By Alan
Caruba
Let’s look
at just some of the latest news about the U.S. economy:
#
According to the Treasury Department’s Bureau of Fiscal Services, the federal
government paid $2,007,358,200,000—over $2 trillion—in benefits and
entitlements in the 2013 fiscal year, October 1, 2012 to September 30, 2013.
Most of the benefits, 69.7% came from non-means tested government programs that
provide them to recipients who qualify regardless of income. That would include
Medicare, Social Security, unemployment compensation, veteran’s compensation,
and railroad retirement, to name a few.
# The
total federal government spending in 2013 totaled $3,454,253,000,000—over $3.4
trillion—encompassing defense, highway and transportation costs, public
education, immigration services, and government worker salaries, to name a few.
# An
astonishing amount of that spending constitutes wasted taxpayer money. In July
the Government Accountability Office (CAO) testified before Congress that federal
agencies made more than $100 billion in improper payments in 2013. That is an
amount comparable to the combined total budgets of the Coast Guard, U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, Border Patrol, Secret Service, and
the Federal Emergency Agency, et cetera. Improper payments result when people
collect money from government programs for which they are ineligible.
# By
August, the total U.S. federal debt had increased to more than $7 trillion
during the five and a half years since Barack Obama has been President. That is
more than the debt increased under all U.S. Presidents from George Washington
through Bill Clinton—combined! More debt than was accumulated in the first 227
years from 1776 through 2003.
# During
the time President Obama has been in office the number of unemployed reached
37.2%, a 36-year high for those 16 or older who do not have a job and are not
actively seeking one. From December 2013 through May of this year, the labor
participation rate had been at 62.8%. The last time the labor participation
rate was that low was February 1978 when Jimmy Carter was President.
# As the
nation sank deeper into debt by the end of 2012 there were 109,631,000
Americans living in households that were receiving one or more federally funded
“means-tested programs”, more generally referred to as welfare. Combined with
those receiving non-means-tested benefits and it added up to 49.5% of the
population.
It is
always tempting to blame everything on the President and, despite the usual
rebound from a recession that has occurred in the past, it has not occurred
during his first term, nor into his second at this point. In fact, the latest
data reveals that the U.S. economy shrank at a 2.9% annual rate during the
first quarter of 2014. Its long-run average rate of growth has been 3.3%, but
the highest since Obama took office was 2.8%.
According
to the World Bank, in 2013 the U.S. Gross Domestic Product, the value of its
goods and services, was $16,800,000,000,000. The federal,
state and governments took their share via taxation on income and/or property.
The rest was saved or spent by those either holding a job or receiving
government benefits; very nearly half of the population old enough to be
employed if there were jobs for them.
The
problem that affects all of us is the imbalance of the U.S. budget where more
money is going out than coming in. The difference is deemed the “deficit.” In
order to pay bills, Congress has to agree to raise the limit on how much the
nation can borrow.
Nick
Dranias, the constitutional policy director for the Goldwater Institute, has
come up with a proposal, “The Compact for a Balanced Budget”, and it was been
published by The Heartland Institute, a free market think tank, in July.
As
Dranias points out, “The U.S. gross federal debt is approaching $18 trillion.
That figure is more than twice what was owed ($8.6 trillion) in 2006, when
Barack Obama was a junior U.S. Senator from Illinois and opposed lifting the
federal debt limit.” It represents more than $150,000 per taxpayer.
“What
if states could advance and ratify a powerful federal balanced budget amendment
in only twelve months, asks Dranias. His proposal is “a new approach to
state-originated amendments under Article V of the U.S. Constitution.
Two
states, Georgia and Alaska, are expected to establish a Balanced Budget
Commission, an interstate agency dedicated to organizing a convention—before
2014 ends—to propose an amendment to achieve a balanced budget. The amendment
would put “an initially fixed limit on the amount of federal debt.” It would
ensure Washington cannot spend more than tax revenue brought in at any point in
time, with the sole exception of borrowing under the fixed debt limit. It would
force Washington to reduce spending long before borrowing reaches its debt
limit, preventing any default on obligations; something threatening many other
nations as well.
Suffice
to say, the proposed amendment involves some complex elements and, if the
Compact does not receive sufficient support from many more states than just the
two that have signed on, it won’t see the light of day.
What
the rest of us understand, however, is that federal spending is out of control
at the same time as the amount of money it takes in is more than what it
“redistributes.” Add in a sluggish
economy, not growing at its usual rate, and you have a recipe for a lot of
trouble ahead.
Republicans
are usually credited with being more financially prudent. If true, we need to
elect a Congress controlled by the GOP in November and a Republican President
in 2016. If we don’t, all bets are off.
©
Alan Caruba, 2014
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