Originally posted by: Mursilis
Originally posted by: BigDH01
The economy would be severely injured. As much as many people here hate the government and government spending, they use that money to buy goods, pay contractors, etc. That money is used by individuals to purchase goods and by contractors to pay employees. People who say they want a balanced budget don't really understand the impact this would have. The fact that we can have a 1 trillion dollar deficit and an economy that's still in decline is just evidence of the severe structural deficiencies in our economic system. We have a devastating case of excess capacity and low demand. If you remove another 1 trillion dollars from the demand-side, you could be in a real world of hurt. Maybe we can balance the budget after the fundamental problems of supply vs demand have been solved.
Obviously, the nation can't just balance the budget overnight, but as the OP noted, deficits have been going back
decades. Even when the economy recovers, Congress likely still won't balance the budget. Look at the history of the past 40 years.
A quick and cursory Google search yields
this. You'll see that total debt in dollars was pretty stable from 1950 until the early 80s. As a percent of GDP, the debt was actually shrinking until the early 80s when it started to rise.
This is more evidence of what I was alluding to. There is not enough aggregate demand without deficit spending to support our current economic paradigm. This spending is necessary as long as we function under the deluded belief that supply-side economics work. The government can't balance the budget without hurting the economy. This is also why people really can't save. If the average American saved a significant portion of their earnings, the economy would be demolished. We depend on deficit spending on all levels to match our level of capacity. Now that Americans have less money to spend, the government has to pick up the slack. I don't expect the government will ever be in a position to balance the budget until there are some drastic fundamental changes in how our economy works. The wonder of supply-side economics. Reagan believed we could produce our way out of stagflation, but, ironically enough, we've produced our way into a debt prison.
If you want capacity numbers, just go
here. You can see that capacity utilization is as low as it's ever been. Total industry is at 68% capacity in June. The other low is 73.5% after dot-bomb. If/when we recover to mid 90s levels, we'll still depend on gov't deficits to maintain the high capacity utilization that saw economic growth through the 80s and 90s.
What this also means as that we are nearing 10% unemployment and our capacity utilization is still at 68%. The unemployment pain has just begun. We simply don't have enough domestic or foreign demand to support the size of our economy. There are too many people and too many goods. This is a very vicious cycle.
There is a good thread about this at Ars Technica where this very issue is being discussed. Technology has allowed us to increase capacity without also increasing employment (and by extension, demand). This has almost necessitated government increasing demand to purchase the new supply. Going into the future, we are faced with two possible prospects. We can accept that demand is going to continue to shrink and just live in a world where displaced people simply can't afford supply or we will live in a world where people are basically paid to perform tasks that don't generally contribute to societal utility, thereby trying to maintain demand. There might simply be more people in the modern world than is needed to supply all of us with what we demand.
Is it true? Don't know. You can view the discussion
here.