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- <text id=92TT0284>
- <link 92TT1403>
- <link 91TT2713>
- <link 90TT2127>
- <title>
- Feb. 10, 1992: Deficits Don't Matter - Votes Sure Do
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Feb. 10, 1992 Japan
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 25
- STATE OF THE UNION
- Deficits Don't Matter; Votes Sure Do
- </hdr><body>
- <p>After months of buildup, Bush outlines a feel-good plan for
- fighting the recession, but it may do more to help his re-
- election prospects than to cure America's ailing economy
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Duffy/Washington
- </p>
- <p> A few days after the embattled President delivered his
- State of the Union message, a little-known member of the
- opposition party appeared on prime-time television to decry
- almost everything the Commander in Chief had said. "The nation
- faces this year, just as it did last year, a tremendous deficit
- in the federal budget," the Congressman intoned. "But in the
- President's message there was no sense of sacrifice on the part
- of the government, no assignment of priorities, no hint of the
- need to put first things first."
- </p>
- <p> The year was 1968. The President was a Democrat named
- Lyndon Johnson. The Republican backbencher was Texas Congressman
- George Bush. And the "tremendous" deficit was $25 billion.
- Twenty-four years later, the deficit has climbed to $399
- billion, and every complaint Bush lodged against L.B.J.'s speech
- could be applied to his State of the Union address--which he
- fervently hopes won't be his last.
- </p>
- <p> In a speech that Bush's aides had touted as the most
- important of his term, the President, as usual, was at his best
- on foreign policy. He stole a march on Democrats by announcing
- deep cuts in the nation's strategic nuclear arsenal. But when
- he turned toward home, Bush fell short of his old standards for
- fiscal sanity or genuine sacrifice. When it comes to priorities,
- Bush made clear, his most important goal is to be re-elected.
- </p>
- <p> Fighting the deficit is not a popular cause even in good
- times; amid this recession, it has ceased to trouble Bush
- altogether. Only once in his 5,000-word speech did he mention
- the deficit, perhaps because his proposed budget does almost
- nothing to reduce it. In October 1990, Bush traded away his "no
- new taxes" pledge and 20 points in opinion polls for a
- deficit-cutting budget deal with the Democrats, a sound attempt
- to lower short-term interest rates, stimulate savings and
- investment and boost Americans' stagnant standard of living.
- Less than two years later, Bush is abandoning that pact,
- convinced that re-election is more important than deficits. The
- budget he presented last week envisions a deficit of $352
- billion for the next fiscal year, followed by shortfalls in the
- $200 billion range.
- </p>
- <p> Democrats also want credit for taking cash out of the
- Treasury and putting it back in voters' pockets in an election
- year. The tax-cutting frenzy in Washington almost guarantees a
- repeat of the 1981 bidding war that helped produce the $3
- trillion in government debt that the U.S. has racked up since
- then. Bush started the bidding off at $25 billion last week,
- suggesting a range of tax deductions and credits that
- congressional Democrats are sure to match and more likely
- exceed. The President asked Congress to pass his plan by March
- 20, a deadline that would permit him to sign a quick fix if the
- Democrats cooperate--and bash them for hampering the fight
- against the recession if they delay.
- </p>
- <p> The most disappointing giveaway in the President's budget
- was the shortsighted handouts to the real estate industry. At
- a time when the U.S. is dramatically overbuilt in commercial
- real estate--some large cities are so overstocked with vacant
- offices it will take 10 years to fill them--it makes little
- sense to add tax incentives to encourage more building. Bush no
- doubt wants to shore up the sagging fortunes of developers and
- the home values of middle-class voters, but it is hard to see
- how adding more mini-malls and office complexes to the
- landscape will help either constituency. One leading G.O.P.
- official, grimacing at the size of the real estate tax break,
- described Bush's proposals to let real estate "investors" write
- off their losses on new buildings against other income as
- "insane." An aide to House majority leader Richard Gephardt was
- less blunt but no less pointed: "What the nation needs isn't
- more buildings. What it needs is more tenants."
- </p>
- <p> Bush's long-term economic proposals to encourage savings
- and investment would have been credible if he had followed
- through on his boast to bring federal spending, particularly
- exploding entitlement programs, under control. Bush's budget did
- include a laconic proposal to cap the relentless growth in such
- programs as Medicaid and Medicare, but Bush himself glossed over
- the proposal in his speech, evidently afraid to use the
- politically charged word entitlement on national television. The
- next day, Budget Director Richard Darman backed further away
- from the cap, acknowledging that the White House would gladly
- abandon the controversial idea if Congress thought it unwise--as it surely will. Too bad. Congress could go home and
- congratulate itself, said Republican Congressman Alex McMillan
- of North Carolina last week, "if we don't pass one other item
- out of the President's budget except for this one."
- </p>
- <p> Bush's budget would allow him to play host at a big party,
- dispensing favors to friends. Average voters too may appreciate
- seeing a few more dollars in their paycheck when his plan to
- ease withholding rules goes into effect. However, the tax rebate
- is illusory: some workers will have to return the door prize to
- the IRS when they file their returns on April 15, 1993. But by
- then the election will be over.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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