What I tried to talk about earlier is the concern that I just mentioned about overzealous spending that can lead to more debt and then, of course, potentially more inflation. We don't have inflationary pressures right now, and we may not see them for several years or a couple of years, but it could happen.
When inflation takes off, you get serious devaluation in the dollar, and that's another problem that comes along with it. I will just very quickly tell you that one of the saddest situations I've ever been involved in was when I was working for the World Bank doing work in Bulgaria. It was just after their huge devaluation that they went into because they ran very large deficits during that period around 1998. The saddest thing was seeing very poor people, people on fixed incomes who tend to be pensioners and others who really suffered when prices doubled in just one year.
That's why economists often talk about inflation tending to be really hardest on lower-income people and people with fixed incomes, because they don't have an offset from that inflation.