transactions tax. While children’s 
	shoes and lunchboxes are taxed at nearly 10%, financial sales have so 
	far gotten off scot-free.  The 
	idea of a financial transactions tax, or Tobin tax, has been kicked around 
	for decades; but it is now gaining real teeth. 
	
	The European 
	Commission has backed plans from 10 countries -- 
	including 
	France, Germany, Italy and Spain -- 
	to launch a financial transactions tax to help raise funds to tackle the 
	debt crisis.  
	
	Sarah van Gelder of Yes! Magazine observes that the tax would not 
	only help reduce deficits but would hit the highest income earners, and it 
	would cool the speculative fever of Wall 
	Street.  
	 Simon Thorpe, a financial blogger in France, cites 
	figures from the Bank for International Settlements, showing
	
	total U.S. financial transactions of nearly $3 QUADRILLION in
	 2011. 
	Including other sources, he derives
	
	a figure of $4.44 QUADRILLION. 
	Even using the more “conservative” $3 quadrillion figure, a tax of a 
	mere 0.05% (1/20th of 1%) would be sufficient to raise $1.5 
	trillion yearly, enough to replace personal income taxes with money to 
	spare.   2. The trillion dollar coin trick. If Republicans insist on the letter of the law, 
	Democrats could respond with a law of their own. 
	The Constitution says 
	that Congress shall have the power to “coin money” and “regulate the value 
	thereof,” and no limit is put on the value of the coins Congress creates, as 
	was pointed out by a chairman of the House Coinage Subcommittee in the 
	1980s.   
	
	I actually suggested this solution in Web of Debt in 2007, when it 
	was 
	just a 
	“wacky idea.” 
	But after 
	the 2008 banking crisis, it started getting the attention of scholars.
	 In a December 7th article 
	in the Washington Post titled “Could 
	Two Platinum Coins Solve the Debt-ceiling Crisis?,” Brad Plumer wrote 
	that if Congress doesn’t raise 
	the debt ceiling as part of the fiscal cliff negotiations, “then some of 
	these wacky ideas may get more attention.”  
	
	
	Ed Harrison summarized the proposal at Credit Writedowns like this: 
 
	Plumer cites Yale Law School Professor Jack Balkin, confirming the ploy is 
	legal.  He also cites Joseph 
	Gagnon of the Peterson Institute for International Economics, stating, “I 
	like it.  There’s nothing that’s 
	obviously economically problematic about it.” 
	 
	To the 
	objection that it is a legal trick that makes a mockery of the law,
	
	Paul Krugman responded, “These 
	things sound ridiculous — but so is the behavior of Congressional 
	Republicans.  So why not fight back 
	using legal tricks?”   3. Declare the debt ceiling unconstitutional. 
	
	The 14th Amendment to the Constitution mandates that Congress 
	shall pay its debts on time and in full, and Congress does not know how much 
	it will collect in taxes until after the bills have been incurred. 
	The debt ceiling was imposed by a statute first 
	passed in 1917 and revised multiple times since.  
	
	
	
	The Constitution trumps it and should rule.  
	
	 4. Borrow interest-free from the government’s own central bank. If the government refinanced its entire debt through 
	the Federal Reserve, it could save nearly half a trillion dollars annually 
	in interest, since the Fed rebates its profits to the government. 
	
	
	The Fed’s newly-announced QE4 adds $45 billion monthly in government 
	securities purchases to the $40 billion for mortgaged-backed securities 
	declared in QE3, and no time limit has been designated for ending the 
	program.  Forty-five billion 
	dollars monthly is over half a trillion yearly. 
	Added to the federal debt already held by the Fed, the whole $16 
	trillion federal debt could be bought back in 28 years. 
	 This is not a wild, untested idea. 
	Borrowing interest-free from its central bank was
	done by Canada from 
	1939 to 1974,
	
	by France from 1946 to 1973, and by Australia and New Zealand in the 
	first half of the 20th century, to excellent effect and without 
	creating price inflation.        5. Decommission some portion of the military. 
	When past costs are factored in, nearly half the federal budget goes to the 
	military.  The data speaks for 
	itself.  I wrote about it
	
	here. 6. Debt forgiveness. Economists Michael Hudson and Steve Keen maintain 
	that the only way out of debt deflation is debt forgiveness. 
	That could be achieved by the Fed by
	buying up $2 trillion in 
	student debt and other asset-back securities and either ripping them up 
	or refinancing the debts interest-free or at very low interest. 
	If the banks can borrow at 0.25%, why not the people? 
	 7. Publicly-owned state and local banks. Municipal governments are facing cliffs of their own. 
	
	
	Ann Larson, writing in Dissent Magazine, blames predatory Wall Street 
	lending practices, which have inflicted deep and growing suffering on 
	communities across the country.   
	Predatory Wall Street practices can be avoided by establishing 
	publicly-owned state and local banks, which leverage the public’s funds for 
	the benefit of the public.  The 
	profits are returned as dividends to the local government. 
	German researcher
	
	Margrit Kennedy calculates that a whopping 40% of the cost of public 
	projects, on average, goes to interest. 
	Publicly-owned banks slash borrowing costs by returning this interest 
	to the government, along with many other advantages, detailed
	here. 
	Unshackle the Hostages 
	and Let the Good Times Roll The fiscal cliff has been said to be holding Congress 
	hostage to conservative demands, but the real hostages are the debt slaves 
	of our financial system.  The 
	demand for “fiscal responsibility” has been used as an excuse to impose 
	radical austerity measures on the people, measures that benefit the 1% while 
	locking the 99% in debt.   The government did not demand fiscal responsibility 
	of the failed financial sector.  
	Rather, Congress lavished hundreds of billions of dollars on it, and the Fed 
	lavished trillions more.  No 
	evident harm from these measures befell the economy, which has fared better 
	than the austerity-strapped EU countries. 
	Another couple of trillion dollars poured directly into the real, 
	productive economy could give it a serious boost. 
	 
	
	According to the Fed’s figures, as of July 2010, the money supply was 
	actually $4 
	trillion LESS than in 2008.  (The 
	shrinkage was in the shadow banking system formerly reported as M3.) 
	That means $4 trillion could be added back into the money supply 
	before general price inflation would be a problem.    
	 The self-induced austerity crisis is a diversion from 
	the real crises, including unemployment, the housing crisis, a bloated 
	military, and unrepayable debt.  
	Slashing services, selling off public assets, and raising taxes won’t cure 
	these ills.  To maintain a 
	sustainable and productive economy requires a visionary leap into the new. 
	A new economy needs new methods of public financing. 
	 
	First 
	posted on Truthout.org. ______________ 
	Ellen Brown is an attorney and president of the Public 
	Banking Institute.  In Web of 
	Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how a private banking 
	oligarchy has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, 
	and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are
	http://WebofDebt.com,
	http://EllenBrown.com, and
	http://PublicBankingInstitute.org. 
	
	
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