Posted on 01/13/2005 12:37:18 PM PST by Maigret
Psst, the Deficits Shrinking
Why wont anyone say it?
Heres one story you wont find on tomorrows front pages: The U.S. Budget Deficit Is Shrinking Rapidly. The headline would be accurate, but the mainstream media is much more interested in talking down this booming economy than telling it like it is.
This weeks Treasury report on the nations finances for December shows a year-to-date fiscal 2005 deficit that is already $11 billion less than last years. In the first three months of the fiscal year that began last October, cash outlays by the federal government increased by 6.1 percent while tax collections grew by 10.5 percent. When more money comes in than goes out, the deficit shrinks.
At this pace, the 2005 deficit is on track to drop to $355 billion from $413 billion in fiscal year 2004. As a fraction of projected gross domestic product, the new-year deficit will descend to 2.9 percent compared with last years deficit share of 3.6 percent.
Wire reports are loaded these days with accounts of an expanded trade gap (driven mostly by slower exports to stagnant European and Japanese economies, along with higher oil imports from the peak in energy prices). But theres not a single report I can find that mentions the sizable narrowing in U.S. fiscal accounts. Behind this really big budget story is the even-bigger story: The explosion in tax revenues has been prompted by the tax-cut-led economic growth of the past eighteen months.
With 50 percent cash-bonus expensing for the purchase of plant and equipment, productivity-driven corporate profits ranging around 20 percent have generated a 45 percent rise in business taxes. At lower income-tax rates, employment gains of roughly 2.5 million are throwing off more than 6 percent in payroll-tax receipts. Personal tax revenues are rising at a near 9 percent pace.
Meanwhile, in the wake of strong stock market advances over the last two years, non-withheld revenues from individuals including investor dividends and capital gains that are now taxed at only 15 percent have jumped by over 14 percent.
Following the Clinton cap-gains tax cut and savings expansion bill of 1997, investment-related tax collections led to bull-market budget surpluses in the pre-9/11 period of 1997-2001. However, despite the flood of new revenues, this years federal budget is still overspending. Domestic spending on non-entitlement programs (excluding homeland defense) is rising at a 4.1 percent rate. Thats more than twice the pace of core inflation. But this may be changing.
According to the Washington Post, the Bush budget totals planned for fiscal year 2006 may be essentially unchanged from the totals for fiscal year 2005 (excluding defense and homeland security). According to reporter Jonathan Weisman, the administrations first really tough budget request (due out next month) would freeze most spending on agriculture, veterans and science, slash or eliminate dozens of federal programs, and force more costs, from Medicaid to housing, onto state and local governments.
The rapid growth of federal health care and other entitlements would also be slowed markedly. Though the numbers are not yet available, this sounds a bit like Ronald Reagans tax-cutting budget of 1981. In addition to reducing the top personal tax rate to 50 percent from 70 percent, the Gipper proposed budget cuts that would be worth nearly $100 billion in todays dollars.
Of course, the political screaming over the forthcoming budget has already begun. A passel of Democrats and at least one Republican, Sen. Craig Thomas of Wyoming, have written a protest letter to Josh Bolten, director of the Office of Management and Budget. Former-Gov. John Engler of Michigan, a Republican and the current president of the National Association of Manufacturers, has pledged to fight the elimination of various protectionist subsidies to his member firms.
However, Sen. Judd Gregg, the New Hampshire Republican who is the current chair of the upper chambers budget committee and a long-time Bush ally, is set to support the administrations new budget discipline. This includes, by the way, Bushs plan to reduce Social Security benefits by replacing wage indexing with a price-level formula and extending the retirement age one or the other, or both in return for personal saving accounts.
By the way, Treasury Secretary John Snow just completed a Wall Street tour where leading bond traders told him not to sweat the transitional costs for personal accounts. The traders said that an additional $100 billion a year over the next decade for transitional financing will be easily manageable. A rounding error, one senior trader told Snow.
A supply-side tax-reform movement, a shrinking budget deficit, newfound spending discipline, and a determination to confound conventional wisdom by reforming Social Security has George W. Bushs second term off to a roaring start even before he is officially sworn in.
Naw they will find something to complain....
What Clinton did was get his initiatives blocked by the Republican congress, so he couldn't spend what he wanted to spend.
Unfortunately, it took a Republican president to begin to grow federal outlays.
According to the Washington Post, the Bush budget totals planned for fiscal year 2006 may be essentially unchanged from the totals for fiscal year 2005 (excluding defense and homeland security). According to reporter Jonathan Weisman, the administrations first really tough budget request (due out next month) would freeze most spending on agriculture, veterans and science, slash or eliminate dozens of federal programs, and force more costs, from Medicaid to housing, onto state and local governments.
Sure, but defense and homeland security are going way up, so we should be cutting somewhere else.
Yay! $100 billion less deficit. Now how about the $5+ trillion in debt?
LoL!
Every day I thank my maker for my sense of humor ---you can't buy comedy material like this!
Who's going to tell Michael Savage???
Gee, the "Guardians of Truth" ignoring this...imagine that...
How dare you insult the former president!
Here is the thing.. Yes GW could have stopped the growth of Government by stopping the No Child Left Behind and stopping the mediscam drug prescription thing. What is done is done.. Time to move on. Most of the spending is earmakred for the military cause we have a little war on terror going right now. It looks like he is going to cut spending.. It is a good start, however, I would wish he get rid of a few departments here and there. Mainly the Department of Education would be a good start.
It is actually almost $8 trillion, but who's counting?
Snort!
Excellent point. BTW I like your tagline.
"...slash or eliminate dozens of federal programs, and force more costs, from Medicaid to housing, onto state and local governments.
But woah... hey our deficit spending is down. Shiver me timbers. So we are slowing slightly slower into the abyss.
Are they SURE there is nothing they can do to STOP, or even REVERSE this trend? Like getting rid of an unConstitutional Agency at the Fed Level or two? Like the Dept of Education or the BATFE? That oughta even things out nicely. Getting rid of the IRS and Socialist Insecurity would even allow us to keep up with Pentagon spending with no worries what-so-ever.
It'd cause heart attacks on the Left, but so what? Not like they are doing us much good anyway right?
The libs will have a huge hissy fit if that happens just before the election.
Perhaps all our Bush bashing over uncontrolled spending by a GOP congress is having an effect. I hope so, this is mildly good news, but a balanced budget or even better a surplus would be much better news.
That's his idea of shrinking?
That the Democrats didn't win and send us back to the Clinton era or worse. I'll cheer for that any day!
I'll also cheer for a President who is doing his best on every front he can! We are at war people, the military and intelligence communities were not only decimated by infiltrated by leftists under Clinton, leaving us vulnerable to what Bush is now trying to correct! So let's all make sure we increase his burden by complaining that all things aren't to our liking yet.
No wonder I pray for him a hundred times a day!
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