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Tag Archives: Balanced Budget Amendment

Hillary breaks out of the “Beltway Deficit Feedback Loop”

04 Sunday Sep 2016

Posted by willykay in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Balanced Budget Amendment, Chuck Raasch, Claire McCaskill, Deficit reduction, Jason Kander, missouri, national debt

There must be something in the local water that leads Missouri Democrats to wail and figuratively rend their garments over the question of deficits and the national debt. It also often leads them to support what can only be described as stupid policies. Claire McCaskill worked hard to establish her me-too, “bipartisan” fiscal credentials by embracing the very bad idea of a balanced budget amendment. Jason Kander, who hopes to join her in the Senate next year, drew gasps of horror from many potential Democratic supporters when he jumped on that same bandwagon. We’ll soon see how far it will carry him.

Showing that he’s on the cutting edge of Missouri deficit thinking, Chuck Raasch, a political columnist at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, revived the Oh-dear-me-the-deficit-is-looming! refrain in a column published today (9/3), which dealt with the responses of the two presidential candidates when asked to describe what they would do to reduce the deficit (yearly overspending) and manage the nation’s debt (the  sum of past years’ deficits).” Raasch was disturbed by what he considered the failure of either to adequately address the issue. In the case of Donald Trump, who, as Raasch points out seemed to confuse the trade deficit with the federal spending deficit, most rational people would agree.

As for Hillary Clinton, Raasch seems to think that while she proposes tax reform to generate new revenue, she fails to address what he calls the “eat-your-peas challenges,” presumably spending cuts to programs like social security and Medicare, the necessity of which Raasch seems to think has been indisputably established. He also gives short shrift to Clinton’s  implicit claim that directing the new tax revenue to infrastructure and education spending would generate deficit-shrinking growth. In short, Raasch evaluates her answer on the basis of the bill of goods Republicans have been hawking since the dawn of modern political time.

First off we should get our facts straight. Deficit spending is not necessarily the problem alarmists want us to think it is. Lots of economists, liberal and otherwise, are emphatic that our current yearly deficits are not excessive when viewed as a percentage of GDP, nor is the national debt potentially unmanageable.

Among those who hold these views are widely respected economists like the Nobel prize winner Paul Krugman who is actually arguing that now is the time to increase the deficit. Nobel prize winner Joseph Stiglitz believes that there is a long-term debt problem although he has definitively rejected the “eat-your-peas” solution. (He famously described anti-debt, European austerity programs as a “suicide pact” – a description that seems prescient as austerity-raddled EU economies stall.) Neither are industry economists inclined to worry about current deficits. Business Insider notes that Scott Brown, chief economist at the investment firm Raymond James has argued that the current deficit rate of %2.5 of GDP is easily sustainable and goes even further, asserting that warnings about the long-term dire effects of the national debt are overstated.

Many of these same economists would also endorse the deficit reducing effect of the proposed Clinton program of progressive tax reform combined with economic programs designed to lessen economic inequality. Although this program leaves Raasch unimpressed, it is very suggestive of the remedies proposed by economists like Stiglitz and Brookings economist Henry Aaron who remarks that:

Many analysts, from both political parties, agree that the federal government should do more now to spur economic growth and that it should simultaneously take steps to lower projected long-term deficits. Republicans and Democrats often don’t agree on the details. But here is one illustrative strategy that economists from both parties have endorsed. The first element is increased investment in what is called ‘infrastructure’—meaning roads, bridges, tunnels, harbors, and airports. Many are in need of repair, replacement, or expansion. Furthermore, interest rates are abnormally low just now, which means that borrowing is unusually inexpensive. When interest rates are low is the best time to undertake long-lived investments. Carrying out those repairs and improvements would put people to work now and improve productive capacity in the future. So would increased support for scientific research and increased spending to support post-high-school education of those who cannot now afford it. These measures would promote economic recovery right now and boost U.S. productivity in the future.

Hillary isn’t necessarily evading the “eat-your-peas” issues, she just has a different perspective than the false economic orthodoxy sold to journalists like Raasch.

Raasch, like our other Missouri Democratic Sistren and Brethren mentioned above, is a victim of what Greg Sargent has described as the “Beltway Deficit Feedback Loop” in which “the relentless bipartisan focus on the deficit convinces voters to be worried about it, which in turn leads lawmakers to spend still more time talking about it and less time talking about the economy” – the real economy, that is, the economy in which the deficit is a rather minor consideration and the growth of the national debt is an easily managed problem.

And why is this feedback loop so prevalent? To paraphrase Mount Holyoake College professor Douglas J. Amy, it has provided the GOP with an issue to help fan resentment against government and against their Democratic opposition. Additionally, it is a tool that can be used to fight progressive programs that the GOP has long opposed such as Medicare and Social Security.

What’s sad is the fact that the deficit chorus is endlessly echoed by otherwise competent journalists like Raasch and that otherwise astute politicians like McCaskill and Kander have so easily succumbed. But we can still be happy that we have a presidential candidate who declines to sing the same, sad old song.

*Edited slightly for clarity, 9/4, 10:29 am.

[This article has been cross-posted to Occasional Planet  under the title, “Hillary has a progressive view of the deficit and national debt. [They’re different, by the way.]”]

[For a more comprehensive discussion  of  Hillary’s economic policies and the concomitant debt reduction strategy see my later post, “More on Hillary Clinton’s approach to federal spending and debt.”]

Rep. Vicky Hartzler (r): never let a vote get in the way of a really bad public policy

19 Saturday Nov 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

4th Congressional District, Balanced Budget Amendment, Bruce Bartlett, missouri, Vicky Hartzler

The posturing continues in Washington:

@RepHartzler Rep. Vicky Hartzler

Just made a historic vote for the good people of MO-4: voted for a Balanced Budget Amendment to the U.S. Constitution! Must get 2/3. 6 hours ago

@RepHartzler Rep. Vicky Hartzler

Final vote-261 to 165. 29 votes short of 2/3. A sad day. Mostly democrats blocked an opportunity to force Washington to live within means. 5 hours ago

Means? Really? And dubya’s tax windfall for millionaires and billionaires has nothing to do with that?

The resolution failed, it needed two thirds of the House:

FINAL VOTE RESULTS FOR ROLL CALL 858

     H J RES 2      2/3 YEA-AND-NAY      18-Nov-2011      1:58 PM

     QUESTION:  On Motion to Suspend the Rules and Pass, as Amended

     BILL TITLE: Proposing a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution of the United States

—- YEAS    261 —

Akin

Emerson

Graves (MO)

Hartzler

Long

Luetkemeyer

—- NAYS    165 —



Carnahan

Clay

Cleaver

The concept doesn’t get rave reviews from certain circles:

Dopiest Constitutional Amendment of All Time?

31 Mar 2011

Posted by Bruce Bartlett

….In short, this is quite possibly the stupidest constitutional amendment I think I have ever seen. It looks like it was drafted by a couple of interns on the back of a napkin. Every senator cosponsoring this POS should be ashamed of themselves….

[emphasis added]

…Bartlett‘s work is informed by many years in government, including service on the staffs of Congressmen Ron Paul and Jack Kemp and Senator Roger Jepsen; as staff director of the Joint Economic Committee of Congress; senior policy analyst in the Reagan White House; and deputy assistant secretary for economic policy at the Treasury Department during the George H.W. Bush administration….

[emphasis added]

Fancy that.

Why weren't they screaming for a Balanced Budget Amendment when Bush was running up the bills?

05 Friday Aug 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Balanced Budget Amendment, Dumbassery, GOP hypocrisy, Kabuki theater, Socialist

Has anyone else noticed that they only trot out their ridiculous “Balanced Budget Amendment” when a Democratic President is sitting in the Oval Office? We first heard about the idea when Bill Clinton was the President, and it went nowhere. (Oddly enough, you may recall that Bill Clinton balanced the budget, closed the deficit and put the country on track to pay off the national debt, and he did it without a Balanced Budget Amendment.)

In the history of bad ideas, you will find some doozies — lawn darts, New Coke, the AMC Pacer, crystal meth — but few rival the Balanced Budget Amendment in either weight or depth of pure, unadulterated, ideology-driven dumbassery. Indeed, the BBA deserves it’s own wing in the Bad Idea Hall of Shame.

But it isn’t just a bad idea. It’s a dishonest one, too boot.

That is because the only thing it does is make it nearly impossible to raise revenue, while doing diddly-squat to rein in Bush-like profligate deficit spending. Bruce Bartlett called  it a “pathetic joke” because it not only lacks any enforcement mechanism, it lacks an enactment mechanism. There is nothing in the thing to prompt Congress to do anything about deficit spending. Not. One. Thing.

It’s simply a Grover Norquist wetdream, an addendum to our owner’s manual that would make it next to impossible to ever, in any way, increase revenues, let alone raise taxes.

It’s a ludicrous idea, and it deserves mockery, scorn and ridicule from every Democrat and less-crazy republican in the country. That is why this is so utterly infuriating.

One of the big victories by tea-party Republicans in the debt-ceiling measure signed into law Tuesday was securing a requirement that Congress vote later this year on a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution.

The measure would need a two-thirds vote in each chamber, and then ratification by 38 states, to succeed. And most observers believe passage in the Democratic-controlled Senate is all but impossible.

Enter Sen. Mark Udall, the centrist Democrat from Colorado, who has introduced an amendment proposal and said Tuesday that Democratic leaders have chosen his legislation to be considered in the fall.

President Obama and other senior Democrats have opposed any balanced-budget amendment, but the idea is popular with many voters – particularly independents, who are growing more fiscally conservative.

Udall is up for reelection in 2014. Many of his Democratic co-sponsors – including Sens. Claire McCaskill (Mo.), Joe Manchin (W. Va.), Bill Nelson (Fla.) and Ben Nelson (Neb.) – are running this year and need support from centrists.

Republicans in the Senate will likely rally around their own proposal, sponsored by Utah Sens. Orrin Hatch and Mike Lee, which would limit spending to 18 percent of GDP and require congressional supermajorities to raise taxes.

A bad idea is a bad idea, even when it can be described as “thoughtful.”

We don’t need a Balanced Budget Amendment to balance the budget and generate a surplus instead of spending shortfalls. All it takes is the political will to increase tax rates to what they were in the prosperous nineties and the backbone to say “no” to republican spendthrifts like Reagan and Little Boots Bush who wracked up most of the national debt all by themselves and ran deficits every year they submitted a budget.

In other words, the BBA is a cop-out. It’s a fig-leaf behind which the republicans can try to hide their shame and disguise their profligate ways.

But it is especially galling that a Democrat from Colorado is the braintrust from the Democratic side of the aisle that “went there,” because Colorado is the state that passed a “taxpayers bill of rights” back in 1994, and the BBA is to the nation what TABOR is to a state, and in Colorado it has been a formula for decline, cutting education at every level and dealing harsh blows to public health, including gutting Medicaid.

I don’t know about you, but I like the services my government provides, at every level. Everyone does, unless they’re a Randian nutjob who believes in hackneyed, magical thinking and who fervently believes (wrongly) that they would be fine without government because they are rugged individualists.

I like the fact that my city has good public transit and the purest drinking water in the country. I like that the streets are safe to drive on, I have nice, wide well-maintained sidewalks, and that a call to 911 will summon a cop, a firetruck or an ambulance should I need the services they provide.

I like the fact that my county provides healthcare to all via a voluntary tax levy we passed in 2005 with an overwhelming majority of voters supporting.

I like the services my state provides — highways, state parks, Medicaid, public health services, the highway patrol that keeps us safe on the state roadways…

I like the stuff the federal government provides. I like having a military. I like Social Security and Medicare and TriCare and the interstate highway system and scientific research and NASA and the FBI and the intelligence services.

I like having peace-of-mind when I fill a prescription that the drug I am taking is the drug that my physician prescribed, that it is safe if taken as directed and that the licensed pharmacist isn’t selling me baking soda. I like that the FAA keeps the skies safe when I fly and that the EPA keeps the businesses that operate near where I live from fouling the air and water and that OSHA makes sure that my workplace is safe.

I like that the government does these things and I don’t mind paying for them in the form of taxes, and I don’t want the beast starved. I want the beast well-fed and fit and groomed.

And if that makes me a Socialist in your eyes, then we’re on the same page.

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