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Mattea Kramer

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Four Spending Myths That Could Wreck Our World

Posted: 07/17/2012 11:00 am

How Not to Solve an American Crisis


Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com


We’re at the edge of the cliff of deficit disaster!  National security spending is being, or will soon be, slashed to the bone!  Obamacare will sink the ship of state! 

Each of these claims has grabbed national attention in a big way, sucking up years’ worth of precious airtime. That’s a serious bummer, since each of them is a spending myth of the first order. Let’s pop them, one by one, and move on to the truly urgent business of a nation that is indeed on the edge.

Spending Myth 1:  Today’s deficits have taken us to a historically unprecedented, economically catastrophic place.

This myth has had the effect of binding the hands of elected officials and policymakers at every level of government.  It has also emboldened those who claim that we must cut government spending as quickly, as radically, as deeply as possible.

In fact, we’ve been here before.  In 2009, the federal budget deficit was a whopping 10.1% of the American economy and back in 1943, in the midst of World War II, it was three times that -- 30.3%. This fiscal year the deficit will total around 7.6%. Yes, that is big. But in the Congressional Budget Office’s grimmest projections, that figure will fall to 6.3% next year, and 5.8% in fiscal 2014. In 1983, under President Reagan, the deficit hit 6% of the economy, and by 1998, that had turned into a surplus. So, while projected deficits remain large, they’re neither historically unprecedented, nor insurmountable.

More important still, the size of the deficit is no sign that lawmakers should make immediate deep cuts in spending. In fact, history tells us that such reductions are guaranteed to harm, if not cripple, an economy still teetering at the edge of recession.

A number of leading economists are now busy explaining why the deficit this year actually ought to be a lot larger, not smaller; why there should be more government spending, including aid to state and local governments, which would create new jobs and prevent layoffs in areas like education and law enforcement. Such efforts, working in tandem with slow but positive job growth in the private sector, might indeed mean genuine recovery. Government budget cuts, on the other hand, offset private-sector gains with the huge and depressing effect of public-sector layoffs, and have damaging ripple effects on the rest of the economy as well.

When the economy is healthier, a host of promising options are at hand for lawmakers who want to narrow the gap between spending and tax revenue. For example, loopholes and deductions in the tax code that hand enormous subsidies to wealthy Americans and corporations will cost the Treasury around $1.3 trillion in lost revenue this year alone -- more, that is, than the entire budget deficit. Closing some of them would make great strides toward significant deficit reductions.

Alarmingly, the deficit-reduction fever that’s resulted from this first spending myth has led many Americans to throw their support behind de-investment in domestic priorities like education, research, and infrastructure -- cuts that threaten to undo generations of progress. This is in part the result of myth number two.

Spending Myth 2: Military and other national security spending have already taken their lumps and future budget-cutting efforts will have to take aim at domestic programs instead.

The very idea that military spending has already been deeply cut in service to deficit reduction is not only false, but in the realm of fantasy.  The real story: despite headlines about “slashed” Pentagon spending and “doomsday” plans for more, no actual cuts to the defense budget have yet taken place. In fact, since 2001, to quote former Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates, defense spending has grown like a “gusher.”  The Department of Defense base budget nearly doubled in the space of a decade. Now, the Pentagon is likely to face an exceedingly modest 2.5% budget cut in fiscal 2013, “paring” its budget down to a mere $525 billion -- with possible additional cuts shaving off another $55 billion next year if Congress allows the Budget Control Act, a.k.a. “sequestration,” to take effect.

But don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen.  It’s likely that lawmakers will, at the last moment, come to an agreement to cancel those extra cuts.  In other words, the notion that our military, which has been experiencing financial boom times even in tough times, has felt significant deficit-slashing pain -- or has even been cut at all -- is the Pentagon equivalent of a unicorn.

What this does mean, however, is that lawmakers heading down the budget-cutting path can find plenty of savings in the enormous defense and national security budgets. Moreover, cuts there would be less harmful to the economy than reductions in domestic spending.

A group of military budget experts, for example, found that cutting many costly and obsolete weapons programs could save billions of dollars each year, and investing that money in domestic priorities like education and health care would spur the economy. That’s because those sectors create more jobs per dollar than military programs do.  And that leads us to myth three.

Spending Myth 3: Government health-insurance programs are more costly than private insurance.

False claims about the higher cost of government health programs have led many people to demand that health-care solutions come from the private sector. Advocates of this have been much aided by the complexity of sorting out health costs, which has provided the necessary smoke and mirrors to camouflage this whopping lie.

Health spending is indeed growing faster than any other part of the federal budget. It’s gone from a measly 7% in 1976 to nearly a quarter today -- and that’s truly a cause for concern. But health care costs, public and private, have been on the rise across the developed world for decades. And cost growth in government programs like Medicare has actually been slower than in private health insurance. That’s because the federal government has important advantages over private insurance companies when it comes to health care. For example, as a huge player in the health-care market, the federal government has been successful at negotiating lower prices than small private insurers can. And that helps us de-bunk myth number four.

Spending Myth 4: The Affordable Care Act -- Obamacare -- will bankrupt the federal government while levying the biggest tax in U.S. history.

Wrong again. According to the Congressional Budget Office, this health-reform legislation will reduce budget deficits by $119 billion between now and 2019.  And only around 1% of American households will end up paying a penalty for lacking health insurance.

While the Affordable Care Act is hardly a panacea for the many problems in U.S. health care, it does at least start to address the pressing issue of rising costs -- and it incorporates some of the best wisdom on how to do so. Health-policy experts have explored phasing out the fee-for-service payment system -- in which doctors are paid for each test and procedure they perform -- in favor of something akin to pay-for-performance. This transition would reward medical professionals for delivering more effective, coordinated, and efficient care -- and save a lot of money by reducing waste.

The Affordable Care Act begins implementing such changes in the Medicare program, and it explores other important cost-containment measures. In other words, it lays the groundwork for potentially far deeper budgetary savings down the road.

Having cleared the landscape of four stubborn spending myths, it should be easier to see straight to the stuff that really matters. Financial hardship facing millions of Americans ought to be our top concern. Between 2007 and 2010, the median family lost nearly 40% of its net worth. Neither steep deficits, nor disagreement over military spending and health reform should eclipse this as our most pressing challenge.

If lawmakers skipped the myth-making and began putting America’s resources into a series of domestic investments that would spur the economy now, their acts would yield dividends for years to come. That means pushing education and job training, plus a host of job-creation measures, to the top of the priority list, and setting aside initiatives based on fear and fantasy.

Mattea Kramer, a TomDispatch regular, is senior research analyst at the National Priorities Project and lead author of the new book A People’s Guide to the Federal Budget.

Follow TomDispatch on Twitter @TomDispatch and join us on Facebook, and check out the latest TD book, Terminator Planet: The First History of Drone Warfare, 2001-2050.

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How Not to Solve an American Crisis Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com We’re at the edge of the cliff of deficit disaster!  National security spending is being, or will soon be, slashe...
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bullthull
Enemy of all that is stupid
02:25 PM on 08/09/2012
I think I just read about 8 myths that will
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Trustfunded1
04:18 PM on 07/18/2012
Interest rates being kept at artificially low rates indefinitely is just begging for a black swan event.
01:26 PM on 07/18/2012
Myth #5 tax cuts for the rich trickle down to everyone else. Fact, rich people invest money, not spend it. That's why they are rich. They invest it in ways to maintain their wealth.

Myth #6 the rich are job creators. Fact, small businesses creat jobs, not capital management firms that liquefy assets like Bain.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
12:14 PM on 07/18/2012
The writer makes some excellent points.

For those of you who are too young to remember, or have forgotten, my father-in-law was not a rich man, but he knew a good investment when he saw one -- Reagan's Treasuries paying 14% over 30 years (and Reagan's tax increases to pay down some of that high priced debt were more than justified). It could have been a quite nice retirement windfall, but President Clinton arranged to pay it off early.
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Bart DePalma
Bart DePalma
09:32 AM on 07/18/2012
"Spending Myth 1: Today’s deficits have taken us to a historically unprecedented, economically catastrophic place."

This is completely true.

In 2-3 years, our debt load will reach the point where interest rates will surge as they are in Spain and Italy.

In 4-5 years, we will be Greece.

The comparison with WWII is actually apt. The United States was a hair's breadth from insolvency in 1944 and we barely got out of WWII through massive purchases of war bonds by the US citizenry. After WWII, we cut spending by over 1/2. Today, no one is going to buy Obamacare bonds to maintain our insane welfare state spending.

"More important still, the size of the deficit is no sign that lawmakers should make immediate deep cuts in spending. In fact, history tells us that such reductions are guaranteed to harm, if not cripple, an economy still teetering at the edge of recession."

In reality, history tells us that sharp government spending reductions in recessions in a free market are rewarded with healthy economic recoveries. See Harding 21, Truman 46, Eisenhower 54, Thatcher 79.

"...cuts that threaten to undo generations of progress."

This is the core of progressive and socialist objections to reigning in the insane borrowing and spending - the American taxpayer is unwilling to pay for their welfare state.
Linda from Deerfield
Paying attention
12:04 PM on 07/18/2012
Put your money where your mouth is and this economy will brighten up overnight. You won't, because you don't actually believe it. Otherwise you would be buying all those big ticket items now while they're still affordable, along with food stockpiles and a survivalist shelter. Oh, and you haven't done a thing to prepare for Eisenhower level taxation to fund brand new infrastructure.
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gmikejake
resist evil
08:00 PM on 07/18/2012
Some "welfare state." As a "welfare state" we should be embarrassed. The nations, and there are many of them, primarily social democracies, that are closer to being true "welfare states" are doing just fine economically. They mix capitalism and socialism very differently than we do. We direct great amounts of our "socialism" to our wealthy individuals and corporations. As a result, the "welfare states" have higher standards of living, more effective and efficient health care systems, lower poverty rates, lower wealth and income disparities, yet still have millionaires, continued opportunities for upward mobility, and very robust "safety nets."
Great numbers of our taxpaying citizens are being effectively "bamboozled" by the constant "reality creation" from the "right." Other options are available, more rational choices, better options for ALL of us .... and they don't lead to "godless communism," either.
satyrday
If my micro-bio is way too long, will it be trunca
08:31 AM on 07/18/2012
Nice article.

People often forget why debt matters, which is just the payment you must make for the interest.

The 'cost to service the debt' was twice as high in the 80s as it is now, as a % of GDP.

So now is the time to spend wisely on our infrastructure, not do BS cuts.
02:09 AM on 07/18/2012
This question remains for the Republicans to answer: Why, in 2001, after Clinton had gotten us down to a future of forseeable, yearly budget surpluses, with which we could finally start paying down the total U.S. debt with - why did Bush and the Republicans decide against paying off our debt, and instead opt for tax cuts? Until the Republicans can answer that, they can make no claim to being fiscally responsible. Then ask yourselves, if the situation came up again, what would they do? Would they act differently? They are telling you the answer every day. If they are screaming for more tax cuts now, when there is no yearly surplus, they certainly are going to advocate tax cuts again if we did have a yearly surplus. So ask them, how would they ever pay off the U.S. debt.?
bullthull
Enemy of all that is stupid
01:44 PM on 07/18/2012
Let me pop the Clinton bubble for you. Bill Clinton did a pretty good job on the fiscal side compared to many modern presidents but the facts of the matter are he was president during a time when defense spending was being reduced about by $76 Billion a year because Reagan basically won the cold war- Poppy Bush just happened to be in office when it happened- AND the largest slice of the baby boom was at peak earning years and paying into SS which has been part of the general budget from the days of Lyndon Johnson. Poor Poppy Bush lost the election over a deal to raise taxes and Clinton saw the benefits of the additional revenue. This happens to a lot of presidents. Carter inherited an unbalanced economy from Nixon thanks to his price controls and taking the dollar off the gold standard. Volker had to jack rates to the roof to squeeze inflation out of the system. Of course Volker had the guts to do it. Bush inherited a weakening economy because Greenspan TOTALLY read the tea leaves wrong and perceived the massive corporate spending to be Y2K compliant as the economy heating up and raised rates just as corporate America was about to cut back sharply on spending once they ate the Y2K costs. Economic realities rarely go along with a political narrative or slogans.
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OneTop
Uh, is that a beer hall?
12:31 AM on 07/18/2012
Great article.

Yes, each of those are myths put forward and repeated for purely ideological reasons.

Sadly for the nation, this fallacious deficit / debt hysteria has caused tremendous damage to untold millions and even more for generations to come.
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AlfredE69
Liberty Lovin' Tree Hugger
09:52 PM on 07/17/2012
Just cut the whole budget in half. No one's spared. End all the wars, including the war on drugs, rescind the Patriot Act, and shut down all US military bases in freeloader nations. Oh yea, too big to fail is Un American. File for bankruptcy, just like Al of Al's Tavern had to.

That is all
Enjoy your summer!
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rekamlias
Sound Money is a good thing
10:24 PM on 07/17/2012
Too big to fail companies need to be broken up like Standard Oil and AT&T. So they don't have file bankruptcy... at least all at once
09:36 PM on 07/17/2012
Total U.S. national debt exceeds U.S. GDP. We are looking more and more like Greece. Source: US Treasury website. Government spending cuts that leave the money in the hands of the people ALWAYS leads to growth. See whitehouse.gov for history.
RobertReport
ex mia sententia
10:33 PM on 07/17/2012
Baloney. Austerity NEVER created growth or prosperity. SPENDING leads to employment and growth because spending is the only mechanism to create demand and demand is necessary for people to be employed and for companies to grow.

Name one period in history when spending cuts lead to growth.
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4eva
.-.. --- ...- . --..-- / -. --- - / .... .- - .
11:51 PM on 07/17/2012
Perpetual growth is unsustainable ... as we and the rest of the world are finding out.
12:02 AM on 07/18/2012
Spending borrowed money ends poorly. Even Keynes didn't advocate spending into debt.
iridium53
Semper Fi
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BuckCarson
Life outside the ObamaSphere
06:42 PM on 07/17/2012
With 2,600 Billion dollars from taxpayers - no wonder the government won't go bankrupt Mattea! The people will. Too bad those wonderful government forecasters can't forecast free market events too well!

There is simply no government entitlement program that started with the expectation of failure.

There is no government entitlement program that has achieved success.

That's the problem. If the Federal government owned the Sahara, there'd be a shortage of sand.

Let's not kid ourselves with such overwhelming evidence everywhere. Let's not kid ourselves that we need to get the economy rolling before we even debate such a luxury.
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gmikejake
resist evil
08:06 PM on 07/18/2012
Government entitlement programs like farm subsidies, oil depletion allowances, tax breaks to off-shore? Those entitlement programs?
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BuckCarson
Life outside the ObamaSphere
07:06 AM on 07/19/2012
those too honey
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FearlessFreep
A radical leftist with a JS Woodsworth avatar.
06:22 PM on 07/17/2012
Myth #5: Any tax increase will hurt the economy. (Dollar for dollar, tax increases will reduce growth less than spending cuts will.)
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Brad A Lamont
05:32 PM on 07/17/2012
hey obama... where are the jobs?
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tacevad
American SS Card Carrying Socialist
07:26 PM on 07/17/2012
ask Job Johnny Boehner
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Brad A Lamont
10:57 PM on 07/17/2012
ahhh Senate dems and reid you mean -- the guy that tabled all the 30 job creation bills passed in the House
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yukoner1
Living way up the left coast.
07:58 PM on 07/17/2012
Ask Boehner.
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Brad A Lamont
10:57 PM on 07/17/2012
ohhh you mean the dem Senate that has tabled the 30 job creation bills passed by the GOP House
05:04 PM on 07/17/2012
true with #1 to a certain extent. the U.S. has to manage it's debt in a very specific way. historic numbers cannot be used to compare where we were in the past. the U.S. should look at the debt based on how it effects the strength of the dollar in the global economy. the U.S. needs to continue to be the global reserve currency that other currencies are pegged against. loss of such a status will increase the price of commodities within the U.S.