By M.Tanner
There is no austerity, only more uncontrolled spending.
There is no austerity, only more uncontrolled spending.
It is a medical truism that if you get the diagnosis
wrong, the treatment will be wrong. The same holds true with Washington
budgeting. Unfortunately, as we prepare for yet more debates over budgeting,
spending, and stimulus, we can expect to once again enter a fact-free debate.
Among the most common myths:
1. Republicans have slashed government spending. While there are
political reasons for both Democrats and Republicans to pretend that we’ve
entered a new age of austerity, it’s not even close to true. According to
figures released last week by the Treasury Department, federal spending this
year is up by roughly 5 percent over the same period last
year. That’s a $120 billion increase in just the first nine months of this
year. That’s right: Despite a near shutdown of the government and “holding the
debt ceiling hostage,” government spending is still increasing. And not
surprisingly, we are borrowing more money in order to fund it. The deficit is
already $23.5 billion higher this year — with three months still to go. As a
result, our national debt continues to grow. This month it will close in on $15
trillion. Throw in the unfunded liabilities of Social Security and Medicare,
and our real indebtedness tops $120 trillion and rising. If Keynesian-style
stimulus worked, we should be swimming in jobs.
2. States are firing teachers and firefighters because
they are broke. Washington has to help. That’s the logic behind the president’s plan for
$35 billion in additional federal aid to the states, a bill that the Senate is
expected to vote on this week. In reality, however, state government spending
has also been rising, up more than 10 percent in the past two years. And while
some of that represents a pass-through of federal aid from earlier stimulus
bills, state general-fund spending rose 5.2 percent this year. If state
governments are laying off teachers and firefighters, it’s because they are
failing to manage their priorities, not because they don’t have any money.
3. We have a revenue problem. Yes, tax revenues are
low today by historic standards, in part because of the recession and in part
because of the Bush tax cuts. But this is a temporary phenomenon. According to
the Congressional Budget Office, even if the entirety of the Bush tax cuts were
made permanent and the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) repealed, tax revenue
would rise to more than 20 percent of GDP by 2020. That’s roughly two
percentage points of GDP above the historic average. If taxes will bring in
more revenue than usual, how is it that we are still projecting huge future
deficits? Simple, spending is expected to rise even faster. In 2020, federal
spending is estimated to be roughly 25 percent of GDP, roughly four percentage
points higher than historic averages, and seven points higher than it was under
President Clinton. So, which side of the ledger has a problem?
4. We can solve our problems by taxing the rich
and closing corporate loopholes.
Set aside the question of whether higher taxes on the rich would stifle
economic growth and job creation. There is simply no way to raise enough money
to cover our deficits by taxing the rich. As the president would say, “It’s
math.” This year, we will run a deficit of roughly $1.3 trillion. Eliminating
the tax break for corporate jets, a prime Democratic talking point, would raise
roughly $300 million this year. Yes, that’s million with an “m.” Ending tax
breaks for oil and gas companies, another frequent Democratic target, would
bring in somewhat more, nearly $4 billion per year. And, the big enchilada, the
Democrats’ proposed 5.6 percent surtax on “millionaires and billionaires,”
would raise an average of $45.3 billion in additional revenue per year.
Therefore, if the Democrats were able to get every penny that they want, they
would raise all of $49.6 billion per year, leaving us with a budget deficit
this year of only $1.25 trillion.
5. We can balance the budget by cutting “fraud,
waste, and abuse.” This
is the Republican flip side of the Democrats’ reliance on higher taxes, a way
to avoid making tough choices about cutting defense and reforming entitlements.
Total domestic discretionary spending — everything from the Department of
Education to the Department of Commerce, from the FBI to the FDA — amounted to
roughly $650 billion this year. If we simply abolished all of those programs,
the muscle and bone as well as the fat, we would still have a $650 billion
budget deficit. That is not to say that we shouldn’t cut everywhere we can, but
to spend too much time searching for “fraud, waste, and abuse” is to pluck out
a splinter while the patient is bleeding to death.
With any addiction, the first step to recovery is to
admit that you have a problem. Washington remains addicted to spending. It is
time for Congress to get honest about that and stop hiding behind these budget
myths. Maybe then, we can begin the path to economic recovery.
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