Here’s a letter to a new correspondent.
Mr. S__:
You ask for my opinion of John Tamny’s latest expression of disagreement with those of us who warn that government borrowing poses serious problems for the economy.
John is correct about many things, but on this matter he’s deeply mistaken. And while his mind isn’t likely to be changed on this front, perhaps yours will.
Although John mentions James Buchanan’s classic 1958 book, Public Principles of Public Debt, it’s clear that he hasn’t read this pioneering work carefully.
Buchanan’s core point is that creditors do not bear the burden of paying for the spending undertaken by debtors. That burden is borne by whoever repays the creditors.
Consider a simple example. Suppose that in 2026 your sister borrows $50,000 from Acme Bank to upgrade her kitchen, promising to repay the principal and interest in 2030. To enable your sister to secure the loan, you agree to assume and honor her debt if she dies before 2030. Alas, your sister dies penniless in 2029, leaving you nothing in her will. One year later, you send to Acme Bank a check for $60,000 (principal plus interest) to retire the loan.
Who paid for your sister’s kitchen upgrade? To be consistent in his argument, John Tamny must answer either “Acme Bank” or “your sister.” But clearly, neither answer is correct. The person who paid for that kitchen upgrade is you.
And so it is with government debt. Government debt is taken out today to fund current spending, with the responsibility of repaying loaded onto future generations. The only essential difference between the Acme Bank example and real-world government debt is that, unlike you who voluntarily assumed responsibility for your sister’s debt, future citizens-taxpayers did not agree to be burdened with the responsibility of repaying the debt that they are nevertheless obliged to repay.
As for the example that John uses to discredit Buchanan’s argument, that example supports Buchanan’s argument. John writes:
[M]erely contemplate the debt run up in 2020 by the first Trump administration to subsidize ($3 trillion Cares Act) lockdowns across the country. Were he alive, could Buchanan seriously contend that the horrors of government consumption were somehow postponed solely because borrowing, not direct taxation, informed them?
Were Buchanan alive, he would point out that the orgy of government consumption that John rightly decries occurred because Americans in 2020 did not have to pay for that consumption. Had all Cares Act spending been required to be funded with current taxes, that spending would have been only a fraction of $3 trillion because Americans in 2020 would not have tolerated such a gargantuan increase in their taxes. The need to fund current spending with current tax revenue would therefore have reduced government’s access to many of the resources that, as matters actually turned out, government used to lockdown the economy and paper over the terrible consequences with deficit spending.
The argument against deficit financing of government spending isn’t limited to the very real dangers that such financing poses to government’s future fiscal stability. That argument also includes this important feature: By preventing today’s citizens-taxpayers from foisting onto future citizens-taxpayers the costs of today’s government activities, a prohibition of deficit financing would reduce the amount of resources to which governments have access. For this reason alone, friends of limited government, including John Tamny, should oppose deficit financing.
It’s distressing that a small but vocal minority of true liberals – most notably today, John Tamny – either cannot or will not grasp this reality.
Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030



Modern libertarianism is a vision of a radical and just future – but one whose contours are inherent in the meaning of the American Revolution, arising from European traditions of natural law, natural rights, a relationship between man and the state that ought to be contractual and reciprocal; and a vision of man that is rooted in the best of the Western Christian tradition. That vision sees the individual soul as so worth saving that God-made-man would sacrifice himself to do so. And that individual soul is responsible for the choices that can guarantee its own salvation.
The whole thinking of the country thus runs down the channel of mob emotion; there is no actual conflict of ideas, but only a succession of crazes.
More generally, it will pay the landlord to include in the lease contract any terms that are worth more to the tenant than they cost him – and adjust the rent accordingly. Given that he has done so, any requirement that he provide additional security (or other terms in the contract) forces the landlord to add terms to the lease that cost him more than they are worth to the tenant. The ultimate result is a rent increase that leaves both landlord and tenant worse off than before.
