Who Is Fighting For Fiscal Responsibility?Who Is Fighting For Fiscal Responsibility?
Washington, DC,
December 16, 2019
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Forbes - Ben Ritz
The federal government is ending 2019 with a national debt of over $17 trillion for the first time in U.S. history - and if one includes intragovernmental debt, such as that held by the Social Security trust funds, this figure rises to $23 trillion. Beginning in 2020, the government is projected to add more than $1 trillion to the debt every year in perpetuity. Amid this rising tide of red ink, is anyone willing to fight for fiscal responsibility? Certainly not President Donald Trump. Since taking office three years ago, Trump earned his crown as the self-proclaimed king of debt by signing into law a $2 trillion tax cut and shattering spending caps created under President Obama. Congressional Republicans – the same folks who demanded these caps be imposed in the first place – had no qualms about charging these costs to the national credit card. After eight years of lambasting deficits under President Obama, most Republican deficit hawks have revealed themselves to be nothing more than peacocks. Thankfully, there is some leadership on the other side of the aisle. When Democrats retook control of the U.S. House of Representatives earlier this year, Speaker Nancy Pelosi reinstated pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) rules requiring legislation that cuts taxes or increases automatic spending to be fully offset. Although not all of her caucus supports PAYGO, the moderate House Blue Dog Coalition – which spearheaded the push to bring back the rule after it was repealed by Republicans in 2011 – has rebuffed efforts to waive PAYGO, sending a clear signal that at least some Democrats oppose digging the nation’s fiscal hole deeper. But stopping digging is only the first step to getting out of the hole. Our annual budget deficit, currently the largest among developed nations, is already on track to grow faster than the economy. Thanks to changing demographics and a shrinking ratio of workers to retirees, the costs of federal health-care and retirement programs are increasing faster than the revenues needed to finance them. As deficits rise, the trust funds that credit Social Security and Medicare with past surpluses will run down, leading to across-the-board benefit cuts when they exhaust within the next 15 years absent Congressional action before then. Washington must adopt a new fiscal policy that strengthens public investments in the foundation of our economy, modernizes federal health and retirement programs to reflect an aging society, and creates a pro-growth tax code that raises the revenue necessary to support these critical government functions. Reps. Ben McAdams (D-UT) and Ed Case (D-HI), co-chairs of the Blue Dog Task Force for Fiscal Responsibility and Government Reform, introduced three bipartisan bills last month that could help move the federal budget in that direction:
Each of these three proposals has different strengths and weaknesses, and none are likely to become law so long as Donald Trump sits in the oval office, but they all serve to start a conversation about the kinds of tax and spending policies necessary to solve our nation’s fiscal challenges. At a time when Congress is considering deepening our debt binge with up to $1 trillion in additional tax cuts, and some presidential candidates are proposing tens of trillions of dollars in new social spending without credible plans to pay for them, it’s a conversation that couldn’t be starting soon enough. |