The Economic Future, Debts, Lies and Cowboy Economics
Is America pushing the world irretrievably into disaster with its fiscal adventurism?


Like the umpteenth review of a bad film that we have already watched, the downgrading of United States debt by Standard & Poor’s was neither revealing nor surprising. The world’s largest economy has lived beyond its means for a very long time until its debt burden exploded into $14.6 trillion, more than thrice the entire wealth of all the world’s 1,210 billionaires on Forbes List.
But what is disconcerting to the rest of the world is the apparent nonchalance of the US political system. Beyond a bipartisan commitment to brinkmanship, America hasn’t offered a credible policy to dig itself out of this fiscal quagmire.
Even the world’s poorest economies have paid the price for America’s folly — in the form of elevated inflation. Violent protests are becoming common across such nations. Europe is a poor copy of the US, with all the bad borrowing habits but without the quick capacity to print currency. China’s debts have been exposed to be much higher than admitted previously. India is in the throes of widening public unrest against a regime perceived to be weak and corrupt. Growth is sagging in both emerging economies.