Harry Browne's stand on the National Debt
Overview
The federal debt isn't just a bookkeeping curiosity. Every debt incurred on your behalf
by the politicians increases the interest cost you have to pay each year.
Today Americans pay over a quarter of a trillion dollars a year in interest expenses.
This is what you're paying for the failed political schemes of yesteryear -- schemes
that were supposed to make health care more affordable, improve education, or clean
up the environment. But the schemes failed, the politicians who created them retired
with generous pensions, and you were left paying the interest expense year after
year. We must get rid of that interest expense by retiring the entire federal debt.
The Quotable Harry Browne: on the Federal Debt
"I want to pay off the federal debt by auctioning off the assets the government shouldn't
own -- western lands, power companies, unused military bases, and commodity reserves.
The first proceeds from these sales should buy private retirement accounts for everyone dependent on Social Security. The remaining proceeds should pay down the federal
debt. No one can know in advance what the assets will bring in the open market; the
estimates have ranged from $5 trillion to $50 trillion. But if they bring in just
$12 trillion, we can solve the Social Security problem once and for all, cover the other
unfunded liabilities of the federal government, and pay off the entire national debt."
How to Pay off the Federal Debt and Save Social Security at the Same Time
You might assume that nearly all of what you pay in income tax is used to pay for
current government programs, but that isn't the way it works. One quarter of your
income tax is used to pay the interest on the national debt. In fact, you pay almost
as much for interest as you pay for national defense or welfare.
If we paid off the national debt those interest payments would disappear and this
alone would reduce your income tax by nearly a third. I have a plan to do just that.
Better still, this plan would also protect the environment and allow us to fund the
Social Security privatization plan I described above.
I want to auction off all the federal government's assets that have nothing to do
with its constitutional responsibilities. These assets include one third of all the
land in the United States, plus power companies, pipelines, commodity reserves, oil
and mineral rights, unused military bases, hundreds of thousands of federal buildings, and
a host of other properties.
Many people believe these assets are being held in trust to protect them from exploitation,
but the truth is otherwise. For instance, many public lands are actually leased out
to private interests for mining, grazing, drilling, and logging. Unfortunately, the
government loses money on these leases -- and you not only have to pay for the
losses, but also for the damage done to the properties.
Even so, you might expect that selling these properties would remove what little protection
the government is still able to provide. But this assumes the federal government
actually protects these properties. It doesn't. The Interior Department is already
$12 billion behind in needed maintenance, and in many cases the government is actually
ruining
the properties it's supposed to protect.
For example, government mismanagement has obliterated most of the seed-bearing pines
in the Blue Mountains of Oregon, and subjected the entire forest to a plague of destructive
insects.
But a neighboring forest owned by Boise Cascade is perfectly healthy. This private
company takes care of its property because it wants to make sure it will still be
valuable 20 or 50 years from now. Boise Cascade has maintained the Ponderosa Pine
forest that stood in the Blue Mountains 100 years ago. And this is only one example. Even the
National Forest Service officials admit that old growth habitats fare better on private
lands.
The same is true for mining and drilling. Private owners want to resell their lands
at a good price after they extract the minerals, so they have a vested interest in
protecting and restoring them. The government has no such incentive, because no one
will suffer financially if its properties deteriorate.
My proposal will halt the continued exploitation and destruction of government-owned
natural resources by politically powerful private interests.
It will put those resources in the hands of private owners and conservation organizations
who will care for them because they're concerned about the future value.
- The Democratic and Republican approaches harm the environment, and impoverish you
in order to pay interest on the failed government programs of yesteryear.
- My approach not only helps the environment, it will pay off the national debt, cut
your taxes, expand the economy, and fund the privatization of Social Security.
Which approach do you prefer?
Your vote for me to be the first Libertarian President will send a clear message that
the politicians can no longer run up bills in your name. # # #
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