Climate change – our real bequest to future generations
Deficit hawks try to scare us about the debt we're leaving. That's economic nonsense – unlike the costs of global warming
Dean Baker
guardian.co.uk, Tuesday 3 January 2012 08.00 EST
It is remarkable how efforts to reduce the government deficit/debt
are often portrayed as a generational issue, while efforts to reduce
global warming are almost never framed in this way. This contrast is
striking because the issues involved in reducing the deficit or debt
have little direct relevance to distribution between generations,
whereas global warming is almost entirely a question of distribution
between generations.
Seeing the debt as an issue between
generations is wrong in almost every dimension. The idea that future
generations will somehow be stuck with some huge tab in the form of the
national debt suffers from the simple logical problem that we are all
going to die. At some point, everyone who owns the debt being issued
today, or over the next two decades, will be dead. They will have to
pass the ownership of the debt to someone else – in other words, their
children or grandchildren. This means that the debt is not money that
our children and grandchildren will be paying to someone else. It is
money that they will be paying to themselves.
Saturday, January 7, 2012
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