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U.S. Deficit and Inability to Repay Debts

Last week, Standard & Poor’s lowered Japan’s bond rating to AA-, the fourth-highest level. By that standard, the U.S. got away with a slap on the wrist from Moody’s Investors Service, which warned merely that “the probability of assigning a negative outlook in the coming two years is rising.” If you look at the U.S. budget trajectory with an eye on the lessons from Japan’s recent history, there’s a strong case that the U.S. rating should be cut immediately. It’s true that the U.S., with total government debt equal to 98.5 percent of gross domestic product, according to Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development data, has many years of unrestrained deficits ahead before it reaches the crisis point of Japan, which has debt of 204 percent of GDP. A more plausible target, however, is 135.4 percent of GDP. That was Japan’s debt in 2000, just before S&P first downgraded it from AAA in February 2001. If the U.S. makes no fiscal progress, and continues to run annual deficits at the 2011 level of $1.48 trillion dollars, it will take just six years to reach a debt level of 135.3 percent of GDP. The Japan precedent suggests the U.S. would lose its sacrosanct AAA rating at that point, if not sooner. To be fair, the Congressional Budget Office, in its forecasting, predicts that the U.S. will do better than that, in part because revenue should increase as the economy recovers. CBO’s wholly unrealistic baseline forecast suggests the day of reckoning is …Continue Reading

Obamacare and How Much It Will Cost You

September 28, 2010 ObamaCare No Comments

Due to ObamaCare, millions of Americans may need to spend even more time on the income tax returns that they file in 2015 and beyond — and many will discover they owe the tax man more than before. Beginning in 2014, individuals and families earning 100% to 400% of the federal poverty level are eligible for a federal tax credit to buy insurance via a health insurance exchange. The amount of the credit is based on a sliding scale and decreases as income gets closer to 400% of the poverty line. Ultimately, the size of the tax credit an individual or family receives in 2014 will be based on 2014 income. But initially it’ll be based on the income reported on the 2012 tax return, filed in 2013. The health exchange’s open enrollment for 2014 will begin in late 2013. ObamaCare requires a person to present his or her tax return at that time to qualify for the tax credit. In effect, the size of the insurance subsidy will be tentatively set by how much an individual or family earned two years earlier. “In the meantime, your income may have risen or fallen,” said Devon Herrick, senior fellow and health economist at the conserva tive National Center for Policy Analysis. “If it’s risen, then you may have gotten more of subsidy than you deserve and you’ll owe money on your next tax return. If your income has fallen, you could apply for a tax rebate on your return.” Exactly how …Continue Reading

 

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