Gutterman's favorite example is the
Roth individual retirement account (IRA). A traditional IRA defers
taxes until withdrawal or death. Converting a traditional IRA to a
Roth IRA means paying taxes on earnings to date but saves the
participant from paying taxes on future contributions to the fund.
The government receives immediate benefit of increased revenue—but
at the expense of far greater loss in future taxes. But since
Congress only budgets out ten years, the loss of revenue from Roth
IRAs will occur beyond ten years and hence is treated as never
happening from a budget viewpoint. In the 2013 fiscal-cliff
agreement, this “long term revenue loser was scored as raising
$12.1 billion over the next ten years.”
This is just one example of government
using “the manipulation of accounting rules to grossly understate
future effects of today's legislation. Indeed it is hardly an
exaggeration to say that Congress is cooking the books to minimize
our long-term budget difficulties. The bottom line is that no matter
how bad you think the budget deficit is, it is actually far worse,”
says Gutterman.
Congress' manipulation of accounting
rules is reminiscent of the actions of Greece and other European
countries that have caused huge currency problems there. In
my new book The Impending Monetary Revolution, the Dollar and
Gold, I explain the implications for the future of the dollar
and give examples of some of European accounting manipulations that
created long-term budget problems for short term gains, just as the
U.S. has done. These include:
“France
struck a deal under which France Telecom paid the government a lump
sum of €5
billion relating to future privatization, in return for France
accepting pension liability for France Telecom's workers. The quick
€5
billion lowered France's deficit sufficiently for it to qualify for
euro-zone membership.”
“ J.P.
Morgan arranged a currency swap for Italy that allowed it to receive
large payments upfront that improved its current deficit picture,
while pushing less-favorable numbers into the future.”
“Deutche
Bank executed currency swaps for Portugal, but the bank says they
were within 'the framework of sovereign debt management.'...However,
in reports to the Eurostat statistics authority, [Portugal]
classified its subsidies to the Lisbon subway as equity.”
The
“chickens are already coming to roost,” as the saying goes, for
European countries. To see what lies ahead for the United States,
read the book! Go to www.amlibpub.com/
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