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<text id=93HT0789>
<title>
1987: In The Shadows Of The Twin Towers
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1987 Highlights
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
November 2, 1987
ECONOMY & BUSINESS
In the Shadows of the Twin Towers
</hdr>
<body>
<p>How America's budget and trade deficits grew to daunting heights
</p>
<p> "Reagan's economic policy is an off-the-wall approach. We're
running an incredible experiment with these [budget and trade]
deficits."
</p>
<p>-- The late economist Otto Eckstein, February 1982
</p>
<p> "It is a scandal. I don't know what they're on, down in
Washington. It's wacko time."
</p>
<p>-- Chrysler Chairman Lee Iacocca, February 1984
</p>
<p> The warnings did not match the violence and volume of last
week's stock-market statements, but they have been sounding for
years. Innumerable economists, business leaders and politicians
from both the Democratic and Republican parties have issued
alarms about the growth of America's budget and trade deficits.
And yet the problems grew and grew. Now dubbed the twin
towers, a reference to Manhattan's World Trade Center and the
long shadows it casts across Wall Street, the hulking deficits
are threatening to sink the U.S. economy. In just a twinkling,
between 1981 and 1986, the U.S. has metamorphosed from the
world's largest creditor to the biggest borrower, carrying a net
debt to foreigners that is expected to hit $1 trillion by 1992.
</p>
<p> There is plenty of blame to go around, as the deficits are the
product of a unique American decade of budget deadlock,
unfettered spending and unprecedented borrowing. President
Reagan, for his part, fought bitterly against tax increases and
cuts in the defense budget when both seemed called for. The
Democrats, for their part, were slow to compromise on social
spending and, like the Republicans, cherished their pork-barrel
projects. Corporate America, which had grown content with its
domestic marketplace, aggravated the trade deficit by its lack
of motivation to sell products abroad. Consumers added to the
trouble by developing a ravenous taste for imported goods and
credit-card spending. All told, the roaring '80s have been a
time of refusal to confront limitations. Declares Investment
Banker Felix Rohatyn: "In an act of the ultimate financial
cowardice, we have attempted to pass on to our children the cost
of this behavior by borrowing from tomorrow."
</p>
<p> How did it happen? Fiscal restraint was already slipping when
President Reagan took office. The fiscal-1980 budget gap was
$73.8 billion, compared with a deficit of just $2.8 billion ten
years earlier. Yet the real ballooning of the deficit to
dangerous levels ($220.7 billion by fiscal 1986) was triggered
during the early Reagan years, when the Administration tried to
cut taxes and boost defense spending at the same time.
According to Reagan's true believers, the deficits were supposed
to shrink as a result of the tax cut. By stimulating the
economy's so-called supply side, the cuts were expected to
encourage work and investment so that Government revenues would
actually rise rather than fall. Thus was born Reaganomics.
</p>
<p> This proposed budget magic drew widespread skepticism,
including George Bush's "voodoo economics" charge during the
1980 presidential primaries. Yet by 1981 Congress was eager to
find a way to pump up the sagging economy. When Reagan sent
Congress his tax-cut proposal, the lawmakers squabbled over the
details but eventually gave the President virtually everything
he wanted. In the end, the Economic Recovery Tax Act slashed
personal-income tax rates 23% over three years. Reaganomics was
supposed to produce a budget surplus of $500 million by 1984,
but one of the Administration's master strategists, Budget
Director David Stockman, knew better. "None of us really
understands what's going on with all these numbers," he
confessed in a December 1981 magazine article that rocked the
White House. "People are getting from A to B and it's not clear
how they are getting there."
</p>
<p> The tax cuts were accompanied by a substantial increase in
federal spending, despite Reagan's campaign promises about
reining in the Government. During the Administration's first
term, total federal spending jumped 26%, to $852 billion in
fiscal 1984. The biggest item was defense, reflecting the
President's view that the military had suffered a decade of
neglect in the 1970s. Reagan's buildup cost $1.2 trillion over
the fiscal years 1981-'86, which boosted military spending 41%
after adjustment for inflation. Among the new hardware: the
B-1B bomber (cost: $280 billion) and the MX missile system
($20.7 billion for the first 50). The Strategic Defense
Initiative, or Star Wars, research and development was allotted
$9.3 billion for the first five years.
</p>
<p> Yet the supply-side tax cuts, designed to stimulate the output
of goods by giving workers and businesses greater rewards,
failed to produce an offsetting revenue bonanza. While sky-high
rates and the 1981-'82 recession might be partly to blame,
supply-side critics say the idea was faulty from the start. In
any case, the budget deficit exploded as Government receipts
shrank. The flow of red ink nearly tripled in two years,
hitting $207.8 billion in fiscal 1983. It would have been even
higher if Congress had not adopted a $98 billion tax increase
in 1982, which Reagan grudgingly signed. Moreover, the deficit
kept mounting despite the Administration's imaginative
revenue-boosting plans, which ranged from the sale of Government
land to the increase of user fees for airports, waterways and
even Coast Guard services.
</p>
<p> Whistle blowers within the Administration were consistently
squelched. When Martin Feldstein, the President's chief
economic adviser in 1982-'84, warned of the deficit dangers in
the Administration's annual economic report, then Treasury
Secretary Donald Regan told reporters they could "throw away"
the document. Meanwhile, supply-siders like Economist Paul Craig
Roberts, who was an Assistant Treasury Secretary during 1981 and
1982, kept minimizing the problem. Said he in 1984: "Deficits
are on the way out." Later the Administration's budgeteers grew
so wary of mentioning the prospect of new taxes that they
started calling it the T word.
</p>
<p> The Administration and Congress found some items to cut, though
perhaps only expedient ones. Federal spending on nonmilitary
research and development, after adjustment for inflation, has
declined 25% from 1979 to 1986 while aid to schools has fallen
14%, notes former Commerce Secretary Peter Peterson. Many
economists have railed against these cuts because they have
borrowed from America's future competitiveness and well-being.
Wrote Peterson in an essay in the October Atlantic:
"Unfortunately, since the future has no lobby...the
Administration and Congress have found this the perfect place
to demonstrate their budget-cutting zeal publicly even while
allowing all other types of spending to keep rising."
</p>
<p> The budget has become increasingly hard to trim as the
outstanding federal debt ($2.37 trillion) has mounted, since
interest payments on old borrowings are crowding out other
items. Net interest outlays increased from 9% of the budget in
fiscal 1980 to 14% in 1986, or $136 billion. Such
uncontrollable expenditures, along with the Administration's
determination to spare large categories like defense and Social
Security, have forced budget cutters "to work in an impossibly
small corner covering only 30% of the spending total," observes
TIME Correspondent Lawrence Malkin in his recent book, The
National Debt. A frustrated Pete Domenici, chairman of the
Senate Budget Committee during 1981, told Reagan, "You can't get
$100 billion in savings out of this little bitty piece that's
left. You got money in there for feeding babies, for building
roads, for cancer research, for the national parks, the FBI.
We'll help you squeeze 'em, but we can't bleed 'em."
</p>
<p> Perhaps the most insidious growth in the budget has come in
payments to middle- and upper-class citizens, a type of handout
that typically carries no test of need. Social Security
payments have increased 17% between 1981 and 1986, to $198.8
billion, even after adjustment for inflation. Many entitlements
rise automatically because they are indexed to inflation.
</p>
<p> Farm supports, meanwhile, rose more than 500%, to $25.8 billion
in 1986. Notes Journalist Alfred Malabre Jr. in his book Beyond
Our Means: "In 1984, less than 20% of all direct Governmental
aid to agriculture went to farmers who were financially
distressed. In other words, for every $1 going to needy
farmers, some $4 was winding up with prosperous ones."
</p>
<p> The alarming surge of the budget deficits through the $200
billion mark seems finally to be forcing some budget progress.
The Administration agreed in 1985 to a freeze in the defense
buildup, and that has held increases in military outlays below
the level of inflation. During the same year, Congress passed
the Gramm-Rudman deficit-reduction bill, designed to impose
automatic spending reductions if the Administration and
legislators failed to meet targets for cutbacks. But the
Supreme Court found a crucial part of the law unconstitutional.
By the time a revised version was passed in September, Congress
had reduced the size of automatic cuts for fiscal 1988 from $37
billion to $23 billion and pushed back the deadline for a
balanced budget from 1991 to 1993.
</p>
<p> It is that trend toward postponing the tough budget-cutting
decisions that has been spooking the financial markets. Said
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan during his Senate
confirmation hearings in July: "Should the...evidence suggest
that the deficit is getting out of control again, then we are
going to find ourselves in a very serious financial bind."
</p>
<p> As the budget swelled, a new problem was rising. America was
consuming far more than it was producing. The deficit between
U.S. imports and exports, $36.3 billion in 1980, jumped to
$123.3 billion in 1984. The trade gap can be viewed at least
partly as an outgrowth of Washington's budget deficits. Reason:
the Federal Reserve felt compelled to keep interest rates high
(average 1983 prime rate: 10.8%) during the early 1980s not only
to attack inflation but also to attract foreign money to finance
America's growing budget gap. That strategy worked well, making
dollar-denominated securities so popular that the currency rose
steadily in value. At first the mighty dollar seemed like a
bonus, enabling U.S. consumers to travel cheaply overseas and
buy foreign imports at bargain prices.
</p>
<p> The strong dollar, however, had devastating consequences for
American industry because it made U.S. exports more expensive
and thus tougher to sell competitively abroad. Complained
Edward Jefferson in early 1985, when he was chairman of Du Pont:
"Since 1980 he rise in the value of the dollar has put a 50%
surcharge on all U.S. goods sold abroad and a 50% subsidy on all
imports. Caterpillar, the longtime world leader in sales of
heavy construction equipment, posted losses of $953 million from
1982 through 1984, mostly because of a drop in overseas sales.
An estimated 3 million U.S. manufacturing jobs disappeared as
imported goods poured into the U.S. Finally corporate America's
anguish grew so great that the finance ministers and central
bankers of the five major industrial democracies met in
September 1985 at Manhattan's Plaza Hotel to reach their now
famous agreement to push down the dollar's value.
</p>
<p> Yet the 40% decline in the currency since then has been slow to
produce an impact. During 1986 the deficit hit $156 billion,
and it is growing this year at a rate that could produce a gap
of $171 billion. Most economists expected that an improvement
in the trade balance would take more than a year, since the
initial result of a weaker dollar is to make imported
merchandise cost more and thus increase the country's bill for
foreign merchandise. After two years, though, the volume of
imports should have fallen enough to reduce the trade gap
substantially. While exports have shown some modest gains
during 1987, "it is clear we have not made a dent in the
problem," contends Mark Anderson, an international economist for
the AFL-CIO.
</p>
<p> Some unexpected forces have interfered. One is that many
foreign companies, determined to hold their U.S. market shares,
have postponed boosting their U.S. prices to compensate for the
rise of their currencies against the dollar, even if it meant
cutting into their profit margins. "The average foreign
producer is probably selling at a loss right now," says Stephen
Roach, a senior economist at the Morgan Stanley investment firm.
Another factor is a reluctance among many U.S. businesses,
which feel content with America as their main marketplace, to
take advantage of the falling dollar to expand their sales
abroad. Says Vladimir Pucik, assistant professor of
international business at the University of Michigan" "What many
American companies are doing is concentrating on defending their
own territory. That's not enough."
</p>
<p> Yet foreign markets have been less than welcoming. As the
global marketing battle takes hold, some countries are reacting
with protectionism. Moreover, economic expansion around the
world is so sluggish at the moment that few countries besides
the U.S. are showing much demand for imports. Observes David
Hale, chief economist for Kemper Financial Services: "The U.S.
has been playing the role of global borrower and spender of last
resort because of a sharp slowdown in the growth rates of other
countries."
</p>
<p> The flabbiness of corporate America has been another major
contributor to the trade deficit. Domestic manufacturers were
ill-equipped to deal with the onslaught of eager foreign
competitors. But now many U.S. companies have boosted their
competitiveness by slimming down their costs and speeding up
their reaction times. Among Detroit automakers, for instance,
the "arrogance is diminishing. There is a sense of
vulnerability," observes Maryann Keller, an auto-industry
analyst.
</p>
<p> Yet American companies cannot hope to conquer the trade deficit
as long as its twin, the budget deficit, remains so huge. The
stimulus of Washington's deficit spending, especially on a
steadily expanding economy, makes the U.S. far too hungry for
imported merchandise. This connection between the twin deficits
has been almost universally recognized for years, and yet the
Administration and Congress are still spending well beyond the
country's means. That is the perilous formula that came to
grief last week.
</p>
<p>-- By Stephen Koepp
</p>
<p>Ways to Get Out from Under
</p>
<p> Bringing down America's twin deficits will demand a wealth of
ideas and compromises. No single fix will do the job. Nor are
any of the remedies likely to be painless. But the
Administration and Congress still have time to tailor a
compromise on reducing the budget gap before the Nov. 20
deadline, when $23 billion in arbitrary cuts takes hold under
the Gramm-Rudman law. Some reasonable proposals for boosting
revenue, cutting spending and reducing the trade deficit:
</p>
<p> Levy an energy tax. This could be a twofer: it would not only
help ease the budget deficit but could also reduce the trade gap
by discouraging demand for imported oil. A tax of $5 per bbl.
on annual U.S. imports of some 1.5 billion bbl. of foreign crude
would raise approximately $7.5 billion in extra revenues. An
alternative is a gasoline tax of 5 cents per gal. in addition
to the current 9 cents federal levy, which would produce an
extra $5 billion or so (1986 U.S. consumption: 112 billion
gal.). Though energy taxes tend to be regressive, citizens in
low-income brackets could receive offsetting credits on their
income tax returns.
</p>
<p> Cut agricultural supports. Too much of the price-support budget
goes to the wealthiest farmers. During 1985, when $23.7 billion
was distributed, only one-third of U.S. farms collected price
supports; almost 70% of those payments went to farmers with
annual sales of $100,000 or more. Former Delaware Governor Pete
Du Pont, a Republican presidential contender, proposes to wean
farmers from income subsidies over five years, thus producing
a $5 billion savings the first year and $75 billion in total.
Agrees Harvard Economists Robert Reich: "The benefit of such
aid is not as great as the social costs in failing to cut it."
</p>
<p> Trim defense spending. Since no one thinks that America's 2.1
million soldiers and sailors are overpaid,scrutiny should be
focused on the 50% of the nearly $300 billion defense budget
that goes for hardware, operations and maintenance. What
deserves even more attention than the notorious price gouging
by defense contractors on spare parts (one toilet seat: $750)
is the wasteful proliferation of large-scale weapons systems.
A raft of new, expensive hardware is coming out of research,
ready to go into production. One package of eight strategic
systems (total cost: at least $250 billion) includes the
Stealth bomber and three missile systems: the
submarine-launched D-5, the Midgetman and the Peacekeeper
(formerly MX). Congress should seriously reconsider whether all
these different weapons are necessary.
</p>
<p> Tighten up interest deductions. America's most venerable tax
shelter is the deduction on home-mortgage interest, a provision
that was originally created to help families buy their first
home. But perhaps that write-off is too generous. Earlier this
month the House Ways and Means Committee adopted a $12.3 million
tax-increase package that, among other measures, would finally
put a cap on the deduction, limiting it to the first $1 million
in mortgage debt. But why not lower the boom even further? As
Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski pointed out, "With the
people I represent, if you talk $75,000, you're talking big
money for a home." A sensible limit might be $250,000.
</p>
<p> Control entitlements. Federal entitlement payments that are
dished out to citizens regardless of their financial need rose
from $200 billion in 1979 to $400 billion in 1986, observes
former Commerce Secretary Peter Peterson. Like many budget
critics, Peterson advocates a so-called means test to make sure
that such benefits as Social Security and Medicare go only to
those who really need them. The number of senior citizens, for
example, has grown significantly in recent years, but the
group's poverty rate is edging downward (from 13.9% in 1978 to
12.4% last year). One type of means test would cut off benefits
for recipients above a certain income level. "There's a big
distinction between entitlements for poor people and
entitlements foe everybody," says Ruben Mettler, chairman of
TRW. Another suggested method to get entitlement costs under
control would be to reduce the cost-of-living adjustment from
100% of the consumer price index to, say, 60%.
</p>
<p> Encourage consumers to save. If Americans increased their
savings rate (only 4% of disposable income last year, vs. nearly
17% in Japan), they would spend less money on foreign imports
and help cure the trade deficit. Moreover, an expansion of
America's paltry savings pool would help reduce U.S. dependence
on foreign financing. One proposal for bringing that about: a
progressive consumption tax. This kind of levy would work like
a national sales tax, but be progressive in the sense that it
would exempt necessities (food, housing, medicine, clothing) to
avoid putting an undue burden on low-income citizens. Former
Arizona Governor Bruce Babbitt, a Democratic presidential
contender, contends that a 5% consumption tax could raise $40
billion to $60 billion a year.</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>