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Do These Deficits Look Familiar?
Reason ^ | January 26, 2004 | Jonathan Rauch

Posted on 01/27/2004 1:33:53 AM PST by neverdem

Meet Richard Milhous Bush

A polarizing Republican president, reviled by liberals, unseats the Democrats, talks like a conservative, but then sails blithely into a cataract of red ink. President Bush's record is beginning to shape up that way, uncannily resembling the record of—Ronald Reagan?

Well, yes, the resemblance is there for all to see, and Bush no doubt draws reassurance from it. A sharp fiscal deterioration fed by reductions in taxes, increases in defense spending, and a recession: Where have we seen this before? From a fiscal point of view, however, the early 2000s resemble not just the early 1980s and the Reagan era but also— perhaps even more—the early 1970s and the Nixon era. Which is not a resemblance that Bush or the Republican leadership in Congress should find reassuring.

On the principle that, once in a while, the past provides some insight into the future, consider for a moment the Nixon era, defined broadly to include the Ford administration, which largely continued Nixon's domestic policies.

The economy boomed in the 1960s, growing at 4.7 percent a year (in inflation-adjusted dollars), on average, from 1962 to 1968. Revenues poured in the door, and President Johnson and the Democratic Congress—then as now, the same party controlled both branches—celebrated the bounty with a host of federal initiatives. But stingy Southern conservatives still ruled the Capitol, and so Johnson tended to seed the ground with fistfuls of new but small programs, most of them funded modestly but good for lines in speeches. (Some of them, notably Medicare, were acorns from which mighty oaks would grow, but that would come later.)

Except in the peak war year of 1968, deficits in the prosperous 1960s ran at or below about 1 percent of the gross domestic product. The war was expensive, and for a while, Johnson tried having guns and butter, but in June of 1968, shortly before the election, he imposed a 10 percent surtax on individuals and corporations. That and some finagling helped him post a small surplus for fiscal 1969. But the surtax was temporary (it ended in 1970). As Johnson's term ended, the country's fiscal situation was unsettled. The next president could make things a good deal better, or he could make them much worse. Along came Nixon. Not a man known for making things better.

Nixon cared little for domestic policy, but he regarded himself as a conservative reformer, he wanted to make a mark on history, and he was swayed by the enlightened economic wisdom of his day, which was liberal by today's standards. Above all, Nixon, being Nixon, was determined to snatch up every inch of desirable political real estate, rather than give a Democratic opponent anything to run on.

And so he watered and fertilized LBJ's Great Society seedlings while proposing not a few big-government initiatives of his own—most memorably a "Family Assistance Plan" that would have guaranteed a federal payment of $1,600 (about $8,000 in today's money) to every family of four with no income, a scheme that would have added as many as 12 million people to the welfare rolls. (To their everlasting regret, congressional liberals helped kill the plan, insisting it was too stingy—a mistake their successors did not repeat last year with Bush's new prescription drug benefit for Medicare.) Nondefense discretionary spending, 3.2 percent of GDP in fiscal 1969, rose to 4 percent in fiscal 1975 and to 4.6 percent by fiscal 1977, President Ford's last budget year.

Nixon spent even faster on entitlements. Fearing that an economic downturn might damage his re-election prospects, he agreed in 1972 to a stunning 20 percent permanent increase in Social Security benefits. The increase originated with House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Wilbur Mills of Arkansas, a Democrat who got it into his head to run for president. Nixon, determined as ever not to be outflanked, briefly resisted but then, waving his hat, climbed aboard the gravy train. He signed the increase into law in September 1972, in time for seniors to receive their fattened checks on October 1, a month before the election.

The increase was so large that it accounted for more than half of the growth in personal income in the fourth quarter of 1972. In case anyone missed the point, the administration helpfully sent out notices letting seniors know that their Social Security checks had swelled.

Thanks to that and other examples of Nixon's generosity, entitlement spending grew from 6.5 percent of GDP in 1969 to 10.6 percent in 1975, an unprecedented increase. Nixon managed to pay for more than half of this new domestic spending by cutting defense as the Vietnam War wound down. But the peace dividend proved to be merely a temporary windfall; the defense cuts overshot, and detente collapsed. By the late 1970s, President Carter found himself obliged to reverse course and begin a defense buildup, which Reagan accelerated.

And so, by the time of Ford and Carter, the government was running chronic deficits of between 2 and 4 percent of GDP. Filling that fiscal hole was to be the preoccupation of every president from Carter to Clinton.

Reagan is generally blamed for the deficit crisis of the 1980s and early 1990s. He certainly made a bad situation worse, running a deficit that reached a recessionary peak of 6 percent of GDP. Remember, though, that the deficit was already 2.6 percent of GDP when Reagan took office, and it was 2.8 percent when he left. He and Congress revoked a substantial share of the 1981 tax cut, and by 1987 the defense budget was coming down almost as fast as it had gone up.

In other words, Reagan doubled the deficit as a share of GDP, but only briefly. The underlying fiscal dislocation was largely the work of Nixon, who let—no, helped— federal spending run away from federal revenues, not just for a while but for good. Resolving Reagan's fiscal rupture—that is, reducing the deficit to pre-Reagan levels, as a share of GDP—took only four years (from 1983 to 1987); resolving Nixon's took 20.

And George W. Bush? Obviously, he is personally not much like Nixon. But his fiscal legacy looks in danger of being similar. The budget, firmly in surplus when he took office, is now in the red, possibly for years to come; his tax cuts and spending increases account for much, though far from all, of the change. Congress, by exceeding Bush's spending requests, has compounded the problem. With the budgetary vise of the Baby Boom generation's retirement soon to begin closing, the country may be on the verge of a 20-year fiscal crisis much like the one Nixon bequeathed.

"After only three years in office, President Bush may be heading to the record books as one of the biggest-spending presidents," writes Veronique de Rugy, a fiscal policy analyst, in a new Cato Institute report ("The Republican Spending Explosion"). She notes that real spending increases in fiscal 2002, 2003, and 2004 have averaged more than 7 percent—versus 1.5 percent over the past 40 years.

The administration retorts that most of the spending increases are attributable to the economic downturn, homeland security, and Iraq—exceptional circumstances that required exceptional responses. Fair enough, but a policy isn't exceptional if it goes on forever. "Justifications for borrowing have now run out," says Maya MacGuineas, the executive director of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan anti-deficit group. "The higher security-spending needs we have are no longer temporary, economic growth has picked up, and there's really no reason not to pay for all the spending that we decide the government is going to engage in."

Well, there is one reason: Repairing the fiscal breach would require Bush to set priorities and make trade-offs, something he, like Nixon, has been conspicuously reluctant to do. Even Nixon, though, promised in 1969 to produce a sizable ("not token") surplus in five years. "It's remarkable that a Republican administration doesn't even have a plan to at least put the deficit on a glide path to zero," says Chris Edwards, Cato's director of fiscal policy studies. "They just say half in five years."

Given that 2004 is an election year, austerity may be too much to expect when Bush releases his budget next month. But at a bare minimum, says MacGuineas, "you shouldn't see any tax cuts or spending increases that aren't paid for, and in fact you should see a plan for how to put us on a path to budget balance."

In 1972, Nixon faced a choice between political one-upmanship and fiscal grown-upmanship, and we all know which he chose. But Nixon was as crass an opportunist as ever entered American politics. Bush is a better sort of man. Isn't he?

© Copyright 2004 National Journal

Jonathan Rauch is a senior writer and columnist for National Journal and a frequent contributor to REASON. This article was originally published by National Journal.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Editorial; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: deficit; entitlementspending; georgrwbush; reason; richardnixon; ronaldreagan; taxes
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1 posted on 01/27/2004 1:33:54 AM PST by neverdem
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To: neverdem
This article fails to mention the complicity of a Rat-controlled Congress for all but two of the years between 1969 and 1995, and blames deficits on Republican Presidents solely. No mention is made of LBJ's Great Society welfare scheme or the huge increase in tax revenues created by Reagan's tax cuts, which were obliterated by even larger increases in spending by the Rat Congress.
2 posted on 01/27/2004 1:48:11 AM PST by KAUAIBOUND (Hawaii - a Socialist paradise)
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To: KAUAIBOUND
That's all true, but Bush is still spending way too much.
3 posted on 01/27/2004 2:17:18 AM PST by DB (©)
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To: neverdem
Things are different today. YOu are not going to reduce the deficit by moving jobs and factories to asia. Asians dont pay income taxes and nobody contributes to the social security system when you lay off an american an give that job to a chinese communist.

Reagan stimulated our economy, causing american companies to build factories over here, and to create jobs over here.

Bush is NOT stimulating the american economy.

Bush's policies are NOT creating american jobs, are NOT resulting in more american factories being created, and are NOT resulting in more Made in USA products to be sold.

is just stimulating the chinese economy, causing more factories to be built in china, and more jobs created for Indians and chinese.

4 posted on 01/27/2004 3:39:05 AM PST by waterstraat
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To: DB
That's all true, but Bush is still spending way too much.

Bush is spending half a trillion dollars more than the tax revenues that we take in. He also is causing our balance of trade to have an additional deficit of another half a trillion dollars. Each year that we spend a trillion more dollars than we produce, means the dollar will lose value.

Social security will face a huge long term crises soon if we keep moving jobs to asia and neither the unemployed american worker nor his employer puts anything into the social security fund.

5 posted on 01/27/2004 3:42:34 AM PST by waterstraat
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To: waterstraat
Reagan did employ the veto pen a number of times. Something that has not been used in the present adminstration. He also jawboned and used his bully pulpit to attempt to hold the line on spending. We are now getting to the point that our national debt is becoming incredible to investors. When that happens, the merry-go-round stops turning.
6 posted on 01/27/2004 3:57:50 AM PST by meenie
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Comment #7 Removed by Moderator

To: waterstraat
Absolutely.

Vote Kerry, he will sign an executive order forbiding any US company from doing business overseas, demand that each company charge more for its product in order to pay more.

His order will forbid any factory from layoffs.

The order will demand construction to start on factories, demand hirings at $35 an hour, with Medical, dental, and retirement pay.

And most important, his order will stop all the bulldozing of factories by Bush, and all the jobs lost that Bush ordered to help his rich friends.
8 posted on 01/27/2004 5:45:35 AM PST by roses of sharon
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To: roses of sharon
Haha. Nice plan. What's scary is that some at FR and many more in this country would probably support that.
9 posted on 01/27/2004 5:49:46 AM PST by Texas_Dawg (A vote for the Constitution Party is a vote for Paul Krugman and Al Qaeda.)
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To: Texas_Dawg
waterstraat hasn't created an about page? Hang the traitor. Good work Dawg. Where would this forum be without you "keeping it in line?"
10 posted on 01/27/2004 6:02:25 AM PST by kristinn
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To: kristinn
Do you not think there are anti-Bush leftists posing as conservatives at FR?
11 posted on 01/27/2004 6:04:34 AM PST by Texas_Dawg (A vote for the Constitution Party is a vote for Paul Krugman and Al Qaeda.)
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To: Texas_Dawg; waterstraat
waterstraat hasn't created an about page.

And you have an About page that you use to attack people that you've clearly lost arguments with.

I'm glad to have made the Honor List personally since it's clear enough you can't even distinguish humor from serious commentary. FR must be a frustrating place for the humor-handicapped.

Waterstraat, keep going. You can make the Honor List too. I'm pulling for you.
12 posted on 01/27/2004 6:08:47 AM PST by George W. Bush
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To: Texas_Dawg
Massive spending and sending all the jobs away isn't Conservative. What's wrong with wanting Bush to be a Conservative? I'm glad he's going to cut the federal deficit in half and make the tax cuts permanent--- because that is Conservative.
13 posted on 01/27/2004 6:10:09 AM PST by FITZ
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To: neverdem
problem is...most of this increase under Dubya is NON DEFENSE spending!!!

...includding MASSIVE new entitlements urged by Bush..

ugh
14 posted on 01/27/2004 6:13:33 AM PST by Capitalism2003 (Got principles? http://www.LP.org)
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To: Texas_Dawg
Defeat them on the merits of their arguments then.
15 posted on 01/27/2004 6:14:03 AM PST by kristinn
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To: George W. Bush
And you have an About page that you use to attack people that you've clearly lost arguments with. Riiiiight. Nope, just pointing out some angry socialist misanthropes (like you, from your own words) at FR.
16 posted on 01/27/2004 6:17:36 AM PST by Texas_Dawg (A vote for the Constitution Party is a vote for Paul Krugman and Al Qaeda.)
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To: kristinn
Defeat them on the merits of their arguments then.

Why would I waste the time arguing against socialism with anti-Bush socialists? (And I'm not saying that all anti-Bush FReepers are socialists per se... just that most of them are by their own words.)

There are some posters here that have legitimate things to say. There are also a lot of anti-GWB socialists that pretend to be conservatives. Waterstraat is one of them.

17 posted on 01/27/2004 6:19:41 AM PST by Texas_Dawg (A vote for the Constitution Party is a vote for Paul Krugman and Al Qaeda.)
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To: Texas_Dawg
Going after people you disagree with by pointing out they have a blank 'about' page is no way to win an argument. However, it does add to the appearance of bullying and childishness on the forum that keeps some conservatives from posting here.
18 posted on 01/27/2004 6:32:44 AM PST by kristinn
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To: Texas_Dawg; waterstraat; dogbyte12
Nope, just pointing out some angry socialist misanthropes (like you, from your own words) at FR.

I invite anyone to go read that thread you and I were on, the one at which you took such offense.

They'll conclude you lost the argument and are incoherent. Just like the people on the thread concluded.

But thanks for that bookmark. I laughed a number of times re-reading it a few minutes ago.

It's more a little funny when someone bookmarks a thread where they got their ass kicked.

Waterstraat and dogbyte, you have to try harder. You were on that same thread but just didn't make the cut to the Dawg's Honor List. Work, work, work and you shall succeed!!
19 posted on 01/27/2004 6:41:18 AM PST by George W. Bush
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To: kristinn

It's good to see one of your now-rare posts. I remember your past history of fighting for liberty, and I appreciated all your efforts. FR has changed in the last year, unfortunately.
Perhaps conservatives will have to launch another site to discuss conservative answers to the mess we are in.
20 posted on 01/27/2004 6:46:44 AM PST by kittymyrib
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