Friday, November 12, 2010

Pondering the Ineffectiveness of the 2010 Deficit Commission

Steve Manicek, in his November 10, 2010 article, offers a word of a caution concerning the preliminary statement by the two chairs. What I find interesting is that his focus is on a quite different point than what I have heard on television. For him, the crux of the proposal comes down to two points: capping federal government expenditures at 22% -- and eventually 21% -- of GDP, and capping revenues at 21% of GDP. And each of these represents a BIG problem. The first is on the spending side. Except for the anomalous stimulus/bailout/recession years of 2009-2011, federal government expenditures haven’t reached 21% of GDP since the collapse of the Soviet Union – and since World War II only exceeded 21% of GDP during the Reagan-Bush military buildup of the 1980s and early 90s. For virtually all of the Clinton and G.W. Bush years – and during all the Kennedy/Johnson/Nixon years – federal expenditures ranged between 18 and 20% of GDP. So while the 21% figure represents something of a cut versus the out-year projections of the President’s most recent budget, it leaves plenty of headroom to establish and make permanent even more government than we had in the immediate pre-Obama years.



For him, the more important problem is on the revenue side. According to Office of Management and Budget figures, federal revenues have NEVER reached 21% of GDP. In fact, only in Bill Clinton’s final year in office – and during WW II – did revenues even exceed 20% of GDP. During the whole time from 1960 through 2008, federal tax revenues almost always fell between 17 and 19% of GDP, only occasionally rising above 19% (chiefly in Clinton’s second term) or below 17% (G. W. Bush’s first term). Even President Obama’s FY 11 Budget has federal revenues rising only to around 19% of GDP by 2015. So the 21% “cap” represents two full percentage points of GDP above what we have experienced even during historically “high” tax environments.
By way of comparison, the last time we had a “balanced” federal budget – FY 2001 – revenues were 19% of GDP and expenditures 18%. 
For me, here is the key. The Commission’s draft, in effect, proposes solving our deficit problem by allowing the federal government to grow 15-20% larger than it was under Bill Clinton, then raising taxes as much as necessary to pay for it. It institutionalizes President Obama’s expansion of the role of government – maybe not quite as much as he and Nancy Pelosi would like – and lays the burden squarely on the shoulders of American taxpayers.
For those interested in pursuing the topic, I invite you to read the following from the Cato Institute.

2 comments:

  1. A friend posted a comment on my facebook account.

    Read your blog, George. I always find you interesting...not always to my liking, but insightful. I don't agree with your conclusion about this report resulting in the growth of gov't...but that's just a sense, not really based in any hard cold facts...as is, I suspect, any conjecture at this point. I see no reason why it would not be a positive thing to cut budgets (especially the "untouchable" ones...whoever decided that nonsense!), responsibly restructure the tax code (and for me that means the more you make, the more you pay), and most of all, quit policing the entire world (we make so many enemies by sticking our noses and our way of life into places they don't belong!).

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  2. Here is my response:
    Agreed, Ned - My own hope, and one I assume share, is that along with the needed "cuts" in "untouchables," such as entitlements, including the new entitlement called Obamacare, would be a reduction of the "corporate welfare" written into the code. I think there has to be a sense of shred pain, in a sense, or it will not work. - I think the concern of the author is that the supposed "limits" in the bill to taxation and spending are not really limits. If they are not limits, they will lead to growth of government.

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