Our Fiscal Future has invited distinguished guest bloggers to share their views about how to get the nation on a sustainable fiscal path. The views presented are their own, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Committee on the Fiscal Future of the United States or any of the organizations sponsoring this website. We welcome and encourage constructive conversation about the fiscal issues facing America, and hope you’ll join the conversation.
“Good Debt” and “Bad Debt?”
AUTHOR: Joseph Minarik, Senior Vice President and Director of Research, Committee for Economic DevelopmentYou’ve heard the story: A private business borrows money foolishly — say, to finance a corporate jet used mainly to fly the CEO off to ski. That borrowing surely results in “bad debt” — not necessarily debt that will not be repaid, but rather debt unwisely incurred, with little offsetting long-run benefit. On the other hand, the same firm might borrow to update its production equipment. That borrowing would increase debt, but it would be “good debt.
July 21st Event in Chicago: America’s Fiscal Future
AUTHOR: Fiscal Future, Site AdministratorThe John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago invite you to
“America’s Fiscal Future: Making Difficult Choices”. A discussion with the co-chairs of the expert committee that produced Choosing the Nation’s Fiscal Future.
FISCAL FUTURE TWEETS
From @BudgetHawks: Raising The Retirement Age http://bit.ly/aSB6LP Taxes: How Much Do We Pay? http://n.pr/c8DKlw
RT @Drudge_Report: Obama Has Added More to National Debt Than Washington Thru Reagan -- COMBINED http://drudge.tw/9Rs58l

