|
Demographic Reality and the Entitlement State
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
The Government
Accountability Office, or GAO, is an investigative arm of Congress
charged with the thankless task of accounting for the money received
and spent by the federal government. As you might imagine, people
who spend all day examining the nitty-gritty realities of federal
spending and deficits might not share the voters' enthusiasm for
grand campaign promises.
David Walker,
Comptroller General at GAO, has been on a speaking tour of the U.S
recently and he pulls no punches when explaining just how precarious
our nation's entitlement system really is.
He explains
that Social Security and Medicare are headed for a train wreck because
of demographic trends and rising health care costs. The number of
younger taxpayers for each older retiree will continue to decline.
The demand for "free" prescription drugs under Medicare
will explode. If present trends continue, by 2040 the entire federal
budget will be consumed by Social Security and Medicare. The only
options for balancing the budget would be cutting total federal
spending by about 60%, or doubling federal taxes.
Furthermore,
Walker asserts, we cannot grow our way out of this problem. Faster
economic growth can only delay the inevitable hard choices. To close
the long-term entitlement gap, the U.S. economy would have to grow
by double digits every year for the next 75 years.
In short, Mr.
Walker is telling the political class that the status quo cannot
be maintained. He is to be commended for his refreshing honesty
and unwillingness to provide excuses for the two political parties,
the administration, or the even the entitlement-minded American
public.
I urge everyone
interested to visit the GAO website,
where you can view a report entitled: "Our
Nation's Fiscal Outlook: The Federal Government's Long-Term Budget
Imbalance." This report should be required reading for
every politician in Washington.
Are ever-growing
entitlement and military expenditures really consistent with a free
country? Do these expenditures, and the resulting deficits, make
us more free or less free? Should the government or the marketplace
provide medical care? Should younger taxpayers be expected to provide
retirement security and health care even for affluent retirees?
Should the U.S. military be used to remake whole nations? Are the
programs, agencies, and departments funded by Congress each year
constitutional? Are they effective? Could they operate with a smaller
budget? Would the public even notice if certain programs were eliminated
altogether? These are the kinds of questions the American people
must ask, even though Congress lacks the courage to do so.
If
we hope to avoid a calamitous financial future for our nation, we
must address the hardest question of all: What is the proper role
for government in our society? The answer to this question will
determine how prosperous and free we remain in the decades to come.
November
14, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
Ron
Paul Archives
|