Our Debt Nightmare Got Worse

 

The rascals did it again. Last December, Congress passed a gigantic spending bill that digs the debt hole deeper, using a devious process intentionally designed to be opaque. Americans, never that fascinated with budget issues, were well into the holiday season. Media attention was focused on impeachment and the perpetual horse race.

So, non-nerds may not yet realize that late at night on December 16, Congress released a 2,313-page bill with a cool $1.4 trillion in spending and another $500 billion in tax cuts and favors for special interests.

The bill was developed entirely by a small group of leaders without debate or examination by a committee. Two-and-a-half days later, after a floor debate limited to 90 minutes, the bill was passed. It was one of 16 votes taken that day, one day before government funding would expire.

Threatening government shutdown has become a regular leadership stratagem to force rushed votes on spending bills. Although these “shutdowns“ are structured to ensure that no government employees or beneficiaries are harmed, they are still feared by politicians.

Republicans know the media will blame them no matter what and Democrats don’t need coaxing to vote for more spending, so the cynical ploy worked again. Bogus threatened shutdowns cumulatively have resulted in trillions of dollars added to the federal debt.

This corrupt process inevitably results in terrible policy. The Center for Responsible Federal Budget puts the price tag of this one bill at 5% of total GDP (!) by 2029. The tax cuts, instead of stimulating growth, repealed levies intended to help pay for Obamacare.

The “Cadillac tax“ on health insurance was ended, a sop to unions whose members can still enjoy lavish health insurance policies with no incentives to limit health spending. The tax that insurance companies agreed to pay to reap the blessings of Obamacare was also repealed.

No other funding sources were raised nor were any spending offsets included. Obama’s claim that his plan “wouldn’t add a dime“ to the national debt turned out to be just another lie.

This is what you get when critical, complicated legislation is crafted by four people negotiating in a room, just before government funding expires. Congress should pass reforms like the bipartisan Prevent Government Shutdowns Act, which would ensure that when spending bills aren’t passed before deadline, the previous year‘s budget continues intact.

But the harsh reality is that there’s little interest in budget reform or restraint because federal deficits are a spent force politically. The federal debt is an incomprehensible $22 trillion, up over $2 trillion during the Trump years of much-touted prosperity. Yet nobody cares. Few politicians any longer even pay lip service to slowing the rate of growth. Nothing to see here, folks.

Instead, Democrats now propose fantastical new spending plans and play gotcha games, combing through each other’s records for evidence of such indiscretions as past support for Social Security reform. For fiscal conservatives, when Donald Trump announced his disinterest in deficit reduction, interest immediately dissipated.

Who wants to be castigated for supposedly hating minorities, children, students, and grandmas when there is zero chance for success anyway? Meanwhile, millennials stand idly by as if none of this could possibly affect them.

In the Wall Street Journal, advocates of Modern Monetary Theory claim to have discovered a bright new approach. They argue that for currency-producing governments, the national debt is never a reason to limit budget deficits. Unlike individuals and businesses, governments can “always make payments as they come due” and can “never be forced to default” since the debt can always be paid simply by creating more money. Their conclusion is that we should “worry about fighting climate change and injustice,” not the debt.

Apparently, this is what now passes for genius in some quarters. Yet inflation would be the obvious result, then hyperinflation as debt service costs grew. Ask Zimbabwe, Venezuela, or any other country that has tried it how that plan worked out. Untold misery and societal breakdown lay down that path.

We have a problem. We want more stuff from government than we are willing to pay for. When interest rates rise, which they will eventually, it won’t be pretty.

Published in Economics, Politics
Like this post? Want to comment? Join Ricochet’s community of conservatives and be part of the conversation. Join Ricochet for Free.

There are 11 comments.

Become a member to join the conversation. Or sign in if you're already a member.
  1. OldPhil Coolidge
    OldPhil
    @OldPhil

    When the Green Nude Eelers talk about the next catastrophe being just around the corner, they don’t realize this is the disaster that’s going to hit us before anything else.

    • #1
  2. DonG (skeptic) Coolidge
    DonG (skeptic)
    @DonG

    When we bankrupt the government we won’t need a wall to keep illegal aliens out.  So, in a way, the debt helps pay for itself.

    • #2
  3. JoelB Member
    JoelB
    @JoelB

    If there are any amendments to the constitution needed, perhaps the one that should be sought is a balanced budget amendment.

    Over two thousand pages and two and a half days for the Congress to review and debate the budget. Talk about obscure and opaque.

    • #3
  4. Clifford A. Brown Member
    Clifford A. Brown
    @CliffordBrown

    Tom Patterson: The “Cadillac tax“ on health insurance was ended, a sop to unions whose members can still enjoy lavish health insurance policies with no incentives to limit health spending.

    The demonization of good health insurance plans, ones where workers are not forced to make the decisions you prefer, is a corruption of conservatism. “Cadillac tax” is classic class warfare language aimed at skilled labor.

    • #4
  5. I Walton Member
    I Walton
    @IWalton

    it falls apart when the demand for dollars declines strongly.  We can’t know when that will happen, but it will likely be a Chinese initiative and they’ll know how and when.

    • #5
  6. Gumby Mark (R-Meth Lab of Demo… Coolidge
    Gumby Mark (R-Meth Lab of Demo…
    @GumbyMark

    Clifford A. Brown (View Comment):

    Tom Patterson: The “Cadillac tax“ on health insurance was ended, a sop to unions whose members can still enjoy lavish health insurance policies with no incentives to limit health spending.

    The demonization of good health insurance plans, ones where workers are not forced to make the decisions you prefer, is a corruption of conservatism. “Cadillac tax” is classic class warfare language aimed at skilled labor.

    Yep, and to add to that back in 2011 HHS estimated that up to 93 million Americans, most non-union, would lose their company coverage as the Cadillac tax kicked in. 

    • #6
  7. Instugator Thatcher
    Instugator
    @Instugator

    Tom Patterson: The tax cuts, instead of stimulating growth, repealed levies intended to help pay for Obamacare.

    How do you know that these tax cuts don’t stimulate growth?

    • #7
  8. Instugator Thatcher
    Instugator
    @Instugator

    Tom Patterson: The “Cadillac tax“ on health insurance was ended, a sop to unions whose members can still enjoy lavish health insurance policies with no incentives to limit health spending.

    Why does limiting the spending of private health insurance matter to anyone apart from the patient, the insurance company or the provider?

    In other words why should we care?

    • #8
  9. Instugator Thatcher
    Instugator
    @Instugator

    Tom Patterson: The tax that insurance companies agreed to pay to reap the blessings of Obamacare was also repealed.

    Since Obamacare is not actually a blessing then we shouldn’t charge insurance payers for foregoing the pleasure.

    • #9
  10. Instugator Thatcher
    Instugator
    @Instugator

    Tom Patterson: The Center for Responsible Federal Budget puts the price tag of this one bill at 5% of total GDP (!) by 2029.

    What does this mean?

    a. it will be worth 5% of GDP per year by 2029? 

    or

    b. The cumulative cost will be worth 5% of 2029’s GDP? (meaning it is only worth .5% each year)?

    • #10
  11. The Reticulator Member
    The Reticulator
    @TheReticulator

    The Deep State needs to be a growth industry in order to thrive. It’s hard to have that without ever increasing levels of federal debt.

    • #11
Become a member to join the conversation. Or sign in if you're already a member.