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-   -   Government Debts grow (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=1838)

tw 07-10-2002 09:30 PM

Government Debts grow
 
Quote:

From the Economist of 22 Jun 2002
Sometime this summer, when most of Washington has left for the beach, the Bush administration will release some news it would rather bury: that America's federal budget is spilling red ink and is likely to stay that way. ... Using some heroic assumptions, Mr Bush may still cling to the idea of a balanced budget by 2005, but who will believe him? ....

The speed of fiscal decline is remarkable. A year ago, the Bush administrate claims it could live within the current official celing for government dbt of $5.95 tirllion until 2008. Now the Trasurey Department desperately need Congress to raise that celing by June 28th. ...

... with healthy economic growth, government revenues could be $400billion - $600 billion lower than expect over the next decade. That alone could nearly wipe out Mr Bush's margin for error [as the economic numbers look worse - not better]. According to the CBO's most recent analysis, Mr Bush's proposals will generate a cumulative surplus of just $680 billion over the next decade.

The Bush numbers also do not allow for inevitable changes in the tax system. For instance, his budget assumes that the people paying "Alternative Minimun Tax" will rise from 2 million in 2001 to 35 million by 2010. ... AMT will have to be rejigged. ... A study from the Brooking Institution argues that such reform could cost government up to $700 billion over the decade. ...

The Bush White House is certainly talking tough. Sizeable increses in defence spending, it aruges, should be made up for by belt-tightening elsewhere. ...

... According to the CBO's latest report, spending in the first 8 months of fiscal 2002 was 10% higher than in the same period last years. Discretionary spending outside defence (where Mr Bush wants to be tough) rose by 17% last year and this year, so far, is going up at a 9% rate.

Worse, Mr Bush himself could be one of the worst offenders. He recently promised a big rise in foreign aid. Though White House official insist that the new Department of Homeland Security can be created at no cost, no one believes them. ... "it boggles the mind" that you can reorganize 170,000 people at no additional cost. [acutal costs are estimated at maybe "tens of billions of dollars"]

So the idea that discretionary spending will fall in real terms seems fanciful. Even if it just rose in line with the population, that alone would add over $400 billion to spending over the next ten years. And that excludes spending increases on entitlements. Given rising health-care costs, Congress would surely be forced to put more money into Medicare. Both parties in Congress are discussing expanding Medicare to include perscription drug coverage...

Sen Joseph Lieberman ... recently suggested that part of the Bush tax plan should be postponed if the economy remains weak. ... Republicans will not touch the tax cut; indeed they want them all to be permanent. It is spending that must somehow be stopped. Welcome to the era of deficit politics.
Why are big deficits and massive spending increases always seems to appear when conservative Republicans in power? The more conservative, then greaeter the accounting is fudged. George Jr's solution: government must spend less on the economy and more on big defense weapons - such as Star Wars. Does this nonsense ever end? We spend more than the military of top 5 countries combined. When does the cold war end? Our secret military budget alone is larger than any other nation's military budget. But we spend too much on our people and infastructure? Deficits are acceptable if it means a bigger military? How quickly this President wipes out a surplus budget. Do you feel safer?

headsplice 07-11-2002 01:22 PM

Quote:

Do you feel safer?
Safer from who? Terrorists? Not an ounce. From the government? Even less so.
My guess would be is that GWB2 is doing what he's always done: spending other people's money. He doesn't care where it comes from or where it goes, as long as his goals are achieved. A syndrome that seems all to common the the hallways of power these days (including in major corporations).

classicman 12-26-2007 04:37 AM

bump

TheMercenary 12-26-2007 09:27 PM

tw, I recall you putting The Economist down recently, something to the effect that their articles were worthless...

Urbane Guerrilla 12-27-2007 11:48 AM

Headsplice, you're going to have to master the details better than to say things like "GWB2." He is not number two in a series, and is not named so. The father has two middle names, the son one, for all the similarity between the end results. For numbers to come into play, a name must be replicated exactly. I do hope you've learned as much in the intervening five years minus between your post date and today.

I'd say you were looking for excuses to feel "not an ounce" safer from terrorists -- and that isn't really honest, looking back, is it? These foes of all that is decent haven't been able to hit us in our home since 9/11, and that's six years straight of success.

Ibby 12-27-2007 04:53 PM

And how many years without getting 'hit in our homes' did we have before 9/11?

R2D3 12-27-2007 05:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Urbane Guerrilla (Post 419512)
These foes of all that is decent haven't been able to hit us in our home since 9/11, and that's six years straight of success.

Thats some measurement of success...nobody bombed us for six years? :headshake

busterb 12-28-2007 11:07 PM

Quote:

Thats some measurement of success...nobody bombed us for six years?
:wstupid:

Urbane Guerrilla 12-29-2007 05:36 AM

And I see a few people are stiiiiiiiiill looking. And they're among the usual suspects, too. Shocking! Shocking!

Sorry, gang; it just isn't a sin to try and win a war, and you know it was the other chaps who started it, after trying so long and so hard and so many times. No matter how hard the Democratic Party and their summer-day-IQ supporters try and tell us it is.

piercehawkeye45 12-29-2007 10:59 PM

Just like the American Indians started the Indian Wars.

Griff 12-30-2007 07:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Urbane Guerrilla (Post 419979)
...you know it was the other chaps who started it, after trying so long and so hard and so many times.

Wow.

TheMercenary 12-31-2007 03:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Griff (Post 420171)
Wow.

Wow what?

Urbane Guerrilla 12-31-2007 03:29 PM

Ain't no wow at all: we sure as hell didn't blow up the Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983, shoot up the Khobar Towers, truckbomb two US Embassies in East Africa, the USS Cole, et al., et al. No wow at all; our operatives weren't blowing up offices in Islamabad or in Lebanon; theirs were, and they worked very hard at it for eighteen years.

Then they got us mad. Griff, it will help you to remember it's the unlibertarians who start wars -- and that our opposition is about as unlibertarian as anyone is likely to get. I'd say that's at least roughly Q.E.D.

Griff 12-31-2007 08:06 PM

Iraq did those things?

TheMercenary 12-31-2007 08:25 PM

Iraq had nothing to do with 9/11.


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