This volume takes a non-economic approach to the issue of the
federal deficit. By identifying fiscal problems as merely the
visible symptoms of a basic behavioral dynamic common to all
people, Cole S. Brembeck undertakes a singular study of how human
interests perpetuate the deficit and how, therefore, the deficit
issue reflects the nature of the representation in the federal
government. Solutions to the worsening deficit crisis can then be
explored by shifting the primary focus away from money, budgets,
and expenditures and toward people, power, and politics.
Fourteen essays discuss different aspects of the human factor in
the federal debt by analyzing how members of the U.S. Congress
spend public money. After establishing the relationship between
money and human behavior (the psychological groundwork of the
entire work), attention then turns to the human and political
motivations that result in the incurring of debt and how Congress's
monetary practices demonstrate the psychology of public spending. A
subject that could constitute an attack on Congress receives fresh
insight--rather than isolating Congress as a body with a unique
propensity for spending, Brembeck acknowledges the relevant force
that is a common human motivator. The work aims at redefining the
central issue of the debt debate and concludes with proposals that
may help to remedy the financial crisis, based on the premise that
the federal debt is a human, not a fiscal, problem.
General
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