Tuesday, August 2, 2011

The Debt Ceiling Debate

The total distraction of the last several weeks in Washington makes me think of a time before I retired. Back at the beginning of the century, as the dot.com bubble burst our business was collapsing. We laid-off half of our staff, froze pay for the entire company, cut pay for the senior management, delayed paying bills, and met with the bank almost weekly. It was a very difficult time and we were struggling to stay alive. Everyone was under more stress than usual and on edge. There was a young woman who was accused of not pulling her weight and getting away with it because she was romantically involved with one of the managers. With all that was going on I wanted to stay focused on staying alive and did not want to deal with issues unrelated to survival.

We had been having monthly meeting of the entire staff for some time where I presented the financials and talked about where we are and what we are doing to try to weather the storm. At a meeting during the height of the clamor I broached the subject of the young woman with a metaphor.

Imagine I am driving a bus with you as a passenger and we are traveling down a steep, curvy road on a stormy night. There is an annoying person in the back of the bus and people are yelling for me to do something about them. Now, if the yelling continues I will get progressively more distracted and will need to do something. However, if I were a passenger on this bus, given the circumstances, I would want the driver to absolutely focus on the road and would put up with the annoying passenger until we got down to the bottom of the mountain. The yelling stopped and the issue resolved itself before the bus reached the bottom. We survived.

I think the above analogy may hold true today. Our country, and the world for that matter, is in the throws of recovering from a deep recession with a number of world events slowing the recovery. Third word countries are advancing faster than the western countries potentially changing the balance of power and whenever there is a threat to the balance the world is in a precarious position. With this critical phase we find ourselves in, the right wing decided to raise a ruckus in the form of a balanced budget debate and held the debt-ceiling hostage. Unfortunately, unlike the annoying passenger on my bus, the debt ceiling could run us off the cliff. The issue of the debt ceiling has resolved itself. However we are left with potentially negative consequences and much valuable time, energy and credibility has been lost in the process. The scary thing is that we are not down from the mountain yet.

1 comments:

navigio said...

great analogy. and perfect way to make your point, imho. i guess the people on the bus could have decided to take things into their own hands instead of yelling at you.. i guess thats analogous to a recall.. :-)

personally, i was kind of surprised by the ruckus surrounding the debt ceiling. i said in a recent post that our politics is no longer about reality but about anecdotes (perhaps its been that way for a while, but it seems extremely so right now). i agree about still being on the mountain. i understand the concern of the people who held the process hostage, though i dont agree that their approach will solve their underlying issues (and im surprised they dont get that). my feeling is we have two approaches to this, both of them are potentially disastrous. the question is which is more manageable and meshes with the realities of our current society. i guess time will tell.. :-)