I didn't say spending is always good. I specifically said that when the economy is doing well we should pay off the national debt.
But that means you'd cut government spending to pay off the debt you racked up when you raised government spending. By cutting the government spending to pay down the debt you racked up, you're hurting the economy. If you're hurting the economy, you'll get less revenues, and after some time period, more expenditures. But then, you'd have to increase government spending again...but did you pay down the debt? Doubtful. So exactly how would that work in reality again?
The correct analogy would be that you're unemployed and just got a job, but you have no car. So you take a loan so you can buy a car to drive to work. You either go into debt and pay it off when you're able to, or you don't take the job and your situation is even worse.
No, that is not the correct analogy at all. The correct analogy is:
1.) You have a variable hour per week job (marketing or something), which equates to the US's Unemployment number. Your salary is say $100k a year: High, but not really because of #2 below.
2.) You already have a house, car, are paying for medical for you family members, paying for your and your wife's parents retirement, which all equates to all the things the government has gotten itself involved in for the past 70 years.
3.) Because of #1, and not running a balanced budget year over year for the past 20 years, you're hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt and have maybe 10 years before you retire. The Fed equivalent of this is they're (really We're) multiple Trillions in debt, and it's only 3-4 decades before massive amounts of $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ will start being sapped from the books because of Social Security, meaning, even more money the Fed will need but doesn't have.
4.) You now want to double down and get a Mercedes, Ferrari, triple your house payment on a new house, and the wife wants a nose job, boob job, ass job, etc. In Fed terms, that's HighSpeedRail (done by Unions of course), road projects (again, done by Unions), TrainwreckCare (I'd say Obamacare, but the reality is, the partisan politics in Congress and the Executive cannot deliver anything that tackles the most major of the issues of HC), funding states who by doing the same things the Fed has bankrupted themselves, etc. etc.
5.) In light of 1 -3, you're arguing that your #4 is a superior solution than being fiscally conservative and reigning your out of control spending and obligations in; afterall, you make $100k a year, your salary isn't your problem...and neither is the Fed's income either.
There you go...now you have a proper analogy.
Chuck
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