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- Essay Name : 829.txt
- Uploader : J. Anderson
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Economics
- Title : Can we make ends meet?
- Grade : A
- School System : College
- Country : US
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments :
- Date : 11/10/96
- Site found at :
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- CAN WE MAKE ENDS MEET?
-
- Should the government balance the federal budget? One might
- assune assume that it would be good to balance the federal budget.
- However, a few economic thinkers disagree and have suggested new
- paradigms. For the last sixty years, the government has run budget
- deficits as a primary method for stimulating economies with high
- unemployment rates. In theory, the budget should return to balance or
- surplus during boom times.
-
- According to the article, "The Balanced Budget Constitutional
- Amendment," (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, January 9,
- 1995), the Reagan administration cut taxes to such a degree that the
- United States would forever face high deficits, regardless of how hot
- the economy was. The writers of that article believe the answer is not
- a balanced-budget amendment because they believe it would prevent
- the federal government from combating recessions:
-
- Worse yet, under such an amendment, the federal government
- would be forced to make recessions worse. When the economy
- slows down, income and Social Security tax revenues drop, due to
- falling wages and profits. Meanwhile, costs for some programs,
- such as unemployment compensation, rise.
- These changes automatically put the federal budget into deficit,
- even if a balanced budget had been planned at the beginning of
- the fiscal year. If a constitutional amendment requires the
- government to balance spending and revenues at the end of the
- year (not just in the original plan), then the White House would be
- forced to cut spending or raise tax rates, thereby slowing the
- economy down, just at the time when it is most in need of stimulus.
-
- One argument for a balanced is as follows: Deficits force the Federal
- Government to borrow money on the capital markets. That
- Government borrowing competes with businesses borrowing to buy
- factories and machines that make workers more productive and raise
- incomes; and with families borrowing to buy new homes, cars, and
- other goods that provide valuable services for years.
-
- The competition for funds tends to produce higher interest rates.
- Also, deficits increase the national debt and, through it, the
- Government's obligation to pay interest. The more it must pay to
- service its debt, the less it has available to spend on education, law
- enforcement, and other important services, or the more it must collect
- in taxes forever after.
-
- Today, the Government must spend 40 percent of every personal
- income tax dollar to pay interest on the national debt
- Recent deficits have not financed investments. Instead, they have
- merely helped the Government to pay its day-to-day bills. Under those
- circumstances, future generations will inherit a debt for which they
- receive no real benefit.
-
- One difficulty with government budgets is that economic conditions
- are subject to change, causing receipts and outlays to be quite
- different from what was planned. If unemployment increases by just a
- small percentage, for example, the government may lose billions of
- dollars because of less income from tax receipts and higher outlays for
- welfare and unemployment benefits.
-
-
-
- Balancing the Budget
-
- Originally planned to make spending cuts in the areas that seemed to
- be growing at the greatest rate and comprising the largest portion of
- the budget. These areas were entitlement programs and the federal
- debt. Unfortunately, Social Security only had 3 items and Net interest
- only had 1 item. Health and Medicare had 22 items and Defense had
- 38 items.
-
- When I found that making cuts in these areas did not result in a
- balanced budget, I tried a new strategy. Instead, I used a highly
- complex and extremely scientific procedure to balance the Federal
- Budget. I went on an outlay cutting rampage, cutting every spending
- program I came across with the exception of those that would have
- made me feel morally uncomfortable. To my best recollection, I did
- not cut benefits to senior citizens or children.
-
- I wanted to cut Social Security spending by identifying fraudulent
- claims and other waste. I would not cut the benefits of people who
- have worked hard all their lives and raised families. Rather, I would
- cut the benefits to people who have the potential to abuse the social
- security and welfare system.
-
- According to "Fiscal Crossroads: Facing Up to the Budget Deficit "
- federal spending patterns have changed significantly over time:
-
- "At the Nation's founding, the federal government spent only on
- war-related costs, certain pensions, and a few other items.
- Gradually, however, it came to accept more and more
- responsibility for the health, welfare, and safety of the growing
- American populace, and its spending in these categories rose
- accordingly.
- Growth of Entitlement Spending:
- In 1962, when President Kennedy was in office, 70 cents of each
- dollar the federal government collected and spent was spent at the
- "discretion'' of Congress.
- Today, 64 cents of each dollar spent by the federal government is
- on automatic pilot-leaving only 36 cents for Congress to have
- discretion over.
- By 2003, 72 cents of each dollar the federal government spends
- will go for entitlement programs and interest on the debt. Only 28
- cents will be available for discretionary spending.
- Defense and Discretionary Spending:
- In 1962, defense spending accounted for almost one out of every
- two dollars the federal government spent. Since then, defense has
- been cut 65 percent (as a percent of GDP) and now comprises just
- 18 percent of all federal spending. Domestic discretionary
- spending has been reduced about 50 percent (as a percent of
- GDP) since the 1960s and accounts for approximately 16 percent
- of all federal spending.
- Foreign Aid:
- Despite widespread perceptions to the contrary, spending on
- foreign aid has comprised a very small share of spending for each
- of the past 30 years. Its share fell from 5 percent in 1962 to 1.4
- percent today. Foreign aid comprises less than 1 percent of federal
- expenditures.
- Where does the federal government spend our tax dollars today-
- and what trends lie ahead?
- Social Security:
- Social security is the single biggest federal expenditure. It
- accounts for 22 percent of all federal spending. The government
- will spend $334 billion on it this year. By the year 2000, the annual
- costs will increase by $100 billion to $434 billion.
- Defense:
- The second largest federal expenditure is national defense. This
- year it will cost the federal government $270 billion and will
- comprise approximately 18 percent of federal spending. This is a
- reduction from last year, when the government spent $282 billion
- on defense and it comprised nearly 20 percent of federal spending.
- By the year 2000, it is scheduled to decrease to 15 percent of
- federal spending.
- Interest on the Debt:
- Net interest payments, the result of previous budget deficits,
- consumed only about 7 percent of federal spending for most of the
- 1960s and 1970s. Today it is the third largest federal expenditure-
- $235 billion this year-and accounts for over 15 percent of all
- federal spending. By 2000, net interest on the debt will rise to $313
- billion and surpass defense spending to become the second
- largest federal expenditure.
- Medicare:
- Medicare, which provides health care coverage for over 37 million
- elderly Americans, includes Part A, hospital insurance, and Part B,
- insurance for physicians and other services. It is the fourth largest
- federal expenditure. It accounts for 10 percent of all federal
- spending. The government will spend $178 billion on Medicare
- costs this year. By the year 2000, its annual cost will increase to
- $288 billion and represent nearly 15 percent of all federal
- expenditures.
- Medicaid:
- Medicaid is the health care program for the poor. The federal
- government shares the costs with the states, paying from 50 to 83
- percent of them. Both federal and state costs are growing rapidly;
- Medicaid accounts for 6 percent of the federal budget. This year
- the federal government will spend $90 billion on Medicaid. By the
- year 2000, annual costs are projected to increase to $149 billion. It
- will rise from 5.5 percent of federal expenditures to 7.5 percent.
- Federal Retirement Programs:
- Federal civil and military retirement and disability programs
- comprise 5 percent of all federal expenditures. This year the
- federal government will spend $75 billion on these programs. In the
- year 2000, the projected annual cost will be $96 billion and
- represent the same share of federal expenditures.
- Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and Food
- Stamps:
- These two programs-which together account for approximately 3
- percent of federal spending-have received the most public
- attention and are perceived to be a much greater cost to the
- government than they are. The federal government will spend $44
- billion on these two programs this year. In the year 2000, projected
- costs will increase to $54 billion, representing 2.7 percent of
- federal spending.
- These figures illustrate an important fact about the budget: a
- handful of programs account for the vast bulk of federal spending.
- Social Security accounts for 22 percent of spending, defense for 18
- percent, net interest for 15 percent, Medicare for 10 percent,
- Medicaid for 6 percent and federal retirement programs for 5
- percent. Together, these programs account for over 75 percent of
- all federal spending."
- (Source: http://www.uwsa.org/busround/8longterm.html)
-
-
- Economic variables affecting revenues
-
- The economic variables having the largest impact on government
- revenues include (un)employment, interest rates, Inflation, and
- population.
-
-
-
-
- Economic variables affecting outlays
-
- The economic variables having the largest impact on government
- outlays include (un)employment, interest rates, Inflation, and
- population.
-
- For its forecast, the Congressional Budget Office has assumed that
- economic variables will remain stable, almost unchanged, over the
- next five years. I believe this is unrealistic since the economy
- changes cyclically.
-
- Because economic variables are not stable, the impact on
- government revenues and outlays is that their forecasts and
- predictions are less reliable.
-
- This would affect my deficit reduction strategy as we discussed in the
- beginning of this paper. Changes in the economy walways affect the
- federal budget. Slowing of the economy can put the federal budget
- into deficit, even if a balanced budget had been planned at the
- beginning of the fiscal year.
-
-
-
- The Ultimate Question
-
- The ultimate question was whether I could balance the federal budget
- within the next five years? The answer is, "Yes, I can."
-
- If I remember correctly, I produced a surplus of around 65 billion
- dollars in the fifth year. I achieved this without raising taxes even one
- penny.
-
-
-
- The possible beneficial effects of my strategy are as follows. With
- less interest to pay on the public debt:
-
- we would not have to raise taxes. Thus, we could provide more
- incentives to businesses to expand and create more jobs.
-
- we would not have our nation's output transferred abroad to pay
- interest and principal on the portion of the debt held by foreigners.
-
- the government would no longer have to borrow to refinance (drive
- interest rates up). Thus, private investment spending would
- increase. One approach of disposing of the surplus involves the
- government transferring its surplus tax revenues back into the
- money market, causing the interest rate to fall and thereby
- stimulating investment and consumption. In another approach,
- government can realize a greater anti-inflationary impact from its
- budgetary surplus by allowing those funds to stand idle.
-
- we may see decreased foreign demand for American securities
- (due to lower interest rates). This would decrease the international
- value of the dollar, causing American exports to increase and
- imports to decrease. The resulting rebalancing of the trade deficit
- would exert a positive effect on our domestic economy.
-
-
- The possible negative effects of my strategy are as follows. With the
- cuts in defense spending:
-
- our economy may encounter a siege of unemployed defense
- workers. With falling incomes, tax receipts will automatically
- decline. To balance its budget, government must either
- 1) increase tax rates,
- 2) reduce spending, or
- 3) use a combination of both.
- The problem is that these policies are contradictory; each one
- further dampens the economy.
-
- One solution might be to use a portion of the surplus in our budget to
- retrain the unemployed defense workers in new growth fields.
-
- With the surplus of money put back into the economy,
-
- we may see money incomes increase during a time of inflation and
- therefore tax collections will increase. To avoid a further surplus
- from occurring, the government must either
- 1) cut tax rates,
- 2) increase expenditures, or
- 3) use a combination of both.
- All three of these policies will add to inflationary pressures.
-
-
- Conclusion
-
- In addition to the spending cuts discussed above some of the
- proposed or enacted remedies for deficits and public debt include:
-
- a proposed constitutional amendment mandating an annually
- balanced budget
-
- the Graham-Rudman-Hollings Act which required annual deficit
- reductions
-
- budget legislation of 1990 which raised taxes, cut expenditures,
- and forced Congress to offset new spending or tax cuts with
- reductions in existing spending or tax increases
-
- greater privatization of the economy by selling public assets and
- programs to the private sector; and
-
- giving the President line-item veto authority.
-
-
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-