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The
2008 Federal Budget
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
The fiscal
year 2008 budget, passed in the House of Representative last week,
is a monument to irresponsibility and profligacy. It shows that
Congress remains oblivious to the economic troubles facing the nation,
and that political expediency trumps all common sense in Washington.
To the extent that proponents and supporters of these unsustainable
budget increases continue to win reelection, it also shows that
many Americans unfortunately continue to believe government can
provide them with a free lunch.
To summarize,
Congress proposes spending roughly $3 trillion in 2008. When I first
came to Congress in 1976, the federal government spent only about
$300 billion. So spending has increased tenfold in thirty years,
and tripled just since 1990.
About one-third
of this $3 trillion is so-called discretionary spending; the remaining
two-thirds is deemed mandatory entitlement spending,
which means mostly Social Security and Medicare. Im sure many
American voters would be shocked to know their elected representatives
essentially have no say over two-thirds of the federal budget, but
that is indeed the case. In fact the most disturbing problem with
the budget is the utter lack of concern for the coming entitlement
meltdown.
For those who
thought a Democratic congress would end the war in Iraq, think again:
their new budget proposes supplemental funds totaling about $150
billion in 2008 and $50 billion in 2009 for Iraq. This is in addition
to the ordinary Department of Defense budget of more than $500 billion,
which the Democrats propose increasing each year just like the Republicans.
The
substitute Republican budget is not much better: while it does call
for freezing some discretionary spending next year, it increases
military spending to make up the difference. The bottom line
is that both the Democratic and Republican budget proposals call
for more total spending in 2008 than 2007.
My
message to my colleagues is simple: If you claim to support smaller
government, dont introduce budgets that increase spending
over the previous year. Can any fiscal conservative in Congress
honestly believe that overall federal spending cannot be cut 25%?
We could cut spending by two-thirds and still have a federal government
as large as it was in 1990.
Congressional
budgets essentially are meaningless documents, with no force of
law beyond the coming fiscal year. Thus budget projections are nothing
more than political posturing, designed to justify deficit spending
in the near term by promising fiscal restraint in the future. But
the time for thrift never seems to arrive: there is always some
new domestic or foreign emergency that requires more spending than
projected.
April
3, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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