PART THREE
XI
Dick Brandt shared an interesting insight about the Global Village students recently. He said, “The international kids are struck by how much we have here in America, how much time we spend watching TV commercials, and especially how much time we spend shopping and spending. They don’t get the concept of shopping as entertainment. For them shopping is what you do when you need something.”
Dick added that he doesn’t see much envy of American consumerism. I guess the kids are smart enough to know that having a lot of stuff is not a measure of real success. We preach the capitalist way like it’s a religion, but you have to wonder if it’s letting us down. When advertising slogans are better known than the Ten Commandments or the Bill of Rights, when shopping malls are our places of worship, when bad behavior is justified as long as it leads to profit, when debt is justified as long as it leads to a plasma TV, and when the measure of a person is the kind of car he drives, maybe it’s time to ask whether we’ve corrupted the very notion of capitalism.
Believe it or not, capitalism originated as a system for the little guy. It replaced feudalism, in which a few wealthy owners had all the power and money and the common person had nothing. It was a noble ideal.
The great economist Milton Friedman, who died in 2006 at the age of ninety-four, once said, “The problem of social organization is how to set up an arrangement under which greed will do the least harm. Capitalism is that kind of a system.” Friedman believed that you couldn’t have freedom without capitalism. The problem is that any system, even a good one, can get rusty over time if we’re not vigilant. And we’ve become pretty lazy about our system. Money has stopped meaning anything to us.
When I was growing up in the 1940s, a million seemed like infinity. All those zeroes! If someone was a millionaire, that meant they had more money than God. I never heard anyone say, “You’re one in a billion.” A million was plenty good enough.
I was just getting the hang of a billion, when people started talking about a trillion. Today our country casually spends a trillion dollars the way we once spent a billion. Where does it end? What’s the next level? I guess it’s quadrillion. Then zillion? I’m not sure. Let’s just say it’s a lot.
WHERE DOES ALL THE MONEY COME FROM?
So where does the government get all this money to spend? The short answer is we borrow it.
If you have a credit card, you can understand what’s happening with our government today. It’s the same thing. Not that you’re running up the big numbers—even if you have teenagers. But the concept is no different. When you borrow money on a credit card, and you don’t pay it back within thirty days, there’s a penalty called “interest.” And if you keep borrowing, your debt grows and so does your interest. When you get your credit card bill, the minimum payment only covers the interest. It doesn’t touch the principal. The more debt you have, the harder it is to pay anything off on the principal. (The average American household has twelve credit cards, so if you’re like most Americans, you’re probably feeling the pinch.)
Now, apply that same idea to government spending. If we spend less in a year than we collect, we have a surplus. If we spend more than we collect, we have a deficit. That’s when we get out the credit cards and start borrowing.
Where do we go to borrow money? To other countries. Almost 50 percent of U.S. debt is held by foreign banks. We go to China, Japan, Saudi Arabia, or one of our other lenders, and we say, “Listen, we need $300 billion to pay for the war in Iraq. That’ll get us started. And we need $600 billion for a permanent tax cut. Our kids will pay you back.”
Our national debt is a record $8.5 trillion. The interest on that alone is $406 billion. We can scrape together enough money to pay the interest, but we’re not even touching the principal. That means the money we shell out in taxes doesn’t buy one new cop or one new schoolteacher. It just pays the interest on what we already owe. When we actually want to do something, we borrow more.
You know what a drag it is when you’re in so much debt that you’re just paying interest on your credit cards. All that money and nothing to show for it. Not a new sofa or a winter coat or a vacation. It’s the same with our government. When we make our $406 billion annual interest payment, we get a big fat nothing for it.
Shouldn’t we be just a little bit pissed off? You’d think if we were going to go into debt on such a grand scale, we’d at least have something to show for it. Like better health care. Or roads that aren’t falling apart. Or cheaper gas. But the government seems to have run up our credit cards without buying anything we can use.
In 1989, when the national debt was considered a real crisis, the big National Debt Clock went up in Times Square. This was during Bush senior’s administration when a national debt of $2.7 trillion actually shocked the nation. There were pictures of people standing on the sidewalk gaping up at the clock as the numbers raced up. It was pretty mesmerizing—especially since it also included the share every family in America owed. Then one day, when the total had reached $5 trillion, the National Debt Clock disappeared. Well, today it’s back, and now the numbers are racing up toward $9 trillion. But the crowds aren’t gathering. Nobody’s gaping. We’re used to it. We’ve lost our ability to be shocked.
But we’d better open our eyes. Like that old curmudgeon Senator Everett Dirksen used to say, “A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking about real money.”
That’s the thing you have to remember. The money is real. How popular do you think Bush’s tax cuts would be if people understood we’re borrowing from China to pay for them? Is that fiscal responsibility? It wouldn’t pass muster in most households.
Wouldn’t you like to see our government show a little budgeting discipline—just like you have to do at home? Maybe if the citizens got a statement every year, they’d demand it. Based on the current national debt, your statement would read something like this:
Dear Mr. and Mrs. America,
Your family’s share of the national debt is currently $115,000. Would you like that amount deferred to your grandchildren?
Too bad we didn’t listen to Thomas Jefferson. He said, “To preserve our independence, we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt.”
SPENDING GONE WILD
When you think of it, isn’t the President really just the CEO of America? Under George Bush’s leadership, we’ve spent half a trillion (and counting) on Iraq, and the people there don’t even have dependable electricity yet. Then we topped off our spending spree with the huge tax cut, which mostly went to the wealthiest Americans. They like to say that the tax-cut windfall is going to “trickle down” to average Americans. I’ll tell you what’s trickling down: the debt. Because for every dollar our government doesn’t take in from taxes, that’s one less dollar going to pay off the debt, and the interest keeps building. This trickle-down business is more like water torture.
It bears mentioning that Bill Clinton, one of those so-called tax-and-spend liberals, had a $559 billion surplus his last four years in office. I’ve coined a new phrase for the current administration: tax-cut-and-spend conservatives.
Now, I’ve heard Dick Cheney say repeatedly, “Reagan proved deficits don’t matter,” and I just have to shake my head. What is he talking about? Maybe he means they don’t matter to him, since he’s worth between $30 and $100 million. But I think most Americans would feel pretty nervous about having half the country’s debt owned by foreigners. Twenty-five years ago we were the largest creditor nation in the world. Now we’re the largest debtor nation.
We are in danger of becoming a colony—of not owning our own country. How did that happen to the richest nation in the world?
A SIMPLE BUSINESS LESSON
In business, the budget-cutting process is pretty simple. You get your key people in a room and you say, “Sales are down, and costs are up. We’ve got to cut ten percent out of the budget. Come back tomorrow and tell me what you’re going to give up.” And everyone looks miserable, but no one says, “Boss, we can’t do it. We need to spend ten percent more than we’re taking in.”
In business, people get it. If a company spends more than it earns, it goes belly-up. In government, it’s all smoke and mirrors. It’s Alice in Wonderland down the rabbit hole.
I’ll tell you one thing. Any businessperson who has to meet a payroll every week learns the value of money pretty fast. I’ll never forget how I learned that lesson the hard way at Chrysler. It was shortly after I’d joined the company, and I was beginning to get a terrible feeling in my gut that we were in big trouble. One Friday morning I asked my CFO, Jerry Greenwald, how much real cash he could lay on my desk by five o’clock that afternoon. He said, “About a million, give or take.”
Only a million? Then I asked him, “What’s our payroll every Friday?” He said, “About two hundred million, give or take.”
That’s when I knew we were bankrupt. When you’re responsible for meeting a weekly payroll, money gets real pretty fast. Unfortunately, the government seems to have lost all sight of this. I learned that, too, when I tried to pay back Chrysler’s government loan.
I went to the White House to deliver the $1.2 billion check to President Reagan. In the Oval Office, I explained to the President that the check was a fake. “No one has ever paid back the government before,” I explained. “They said it would take about thirty days to figure out who it should be written out to.”
President Reagan laughed hysterically, slapping his knee. “You’ve got to be kidding me,” he said. “That’s what’s wrong with the federal government.” In other words, there were no IN baskets, only OUT baskets. With Reagan still laughing, I put a hold on the check, and kept the $10 million of interest it generated in a month.
WE’RE PIGGING OUT
It’s hard for our government to exercise responsibility in spending when the citizenry has such a bad case of the gimmies. You don’t see that many political campaigns built around paying down the national debt. It’s not very sexy. It’s a simple fact that the people who get elected are the ones who give out the goodies, not the ones who take them away. Look what happened to Jimmy Carter when he told Americans to turn off their lights and start wearing sweaters. Look what happened to the first President Bush when he had to go back on his promise not to raise taxes. Nobody runs for office on the slogan “Read my lips: I’ll raise your taxes.”
You’re more likely to hear “Vote for me, and I’ll find some money for your pet project.”
It’s called pork. Billions are spent every year for individual pork-barrel projects that get people elected. A Hall of Fame here, a bridge to nowhere there. It adds up.
I can’t really blame Americans for not taking the national debt seriously. Why should they? It seems like every time the government wants to spend money on a pet project or a tax cut or a war, they find it.
I propose that we take back control of our money. How? By voting for people who will honor their commitment to the citizens of this country. It’s our right. It’s also our obligation. Why don’t we start by NOT voting for the candidate who promises tax cuts. Why don’t we start by demanding a National Borrowing Freeze. Let’s cut up the credit cards.
As I mentioned earlier, when I was chairman of the Statue of Liberty–Ellis Island Centennial Commission, we raised millions of dollars from ordinary people all over America. We got almost $2 million from schoolchildren sending in their nickels and dimes. One morning I opened a letter with two one-dollar bills attached. The letter was written in a child’s hand. “Dear Mr. Iacocca,” it read. “Here’s my allowance for the week. Spend it wisely.” That got me. Spend it wisely. The future generations are depending on us to use our heads. Are we up to the task?