With the New Year comes new hope and optimism. The slate’s wiped clean. A new leaf is turned over. Time to start anew.
If only it were so simple. If only, with the turn of the calendar, the mistakes from the past would magically disappear – forever. Wouldn’t it be nice?
But like unpaid bills, the mistakes remain. And they must be reckoned with.
In the sphere of money and politics, central planners in Congress, at the U.S. Treasury, and the Federal Reserve have left massive amounts of mistakes. Several generations of deficit spending and currency debasement have piled up like rotting refuse during a trash workers’ strike.
These mistakes aren’t going away.
While many Americans were fully ensconced in holiday delight, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen penned a letter. You may have missed it. Most people did.
The December 27 letter to House Speaker Mike Johnson provided a friendly notice of the consequences of past mistakes. Namely, that the Treasury expects the statutory debt limit to be hit sometime between January 14 and January 23. Continue reading