Posted on 01/08/2011 12:59:34 AM PST by MontaniSemperLiberi
As part of an effort to figure out what the Republican House SHOULD be doing now, Ive looked up our current budget (or at least the one that was proposed) and figured out what could be eliminated to get the deficit down to $0.
Here is our revenue
|
Budget |
|
Estimates |
Classification |
Full Fiscal Year |
|
|
Budget Receipts |
1,031,926 |
Individual Income Taxes |
|
Corporation Income Taxes |
280,396 |
Social Insurance and Retirement Receipts: |
|
Employment and General Retirement (Off-Budget) |
661,919 |
Employment and General Retirement (On-Budget) |
195,771 |
Unemployment Insurance |
54,422 |
Other Retirement |
4,276 |
Excise Taxes |
75,799 |
Estate and Gift Taxes |
25,076 |
Customs Duties |
26,632 |
Miscellaneous Receipts |
89,508 |
Allowances |
-20,000 |
Total Receipts |
2,425,725 |
(On-Budget) |
1,763,806 |
(Off-Budget) |
661,919 |
The budget goal / magic number is $2.425 Trillion ($2,425,725,000,000.00 for those of you in Rio Linda)
Here are our outlays.
|
Budget |
|
Estimates |
Classification |
Full Fiscal Year |
|
|
Budget Outlays |
|
Legislative Branch |
5,599 |
Judicial Branch |
7,512 |
Department of Agriculture |
144,490 |
Department of Commerce |
11,768 |
Department of Defense-Military |
723,703 |
Department of Education |
101,692 |
Department of Energy |
45,143 |
Department of Health and Human Services |
926,236 |
Department of Homeland Security |
56,366 |
Department of Housing and Urban Development |
51,219 |
Department of the Interior |
14,382 |
Department of Justice |
32,381 |
Department of Labor |
109,288 |
Department of State |
29,309 |
Department of Transportation |
86,280 |
Department of the Treasury: |
|
Interest on Treasury Debt Securities (Gross) |
464,706 |
Other |
94,921 |
Department of Veterans Affairs |
134,106 |
Corps of Engineers |
11,540 |
Other Defense Civil Programs |
54,862 |
Environmental Protection Agency |
11,541 |
Executive Office of the President |
500 |
General Services Administration |
2,279 |
International Assistance Program |
24,659 |
National Aeronautics and Space Administration |
18,732 |
National Science Foundation |
8,374 |
Office of Personnel Management |
73,676 |
Small Business Administration |
1,465 |
Social Security Administration |
789,034 |
Other Independent Agencies |
47,226 |
Allowances |
37,483 |
Undistributed Offsetting Receipts: |
|
Interest |
-188,784 |
Other |
-89,768 |
Total Outlays |
3,841,920 |
(On-Budget) |
3,259,207 |
(Off-Budget) |
582,713 |
Surplus (+) or Deficit (-) |
-1,416,195 |
(On-Budget) |
-1,495,401 |
(Off-Budget) |
79,206 |
The starting point is $3.841 Trillion (Again, 3,841,920,000,000.00 for those of you in Rio Linda)
( http://www.fms.treas.gov/mts/mts1110.pdf , table 4)
So the need is to cut the budget by (1 2.425 / 3.841 ) x 100% = 36.8%
First, there is only one item that cant be cut, interest payments on the national debt. If anyone you know says "Hey, maybe we should default on our debt", get a real big stick and beat them into the ground. A judge will rule that self-defense. Interest gets funded 100%, which works out to $464.7 Billion. That means the rest of the budget has to be cut by 49.0%.
Tier 1 Programs and Funding Levels
These are constitutional level functions plus Social Security and Medicare/Medicaid. I couldnt bring myself to zero those last two out as there are some seasoned citizens that really do need the money to live.
|
Budget |
Montani's |
|
Estimates |
Funding |
|
Full Fiscal Year |
Level |
|
|
|
Department of Justice |
32,381 |
90% |
Judicial Branch |
7,512 |
80% |
Department of Defense-Military |
723,703 |
80% |
Social Security Administration |
789,034 |
80% |
Department of Health and Human Services |
926,236 |
70% |
Department of Veterans Affairs |
134,106 |
70% |
Legislative Branch |
5,599 |
50% |
Executive Office of the President |
500 |
50% |
General Services Administration |
2,279 |
50% |
Office of Personnel Management |
73,676 |
50% |
Department of State |
29,309 |
40% |
One could find larger cuts in Defense, I suspect.
Teir 2 Programs and Funding Levels
These are programs/departments where we do need some funding, i.e. keeping DOE nuclear labs from going hot, etc.
|
Budget |
Montani's |
|
Estimates |
Funding |
|
Full Fiscal Year |
Level |
|
|
|
Other Independent Agencies |
47,226 |
30% |
Department of Energy |
45,143 |
20% |
Department of Homeland Security |
56,366 |
20% |
Department of the Interior |
14,382 |
20% |
Department of Transportation |
86,280 |
20% |
Corps of Engineers |
11,540 |
20% |
Other Defense Civil Programs |
54,862 |
20% |
Environmental Protection Agency |
11,541 |
20% |
International Assistance Program |
24,659 |
20% |
Department of Agriculture |
144,490 |
10% |
National Aeronautics and Space Administration |
18,732 |
10% |
National Science Foundation |
8,374 |
10% |
Some of these funding levels were bumped up from zero after I took a hard look at Tier 1, cut a bit more and added a few billion to the Tier 2 programs. Someone might ask "Why not zero out International Assistance" and I say that if I can bribe President Achmed to turn on Militia leader Moamed then thats a lot of savings out of the Defense budget.
Tier 3 programs and Funding Levels
These departments are eliminated. At best, some can get rolled into other departments like NIST for instance (we really do need a weights and measures agency) but that comes at the expense of whatever funding is available in those departments.
|
Budget |
Montani's |
|
Estimates |
Funding |
|
Full Fiscal Year |
Level |
|
|
|
Department of Commerce |
11,768 |
0% |
Department of Education |
101,692 |
0% |
Department of Housing and Urban Development |
51,219 |
0% |
Department of Labor |
109,288 |
0% |
Small Business Administration |
1,465 |
0% |
That gets us down to a 12 billion surplus!
Thats it. Thats my best guess. Feel free to copy these numbers into your spreadsheet and come up with your own funding levels. You will be well armed to inform the next congressman who says, "We can cut $100 billion this year!" that that is a proverbial fart in the wind as far as Federal spending goes.
Thanks.
On first read I don’t know the real end point, but at least some courageous soul has taken a first step to sift the govt. pubs and put out a framework that helps understanding.
Drilling down into the detail will give more clarity to the % reductions.
The Republicans need to have a zero-deficit budget in their pocket.
Then they can negotiate on how to get from here to there.
One reason this is necessary is because claims that they will refuse to raise the debt ceiling unless a deal is struck on the budget will not be taken seriously by the administration unless the Republicans show they are ready to make the move if necessary.
This is standard negotiating tactics. You can’t beat something with nothing.
The Republicans need to have a zero-deficit budget in their pocket.
Then they can negotiate on how to get from here to there.
One reason this is necessary is because claims that they will refuse to raise the debt ceiling unless a deal is struck on the budget will not be taken seriously by the administration unless the Republicans show they are ready to make the move if necessary.
This is standard negotiating tactics. You can’t beat something with nothing.
Sorry for the double post.
One approach would be to defer interest payments for a few years until the budget is under control.
That should be part of any serious budget cutting proposal.
While critics will howl that this will increase interest rates—that will encourage DC to cut faster and harder—a good thing.
Dangerous move.
If interest rates spike before the deficits are brought to zero it all may collapse.
I read somewhere that if the interest rates go to 11% at the current debt level then it doesn't take all that long before all revenue will have to go to pay just the interest.
What's scary is that 11% isn't all that unimaginable.
Frankly, if the House doesn't do something much more aggressive than the 100B cut in the budget then it all will eventually collapse. 100B isn't a serious response to deficit spending in the Trillion range.
up4later
Good stuff, but you haven’t gone far enough. The $12 billion “surplus” would need to be applied to paying down our debt. We can’t just keep paying the interest, we actually need to pay down $14 trillion in debt and $12 billion is a drop in a huge bucket. Even if we could find $500 billion a year to pay off the debt it would take us over a quarter of a century to pay off the debt. What are the chances of staying on the kind of budget that cuts spending far more drastically than what you’re showing for 28 years? It is inevitable that we are going to collapse under this debt, default on the debt, or have blood in the streets over the severe austerity required to come up with $500 billion per year. Decades of criminally insane spending has brought us here and it will be our children and grandchildren who will suffer the catastrophic consequences of it. This makes me so sick about the future of our country that I want to throw up.
FWIW, Greece is at 12.6
So yes, thanks to Obama, the door to bankruptcy has been opened.
They really need to get the inflation rate and the deficit under the year to year growth. With revenues around 3 and spending at 4.5, they would have to cut spending down to around 3.3 trillion. They need to cut about 1.2 trillion or so to get the deficit under control.
Across the boards cuts sufficient to bring the budget into balance in a year or two would be hard, even disastrous, on many parts of our society and economy. But the total collapse of the house of cards that our budgeting process has become will be even worse.
An honest, good-faith, move toward ending the madness would result in a much stronger economy and therefore rising revenues.
Exactly where I am.
We need to get down to $0.00. That’s our end goal.
My timeline to do so is very, very short, i.e. September 2011. Why? Because our Debt to GDP ratio is now 100% (14T in debt, 14T in GDP) and that’s the point most countries default and there ain’t no country that can save us like they saved Greece.
So that gets us into brinksmanship. I posted the Federal Cash Flow situation this weekend http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/2653239/posts It ain’t pretty but it is what it is.
Baring a plan to get the deficit down to $0.00, I’m thinking of going Gault. I’ll pull all my cash out of my 401k, convert it to metal and wait for the end times.
Let me get my big stick.
Our interest payments are estimated to be $464.7Billion with the interest rate at 2.5%. This is historically low. If interest rates go up to something on the high side, say 7.5%, that interest payment goes up by a factor of 3 to $1,394.1 Billion.
That difference means the end of our defense budget, Medicare/Medicaid or Social Security.
We have to pay off our interest payments.
Agree 100%. Even to the sick to stomach point. It really is sad, isn’t it?
Frankly I doubt we have the will to do it. Paul Ryan’s statement that he will have trouble finding $100billion in cuts because we are already 1/2 way into the fiscal year is a joke. What a clown.
I don’t think it’s quite that bad yet. There are plenty of other jurisdictions that are in worse shape than America, so there are plenty of investment dollars that are going to get dumped into the dollar as a flight towards safety.
You’re arguing based on transients rather than fundamentals. Yes there is a certain amount of pull to the US. Note however that the foundation has been laid to get off of US currency. Sure it’s small now but the WB has just issued it’s first bond in yuan.
HONG KONG (AP) The World Bank is issuing its first bonds denominated in China’s yuan in Hong Kong, joining a growing number of borrowers tapping the new debt market as Beijing gradually promotes its tightly controlled currency abroad.
They are setting up the mechanisms and getting over the initial learning curve. When confidence in the US is lost there will be a great sucking sound towards China.
It makes you wonder why we even have a Navy. If China can ruin us now, what good is a F-35B?
I’m watching the Euro and the Yen. When both start falling out against the dollar (as in EU being 80 cents on the dollar), then it will be time to worry about the US.
Fiscal problems will crop up there first, and spread to the US, not the other way around.
Good comment about Ryan.
Incremental thinking is what got us into this mess.
It will take radical thinking to get us out of it—if we can get out of it.
Waiting for other countries to fail first, waiting for somebody else to do something, that is incremental thinking.
It dosen’t work well when you have flown off the cliff and are halfway down.
You need to reach for the ledge even if it breaks some limbs if you are successful.
(Defaulting on the interest is reaching for the ledge—it is a binding commitment for a future balanced budget—with a 460B a year kick-start towards your goal.)
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