The
Budget Battle
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Recently
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.: Use
the Dollar or Else
Watching the
public debate on the budget, we are reminded of two boys on the
floor playing with toys. One has a bear and the other has a dinosaur.
They are forever threatening the other kid with taking the toy away.
One warns he will take away the dinosaur (military spending) and
the other says he will grab the bear (domestic spending). They pull
and tug and eventually settle the dispute so long as each gets to
keep his favorite.
Oh, and one
other thing: both toys belong to other children.
That’s the
public debate, which should strike anyone as preposterous on its
face. If the goal in this crisis is to balance the budget without
raising taxes, everything has to be cut regardless of political
ideology. But of course that’s not what political parties do. The
goal of a political party is to shovel the largess in the direction
of its constituent supporters while punishing the loyalists of the
other party, which is attempting to do the same.
The tit-for-tat
is always resolved the same way: more for both sides, from third
parties.
In other words,
this is all political play, which is obvious from the numbers and
the norms. In the first place, no one is talking about actual cuts,
not even the supposedly radical Republicans. These are cuts in projected
spending, meaning that everyone is dealing with symbolic changes
in a future that is just as symbolic. Even on paper, the only way
to consider these cuts is to compare them with the GDP and the national
debt -- both of which are slated to rise. Forgetting those two metrics,
and looking at the actual numbers, there are no cuts at all and
only increases.
Even the dating
of the Republican’s balanced budget is ridiculous. So the budget
will be fully balanced in 2040? That’s three decades from now. Few
of the people in office will still be in office, and many will be
dead. To see how viable this is, consider how many political plans
of the year 1982 still survive today.
The Republican
plan proposes domestic cuts in these gargantuan programs like Social
Security and Medicare with nothing specific beyond the old prattle
about establishing bi-partisan commissions and sending block grants
to the states. There is nothing specific here beyond a numbers-laden
pipe dream. No programs are abolished, no benefits are slashed or
even trimmed, and although the propagandists claim to attack the
culture of spending in Washington, there is not one word about taking
on the money-printing machine that made the $14 trillion national
debt possible in the first place.
The real legislative
battle is over current-year spending, and there the Republicans
appear to be taking a slightly less profligate line than one might
expect, due to pressure from Tea Party types. The government might
"shut down" unless an agreement is reached, and I hope
it happens. It doesn’t, of course, mean the end of government as
we know it, but it can produce a few days of entertainment.
The Republicans
are at least correct on this point: the government’s finances are
in a state of total calamity, thanks to them and the Democrats.
With each shift in the business cycle, we keep going through the
same stages, only it gets worse each time. During the boom, tax
revenues soar and the president and Congress initiate vast new spending
for their interest groups. Then the recession hits and tax revenue
plummets, driving up the deficit. But rather than cut back on spending,
economists instruct Congress to do what they want to do anyway,
spend even more! And so it goes, as we spiral down into the pit.
The
only reason this nonsense is sustainable is due to the promise of
the Federal Reserve to back all this spending with money creation.
The Fed is what makes the whole racket too big too fail. This is
why budget battles end up being insignificant to the future of government
spending patterns. If the Republicans wanted to seriously take on
the fiscal mess, they would begin with reining in the Federal Reserve.
Apart from such reforms, budget battles end up being theatre.
The time to
start paying close attention is when Democrats take on entitlement
programs, Republicans propose serious cuts in military spending,
and both parties agree on fundamental monetary reform. Until that
time, these battles have all the significance of the battle between
the two children. Both sides need to return their toys to their
proper owners.
April
9, 2011
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail], former editorial assistant to Ludwig von Mises and congressional
chief of staff to Ron Paul, is founder and chairman of the Mises
Institute, executor for the estate of Murray N. Rothbard, and
editor of LewRockwell.com.
See his
books.
Copyright
© 2011 by LewRockwell.com. Permission to reprint in whole or in
part is gladly granted, provided full credit is given.
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