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Blowing the Budget. Bush’s budget means more spending, more government. Roughly $20K per household.
Reason magazine ^ | February 21, 2002 | Michael W. Lynch

Posted on 02/21/2002 9:39:02 AM PST by grundle

http://www.reason.com/ml/ml022102.shtml

February 21, 2002

Blowing the Budget

Bush’s budget means more spending, more government.

By Michael W. Lynch

If the president’s annual budget can be accurately read as a statement of political values, George W. Bush values a much larger federal government -- although one that he hopes will (someday, somehow) consist of only well-managed programs.

Bush’s proposed budget for fiscal 2003 makes history -- it’s the first to break the almost unimaginable $2 trillion mark, spending roughly $20,000 on behalf of each American household. We’re at war, so of course the military gets a huge 18 percent increase in outlays. But if Bush has his way, which he surely will and then some, even non-defense discretionary outlays will increase by 5 percent, with every department getting a boost. The budget not only picks the Social Security lock box (a short-lived but useful fiction) but also violates the deficit-spending taboo, which had been an even more useful restraint on spending.

If President Clinton had submitted this budget, right-of-center groups in D.C. would have pounced, slamming him for failing to make tough choices. This budget does, after all, throw more money at such once-scorned programs as AmeriCorps, whose chief virtue now appears to be its presence in numerous congressional districts.

Bush’s budget, however, was met with laudatory press releases from such watchdogs as Citizens Against Government Waste and Americans for Tax Reform. William Eggers, a former Bush aide and senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, took to the pages of The Wall Street Journal to declare the budget a "distinct departure from the Beltway practice of rewarding failure with more spending." Eggers and others, including Reason Public Policy Institute, the nonpartisan think tank funded by Reason Foundation (the nonprofit that publishes Reason magazine and this Web site), point to The President’s Management Agenda as evidence that Bush is a man committed to better managed, if not necessarily smaller, government.

Not everyone is convinced. "This is the first Republican administration in eight years and they have really wimped out on the spending side," says Chris Edwards, the Cato Institute’s director for fiscal policy. "If a program is failing it ought to be terminated or privatized, but there are very few terminations or privatization proposals."

But Bush is taking the long view. For this budget cycle, departments and agencies are rated with a traffic light system of red, yellow, or green, with select programs declared "effective" or "ineffective." The idea is to get program heads to commit to delivering specific, measurable results. If they fail, the programs will supposedly get cut or reformed -- more likely simply renamed.This is the baseline year, so even though more than 85 percent of the agencies graded by the administration earned a red, many still got slated for funding increases. In Washington, later rarely comes--especially if it means cutting anything. It’s not, after all, that we don’t know certain departments and programs fail year in and year out. (The Department of Energy, Head Start, and Amtrak are three excellent examples.) It’s that every program serves someone’s interest, even if only that of the people operating it.

An alternative to using the war as an excuse to save the federal government from spending restraints would have been to use the need for defense spending combined with zero deficits as cover to make the tough choices and knock some real losers off the federal books. Instead, we get massive new spending, no real cuts, and a promise that with sophisticated management techniques, such beauties as the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Department of Labor will start delivering real results.

"I don’t pay any attention to that kind of nonsense," says Heritage Foundation economist Daniel Mitchell when asked about the effort to improve federal management. "I shouldn’t say nonsense because I’m sure there is something worthwhile in it, but it’s one of these things where I don’t want to manage government better, I want to shrink government."

It’s doubtful that many on the Hill will pay attention either. The administration has "lost credibility," says Cato’s Edwards, "because they say ‘Congress has to control spending, except for all of these areas where we want more spending.’"

The same can be said of the tax side of the budget, which calls for tax simplification and promises a series of learned papers on the subject. But for now, this new budget further junks up the tax code.

"They have 30 new provisions, and 20 of them will complicate the code," says Edwards. "Solar power credits, credits for fuel cell cars, credits for teachers to buy supplies. You don’t need a white paper to know that stupid tax credits complicate the code."

That is probably the point. Tax simplification is a wonderful product for Republican pols. But if they actually delivered on it, they could no longer sell it so profitably on the stump. The same holds for sending Congress a bloated budget with a rhetorical call to hold the line on spending. When Congress and the president agree to spend far more than Bush originally requested, he’ll be able to blame the free-spending Congress, placing a special emphasis on the Democrat-controlled Senate.

As a political performance, this rates a green light. But it rates a red light for good governance and is clearly "ineffective," if the goal is a smaller, less intrusive government.

Michael W. Lynch is Reason's national correspondent.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS:
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1 posted on 02/21/2002 9:39:02 AM PST by grundle (grundle2600@hotmail.com)
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To: grundle
$20K per home is a lot of beer money. Will the big spender be reelected is the question.
2 posted on 02/21/2002 9:45:37 AM PST by deadrock
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To: grundle
I am getting increasingly disallusioned with Mr. Bush--his budget, his growing the federal government and his domestic policies, e.g. amnesty to illegal Hispanic aliens. I don't think his "war on terrorism" is going to carry him through the next election.
3 posted on 02/21/2002 9:56:43 AM PST by scholar
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To: grundle
I guess Newt's smaller/more constitutional gub'mint is out the window eh? Time after time the Repubs prove that I did the right thing in leaving that party. Of course, the "hangers on" will cry, "Stay and change the party from the inside."

Yeah, right. They won't come around until they realize that no one is voting for them anymore.

4 posted on 02/21/2002 10:03:31 AM PST by Dawgsquat
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Comment #5 Removed by Moderator

To: grundle
If anyone thinks the President controls the budget they are ignorant. The President gives congress his wish list and they grant some of his wishes and then some. If bush submitted a budget that was only 1 Trillion congress would bring it right back up to over 2 trillion.

There is no white horse that will ride in and cut the budget. Reagan signed 8 budgets and every one was bigger then the previous years--congress made him do it to get what he wanted funded and Bush is doing the same thing !

If you want a smaller budget the only way this will ever happen is if the real conservatives take control of 60% or more of the congress !

6 posted on 02/21/2002 10:19:03 AM PST by america-rules
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To: america-rules
Don't forget the GOP blew it after 1994 when they controlled both houses of congress. We won't see the GOP controlling both these again in our lifetime espically with a GOP President. It won't happen no matter how much you dream !
7 posted on 02/21/2002 10:22:28 AM PST by america-rules
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To: america-rules
I lost any remaining respect I had for the GOP when they didn't even make a pretense of an effort to roll back the size of government when they controlled congress.
8 posted on 02/21/2002 10:26:37 AM PST by LN2Campy
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To: grundle
Show me the numbers. Taxes have been cut. HELLO!
9 posted on 02/21/2002 10:41:39 AM PST by biblewonk
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To: biblewonk
Show me the numbers. Taxes have been cut. HELLO!

As Milton Friedman correctly points out, the REAL level of taxation is equal to the level of spending. Republicans try to pretend that isn't true, but ignoring the facts don't make them go away. Every dollar the federal government spends will EVENTUALLY need to be returned in taxes.

HELLO!

10 posted on 02/21/2002 1:01:34 PM PST by Mark Bahner
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To: america-rules
We won't see the GOP controlling both these again in our lifetime espically with a GOP President. It won't happen no matter how much you dream !

Why would anyone who wants a small federal government dream about that?

11 posted on 02/21/2002 1:03:21 PM PST by Mark Bahner
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To: Mark Bahner
I think my pee pee has just been wacked.
12 posted on 02/21/2002 1:08:28 PM PST by biblewonk
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To: Mark Bahner
Republicans try to pretend that isn't true, but ignoring the facts don't make them go away.

You know, I used to blame the Democrat Congress for the rampant spending in the Eighties. Since the 1994 elections, I've been waiting for any sign that the Republicans aren't the same big spenders.

Let's face it; they all just give "us" what we want from Uncle Sugar: income redistribution. With DemocRATS, it's tax-and-spend-and-spend. With Republicans, maybe it's spend-and-spend-and-tax.

13 posted on 02/21/2002 1:19:23 PM PST by newgeezer
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To: newgeezer
Yes, if you really want small government, it's crazy to vote Republican. Libertarians (and to a lesser extent, the Constitution Party) are the only real votes for anyone who wants small government.
14 posted on 02/21/2002 7:03:54 PM PST by Mark Bahner
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To: OKCSubmariner
Help is on the way.
15 posted on 02/22/2002 2:49:29 AM PST by Uncle Bill
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To: riley1992
ping
16 posted on 02/22/2002 2:58:07 AM PST by NoCurrentFreeperByThatName
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To: Mark Bahner
Yes, if you really want small government, it's crazy to vote Republican. Libertarians (and to a lesser extent, the Constitution Party) are the only real votes for anyone who wants small government.

I want to be able to vote for a party that has a plan to win, keeps the economy balanced and fair, wants to send the illegals home (and make it very, very difficult to be legal), and works to bring an umbrella of minor parties together until they achieve these goals...then fight it out over the other issues.

Otherwise, the best path is gridlock.

17 posted on 02/22/2002 3:09:42 AM PST by grania
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To: biblewonk
I think my pee pee has just been wacked.

Sure looks that way.

18 posted on 02/22/2002 3:30:08 AM PST by another1
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To: grundle
federal government - [snip] - well-managed programs

Impossible contradiction in terms.

19 posted on 02/22/2002 3:35:41 AM PST by another1
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To: scholar
I am getting increasingly disallusioned with Mr. Bush

Shhhhhhh! Don't say that too loudly or you will be brandished an "America Hater", you know.

20 posted on 02/22/2002 3:53:03 AM PST by riley1992
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