Hurting Our Young Americans' Futures


By Dr. Glenn Mollette

Millions of Americans in states like California, Illinois and Kentucky are already in peril because of the horrendous government mismanagement of teacher's and state worker's retirement money.

Americans are in further peril because we will face severe hardship in this country if the long-term path of our Social Security program continues. Our government leaders must take steps to resolve the road Social Security is on. We must pay back what has been borrowed from the fund and stop buying trillions of dollars in Treasury securities that we cannot pay back to ourselves.

We are the biggest owners of our National Debt.

America owes 20 trillion dollars.

Our Social Security Trust Fund or our retirement money owns a big chunk of the national debt.

Our U.S. Treasury manages the U.S. debt through its Bureau of Public Debt. The debt falls into two categories: Debt Held by the Public and Intra-governmental holdings. The Intra-governmental is the portion of the federal debt owed to 230 other federal agencies. It totals about 5.6 trillion dollars. Why would the government owe money to itself? Some agencies like the Social Security Trust Fund, take in more revenue from taxes than they want to set aside and invest. Rather than saving the money, these agencies buy U.S. Treasurys with it. They do this because our federal government is so strapped for cash for the general fund. Someone will say our country is investing our Social Security money. It's not an investment to loan money to someone who already owes 20 Trillion dollars.

By owning Treasurys, they transfer their excess cash to the general fund, where it is spent. One day they will redeem their treasury notes for cash - it is hoped. The federal government at that time will either need to raise taxes or issue more debt to give the agencies the money they will need and the agency will be desperate for it because it owns Treasurys. It's sort of like robbing Peter to pay Paul. The day will come when the financial crisis is so great that it will be very difficult to raise the payroll tax more and more to cover the demand to pay retirees.

Which agencies own the most treasurys? Social Security.

  • Social Security Trust Fund and Federal Disability Insurance Trust Fund $2.8 Trillion
  • Office of Personnel Management Retirement - $888 Billion
  • Military Retirement Fund - $670 Billion
  • Medicare - $294 Billion
  • Cash on hand to fund federal government operations $580 Billion

Here are the holders of public debt as of December 2016.

  • Foreign $6.004 Trillion
  • Federal Reserve $2.465 Trillion
  • Mutual Funds $1.671 Trillion
  • State and local government including their pension funds $553 Billion
  • Banks $663 Billion
  • Insurance Companies $347 Billion
  • U.S. Savings Bonds $166 Billion
  • Other (brokers, bank personal trusts, individuals, government sponsored enterprises, corporate and non-corporate investors and other enterprises $1.662 Trillion

If you add up the debt held by Social Security and all the retirement and pension funds nearly half of the U.S. Treasury debt is held in trust for your retirement. If the United States defaults on it's debt, China, Japan and Ireland would be very upset, but current and future American retirees would be hurt the most.

In October 2017 China owned 1.2 trillion dollars of U.S. debt. Japan owned 1.1 trillion. Ireland is third holding $312 billion. Brazil holds $270 billion. The Cayman Islands owns $269 billion. Luxembourg is $218 billion and Belgium $116 billion. Switzerland, The UK, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Saudi Arabia and India hold between $141 billion and $254 billion. (Sources: Treasury Bulletin, Monthly Treasury Statement, and Table 6. Schedule D Investments of Federal Government Accounts in Federal Securities, U.S. Department of the Treasury, December 2016. "Treasury Bulletin, Table OFS-2 Ownership of Federal Securities" U.S. Department of the Treasury, December 2016.)

The numbers are always changing of course when it comes to our national debt. The numbers above don't add up to exactly what our current debt is because the numbers are always changing.

We have to reduce the size of government.
We must reduce spending money we do not have.
We must stop spending trillions of dollars on Iraq, Afghanistan and other foreign countries.

Reducing our financial support of the United Nations is a good move. Reducing our financial support to other countries is imperative. Especially the countries who now for years have burned our flag and demonstrated hate toward America.

We have to get our own house in order.

At the current trend a lot of our young Americans are going to be very hurt down the road.

Sources: Treasury Bulletin, Monthly Treasury Statement. Kimberly Amadeo

Dr. Glenn Mollette is the author of 12 books. His syndicated column is read in all 50 states.

Contact him at GMollette@aol.com. Learn more at www.glennmollette.com. Like his facebook page at www.facebook.com/glennmollette

More Resources


04/18/2024
How Trump Used New York Bodega Visit To Return to Form
There was Donald Trump, the former president, back in his element and enjoying himself in a crowd, posing for photographs, overstating his standing in the polls and suggesting that he is serious - truly - about winning an impossibly Democratic state.

more info


04/18/2024
Democrats Lie About Biden Corruption, Put Trump on Trial
The Get Trump Democrats are beside themselves with glee about the former president being stuck in a Manhattan courtroom for the Stormy Daniels hush-money trial.

more info


04/18/2024
A Quick End to Republicans' Mayorkas Impeachment Stunt
Senate Democrats put a quick end to Republicans' political stunt.

more info


04/18/2024
DC Republicans Prepare To Sell Out Their Voters
If you're going to make an end-run around your own party, shouldn't you at least give us a reason?

more info


04/18/2024
Will Doing 'the Right Thing' Cost Speaker Johnson?
It took less than six months for Speaker Mike Johnson to reach his existential moment. The Louisiana Republican has arrived at fateful but familiar crossroads where he must either choose to honor a conventional vision of US national interests or side with the wrecking ball antics of his party's far-right bloc.

more info


04/18/2024
Will Johnson's Border Betrayal Produce a Democrat House?
When Mike Johnson was elected speaker, there were 222 Republicans and 213 Democrats: a nine-seat majority that allowed Republicans to lose the votes of four members but maintain a majority.

more info


04/18/2024
The Uncomfortable Facts About Cop Shootings
When Dexter Reed died in a shootout with Chicago police on March 21, the incident was quickly grafted onto a narrative that began in 2014 after a policeman killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo. - namely, that the U.S. faces an epidemic of violence by unbridled cops who do not believe black lives matter. "Killing of Dexter Reed raises questions about Chicago police reform. ‘The message is, go in guns blazing,'" blared a headline in the Chicago Sun-Times.

more info


04/18/2024
The Great Bet on Rate Cuts Is Off
We are trapped in old ways of thinking about inflation

more info


04/18/2024
Are Democrats Stuck With Biden?
Don't call it collusion but his campaign owes the Iranians a big thank-you note.

more info


04/18/2024
What Was Won in No Labels' Crusade
Earlier this month, No Labels' effort to offer a third choice for president in 2024 came to an end. It was an audacious idea from the beginning. We knew defenders of broken Washington would rage against us; their economic model demands it. But we did it anyway because we knew that a vast majority of voters wanted it, and giving voice to those voters is the only way to bring common sense back to our politics, something that is so desperately needed.

more info


04/18/2024
Sen. Hawley's Labor Revolution
Hawley's pathbreaking alliance with the Teamsters is good news for workers, an exemplar to a GOP with an increasingly downscale voter base, and a win for the nation.

more info


04/18/2024
The Problem With Calling on Justice Sotomayor To Resign
As Justice Sonia Sotomayor approaches the 15th anniversary of her historic appointment to the Supreme Court, some liberal pundits and lawmakers want her to consider stepping down. They think that Sotomayor's health, and the possibility that Democrats might lose the presidency and the Senate in November, put the future of the court's liberal wing at risk.

more info


04/18/2024
Equality Under the Law and Conflicts of Interest in New York
One of America's foundational principles is "equal justice under the law," or the principle that no matter who you are or what you stand for, you are entitled to a fair chance to make your case in a court of law. That's why the Lady Justice statue outside the Supreme Court wears a blindfold and holds a scale - the blindfold to symbolize her impartiality and immunity from outside influences, and the scale to signify her objective weighing of the evidence in front of her.

more info


04/18/2024
The $6 Trillion Decision
The stakes of the election can be laid out in 13-figure sums.

more info


04/18/2024
Fight for PA: Voters Fear Trump Won't Be Allowed To Win
John has PTSD. The 78-year-old is a Vietnam war veteran, but that's not the source of his trauma - at least according to his t-shirt. PTSD, in fact, stands for "Pretty Tired of Stupid Democrats", which is why John has made the 560-mile pilgrimage from his home in Wilmington, North Carolina to Schnecksville, Pennsylvania. He is here, along with thousands of others, to support "the best president of our lifetime", who is holding his final rally before travelling to New York to face trial over an alleged hush money scheme. "It's a bogus trial like the rest of them," John says. "But at least he's...

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Cancer Cures May Already Exist — But Won't Reach Patients if Pelosi's Drug Bill Passes


House Democrats recently unveiled H.R. 3, a proposal that would impose ill-considered price controls on prescription drugs.

Senate Drug Plan Brings Death and Taxes


The Prescription Drug Pricing Reduction Act would stall future drug development and deprive Americans of lifesaving cures -- all without reducing patients' out-of-pocket costs.

Is the Federal Reserve Apolitical?


President Donald Trump has had (what else?) a publicly tempestuous relationship with the Federal Reserve System.

The Bladensburg Cross: The Court Moves in the Right Direction


A large cross erected in 1925 by Gold Star mothers in honor of their 49 fallen sons who gave their lives in World War I will be allowed to stand. That is the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in American Legion v. American Humanist Association. The monument, located in Prince George's County, Maryland, has been maintained by a state agency—the Maryland National Capital Parks and Planning Commission—with government funds since 1961. Members of the American Humanist Association claimed they were offended when driving past this religious symbol maintained on public land at public expense, and that to continue this display was a violation of the Constitutional provision prohibiting a governmental "establishment of religion."

Impeachment of the President: Who Should We Consult? We Say the Founders


Impeachment was in the news recently after President Donald Trump's personal attorney, Michael Cohen, pleaded guilty to campaign finance violations. In his plea, Cohen implicated Trump, stating that he, as Trump's attorney, had made payments to women at the direction of a "candidate for federal office." Some journalists jumped with joy at the news, as captured by headlines like this in the New York Times: "Donald Trump's High Crimes and Misdemeanors: The Principled Case for Impeachment is Clear, What is Missing is the Courage."

Are Fossil Fuels an Ethical Investment?


Saudi oil giant Aramco -- the world's most profitable company -- issued its first public offering in December. The IPO has reenergized debate around whether it's ethical to invest in oil and natural gas companies.

Texas Firms Save Lives and Healthcare Dollars


Rising healthcare costs are taking their toll on American patients. Half of adults say they or a loved one skipped or delayed treatment in the past year due to cost concerns, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation. About a quarter say they or a family member has struggled to pay medical bills.

Bring IP Back Into US-Japan


If you blinked, you might have missed it. On January 1, a limited trade deal between the United States and Japan took effect. It doesn't go nearly far enough.

Curbing U.S. Population Growth Would Fight Climate Change


Millions of young Americans want to shrink their carbon footprints.

We Can Save the Planet Without Destroying the Economy


More than 250 environmental groups recently petitioned House Democratic leaders to embrace the Green New Deal. They claim banning fossil fuels is the key to ending climate change.

American Innovation Helps Patients Beat Coronavirus


American scientists are working furiously to develop treatments for the novel coronavirus, COVID-19.

When Protectionism Endangers Lives


Peter Navarro, one of President Trump's trade advisors, recently slammed pharmaceutical lobbyists for opposing his "Buy American" executive order.

Coronavirus Reveals the Recklessness of Drug Pricing Reform


A Seattle patient recently became the first American to receive a potential breakthrough vaccine for COVID-19. That vaccine -- developed by Moderna, a Massachusetts biotech start-up -- is one of several experimental coronavirus vaccines and treatments that pharmaceutical firms are developing around the country.

America's Unique Approach to Innovation Will Cure COVID-19


Scientists have responded to COVID-19 with unprecedented speed. Just months after the outbreak of the novel coronavirus, clinical trials are already underway for nearly 200 vaccines and therapies.

Trump Proves Black Workers Matter


President Trump recently suspended nearly all guest-worker programs for the rest of the year. This historic executive order will open up more than 500,000 jobs to Americans -- and it'll disproportionately help Black citizens.