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Old 10-08-2006, 10:27 PM   #1 (permalink)
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From Federal Budget Surplus, to Disaster, in Just Six Years

In <a href="http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showpost.php?p=2134078&postcount=34">another thread</a>, UStwo posted this excerpt, this is my response:

It comes down to the fact that you want to enjoy a low tax rate, even as the deficit that is aggravated by the impact of recent tax cuts, and out of control republican spending, destroys the fiscal soundness of the US in the not too distant future. As far as a shift of government control to "the loony left", as you describe it, others reading this can mull over the fact that the treasury deficit declined every year, starting with the end of 12 years of "responsible conservative management" of the federal budget, and resumed it's trend of increasing, massively, when republicans returned to power, in 2001:
Quote:
<a href="http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:LK4mcAFfc4cJ:www.cbo.gov/budget/historical.pdf+2005+revenue+tax+revenue&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=7#2">CBO html link</a>
Year GDP Revenue Spending Surplus/Deficit
1993 ______1,154.5 1,409.5 -300.4

2000 9,817 2,025.5 1,789.2 86.4 (This line displays an $86.4 billion budget surplus.....
2001 10,128 1,991.4 1,863.2 -32.4 (a small deficit here, and then the tax cut
2002 10,470 1,853.4 2,011.2 -317.4
2003 10,971 1,782.5 2,160.1 -538.4
2004 11,734 1,880.3 2,293.0 -568.0
2005 12,487 2,153.9 2,472.2 -493.6

GDP growth 2000-2005, 27% total, 4.9%/year.
Revenue growth 2000-2005, 6.3% total, 1.2%/year.
Spending growth 2000-2005, 38% total, 6.7%/year.
Quote:
<a href="http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:LK4mcAFfc4cJ:www.cbo.gov/budget/historical.pdf+2005+revenue+tax+revenue&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=7#4">CBO html link</a>
Table 1.
Revenues, Outlays, Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt Held by the Public,
1962 to 2005
(Billions of dollars)
Sources: Congressional Budget Office; Office of Management and Budget.
Note: n.a. = not applicable (the Postal Service was not an independent agency until 1972); * = between -$50 million and $50 million.
a. End of year.
1962 99.7 106.8 -5.9 -1.3 n.a. -7.1 248.0
1963 106.6 111.3 -4.0 -0.8 n.a. -4.8 254.0
1964 112.6 118.5 -6.5 0.6 n.a. -5.9 256.8
1965 116.8 118.2 -1.6 0.2 n.a. -1.4 260.8
1966 130.8 134.5 -3.1 -0.6 n.a. -3.7 263.7
1967 148.8 157.5 -12.6 4.0 n.a. -8.6 266.6
1968 153.0 178.1 -27.7 2.6 n.a. -25.2 289.5
1969 186.9 183.6 -0.5 3.7 n.a. 3.2 278.1
1970 192.8 195.6 -8.7 5.9 n.a. -2.8 283.2
1971 187.1 210.2 -26.1 3.0 n.a. -23.0 303.0
1972 207.3 230.7 -26.1 3.1 -0.4 -23.4 322.4
1973 230.8 245.7 -15.2 0.5 -0.2 -14.9 340.9
1974 263.2 269.4 -7.2 1.8 -0.8 -6.1 343.7
1975 279.1 332.3 -54.1 2.0 -1.1 -53.2 394.7
1976 298.1 371.8 -69.4 -3.2 -1.1 -73.7 477.4
1977 355.6 409.2 -49.9 -3.9 0.2 -53.7 549.1
1978 399.6 458.7 -55.4 -4.3 0.5 -59.2 607.1
1979 463.3 504.0 -39.6 -2.0 0.9 -40.7 640.3
1980 517.1 590.9 -73.1 -1.1 0.4 -73.8 711.9
Revenues Outlays Budget Security Service Total the Publica
1981 599.3 678.2 -73.9 -5.0 -0.1 -79.0 789.4
1982 617.8 745.7 -120.6 -7.9 0.6 -128.0 924.6
1983 600.6 808.4 -207.7 0.2 -0.3 -207.8 1,137.3
1984 666.5 851.9 -185.3 0.3 -0.4 -185.4 1,307.0
1985 734.1 946.4 -221.5 9.4 -0.1 -212.3 1,507.3
1986 769.2 990.4 -237.9 16.7 * -221.2 1,740.6
1987 854.4 1,004.1 -168.4 19.6 -0.9 -149.7 1,889.8
1988 909.3 1,064.5 -192.3 38.8 -1.7 -155.2 2,051.6
1989 991.2 1,143.8 -205.4 52.4 0.3 -152.6 2,190.7
1990 1,032.1 1,253.1 -277.6 58.2 -1.6 -221.0 2,411.6
1991 1,055.1 1,324.3 -321.4 53.5 -1.3 -269.2 2,689.0
1992 1,091.3 1,381.6 -340.4 50.7 -0.7 -290.3 2,999.7
1993 1,154.5 1,409.5 -300.4 46.8 -1.4 -255.1 3,248.4 Deficit decline starts
1994 1,258.7 1,461.9 -258.8 56.8 -1.1 -203.2 3,433.1
1995 1,351.9 1,515.9 -226.4 60.4 2.0 -164.0 3,604.4
1996 1,453.2 1,560.6 -174.0 66.4 0.2 -107.4 3,734.1
1997 1,579.4 1,601.3 -103.2 81.3 * -21.9 3,772.3
1998 1,722.0 1,652.7 -29.9 99.4 -0.2 69.3 3,721.1
1999 1,827.6 1,702.0 1.9 124.7 -1.0 125.6 3,632.4
2000 2,025.5 1,789.2 86.4 151.8 -2.0 236.2 3,409.8 Deficit eliminated
2001 1,991.4 1,863.2 -32.4 163.0 -2.3 128.2 3,319.6
2002 1,853.4 2,011.2 -317.4 159.0 0.7 -157.8 3,540.4
2003 1,782.5 2,160.1 -538.4 155.6 5.2 -377.6 3,913.4
2004 1,880.3 2,293.0 -568.0 151.1 4.1 -412.7 4,295.5 SSI Revenue= $151.1b
2005 2,153.9 2,472.2 -493.6 173.5 1.8 -318.3 4,592.2
Revenues Outlays Budget Security Service Total the Publica
Deficit (-) or Surplus Debt
On-
In 2004, 3 years after the 2001 tax cut trend began, SSI revenues collected were the same $151 billion as they were in 2000. Revenue from inidvidual income tax, however, was down to $1,880.3 billion, or $125 billion lower than the $2025.4 billion collected in 2000.

The actual 2006 treasury deficit, with "off-budget" appropriations for Katrina "relief" and military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, added, will total <b>$574 billion</b>, vs. $553 billion in 2005, $496 billion in 2004, $555 billion in 2003, $421 billion in 2002, $133 billion in 2001, and just $18 billion, in 2000,
down from $347 billion when "the loony left began to manage the budget in 1993: http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdhisto4.htm
Quote:
http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdpdodt.htm
Prior Fiscal Years____Intragovernmental Holdings
09/29/2006 _______8,506,973,899,215.23
09/30/2005 _______7,932,709,661,723.50
09/30/2004 _______7,379,052,696,330.32
09/30/2003 _______6,783,231,062,743.62
09/30/2002 _______6,228,235,965,597.16
09/28/2001 _______5,807,463,412,200.06
09/28/2000 _______5,674,178,209,886.86
09/30/1999 _______5,656,270,901,633.43
The economist who recently wrote this column:
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...100100872.html
A Party Without Principles

By Sebastian Mallaby
Monday, October 2, 2006; A19

After years of single-party government, the prospect of a Democratic majority in the House ought to feel refreshing. But even with Republicans collapsing in a pile of sexual sleaze, I just can't get excited. Most Democrats in Congress seem bereft of ideas or the courage to stand up for them. They clearly want power, but they have no principles to guide their use of it.....
also wrote this one:
Quote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...051400806.html

</FONT><br/>Republicans Ignore Their Experts on The Cost of Tax Cuts<br/><P><FONT SIZE="-1">By Sebastian Mallaby<br/>Monday, May 15, 2006; A17<BR></FONT>
Year GDP Revenue Spending Surplus/Deficit
1993 ______1,154.5 1,409.5 -300.4

2000 9,817 2,025.5 1,789.2 86.4
2001 10,128 1,991.4 1,863.2 -32.4
2002 10,470 1,853.4 2,011.2 -317.4
2003 10,971 1,782.5 2,160.1 -538.4
2004 11,734 1,880.3 2,293.0 -568.0
2005 12,487 2,153.9 2,472.2 -493.6

<b>Deficits in right column, above, do not include "off budget" appropriatins.....</b>
GDP growth 2000-2005, 27% total, 4.9%/year.
Revenue growth 2000-2005, 6.3% total, 1.2%/year.
Spending growth 2000-2005, 38% total, 6.7%/year.

So....aside from wanting to avoid increased personal income taxes, necessary if the "loony left" has any hope of coming in and cleaning up "the dog poop on the carpet", which is the mismanaged state of federal budget management and spending, today.....contrasting sharply to the state of the budget when "the loony left" handed control over to "responsible conservatives", less than six years ago.....and neccessary if you want to be responsible enough to commit to avoiding passing a bankrupt government to you own children, as your legacy, can you seperate the preceding facts, data, and descriptions, from your own political prejudices and preconceived notions.

The federal budgeting and spending of the last 25 years, provides a model that strongly suggest that the opposite of everything you've posted on the justification of your political preferences, is invalid. It is a presciption for temporarily low income taxes now, in exchange for a curency crash and a bankrupt federal treasury, before 2015.

Why would you not let the political party with the budget and spending management organization, with the strongly superior reputation and past record for success, an organization that...in just 7 years in the 90's reversed a record of deficits that had grown, on the 12 year watch of "responsible conservatives", to a level that was an even greater percentage of GDP than it is now? .....And instead......disparage the competent alternative with insults, and support a political organization that has managed us into crisis deficit levels.....not once.....but twice.

Consider where the economy will retreat to, without the artificial stimulus of <a href="http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/2006/09/gdp-growth-with-and-without-mortgage.html">MEW</a>.......
Quote:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...UmU&refer=home

..... Countrywide Financial Corp., the largest U.S. mortgage lender, told employees in a Sept. 19 memo to expect job cuts of 5 to 10 percent in some departments. The Calabasas, California- based company, which employs 56,000, funded 24 percent fewer loans in August than a year earlier.

Consumer spending will also take a hit as falling house prices discourage homeowners from borrowing against equity gains. Home equity withdrawal fell to an annual rate of $497 billion in the second quarter, from $649 billion in the first quarter and $817 billion in the final quarter of 2005, according to calculations supplied by the Fed. .....
Consider that, in 2005, even with the stimulus to US GDP of a $553 federal deficit, and consumer withdrawal from home equity of at least $600 billion in 2005, GDP rose from $11,734 billion in 2004, to $12,487 in 2005, an increase in GDP of only $753 billion, and...even with all of that added stimulus, personal income tax revenue to the US treasury, was $2153.9 billion, only $128 billion higher than the $2025.5 billion collected in 2000, when the GDP total was $9,817 billion, or $2,670 billion less than 2005 GDP. GDP had increased 27 percent in 5 years, and income tax revenue rose just $128 billion in the same period....or just 6.3 percent.
Quote:
http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/2...-mortgage.html
.....The first graph shows quarterly MEW as a percent of GDP for the last 30 years. There is substantial quarterly variability in MEW, but it appears MEW has fallen, as a percent of GDP, from the levels of the last few years.
Using Greenspan's estimate of approximately 50% of MEW flowing through to personal consumption expenditures, it is possible to estimate the impact of MEW on GDP.
<center><img src="http://photos1.blogger.com/hello/243/2888/640/QuarterlyMEWQ22006.jpg"></center>


This graph, of annual real GDP growth for the last 30 years, clearly shows the unprecedented impact of MEW over the last few years.
(2006: first two quarters)

Using this method, the surge in MEW in the mid to late '80s boosted GDP by an average of about 0.5% per year. Over the last five years, MEW has boosted GDP by an average of 2.2% per year!
<center><img src="http://photos1.blogger.com/hello/243/2888/640/GDPMEWQ22006.1.jpg"></center>
UPDATE NOTE: The above calculations and graph assumes that consumption is domestic. In reality a large portion of MEW related consumption probably flows to imports. I'll <a href="http://calculatedrisk.blogspot.com/2006/09/mortgage-extraction-and-trade-deficit.html">write more</a> about this.
So, combined MEW and deficit stimulus to the economy of $1,153 billion, only increased GDP by $753 billion in 2005. Receding housing prices will result in huge decreases in economic stimulus from MEW, as "cashout" refinancing disappears, and with a deficit forecast to decline, what will be left to "prop up "GDP? IMO, it won't be possible to raise tax rates without further strain on a GDP that needed an $1,153 billion input in 2005, to effect a $753 billion, 2005 GDP increase. There are no solutions, and IMO, no hope. The "responsible conservatives" have destroyed the stable federal budget of 2001, in just 5 years..........

<b>Can anybody justify labelling the political party that reversed the 1992 deficit, and ended it by 2000, only to witness it's rise to even higher levels, after they lost control of the federal government, "The Loony Left"?</b>
Can anyone post reasons to continue to vote for the current party, given this history of budget mismanagement?

Last edited by host; 10-08-2006 at 10:29 PM..
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Old 10-08-2006, 10:46 PM   #2 (permalink)
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Yes host republicans have been bad boys spending, something Clinton couldn't do since he lost the house. I've posted this before. This is why they should lose the house, and why many republicans are upset.

It was also projected surplus, and we had that little recession, we all knew it was comming yet somehow was such a shock to people after 2000.

Edit:As a side note I'd love for ratbastid to be correct on this one, I'd like it to be a grand plan instead of porkbarrel
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Old 10-08-2006, 10:56 PM   #3 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Yes host republicans have been bad boys spending
<!-- start zFacts Gas Gizmo -->
<table id="zDebtBox">
<tr><td><script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.zfacts.com/giz/G05/debt.js"></script></td></tr>
<tr><td><a href="http://zfacts.com/p/461.html" id='zF05' style="color:black;font-size:12px">The Gross National Debt</a></td></tr>
</table>
<!-- end gizmo -->
"Bad" might be putting it lightly.
Quote:
Originally Posted by host
GDP had increased 27 percent in 5 years, and income tax revenue rose just $128 billion in the same period....or just 6.3 percent.
Interesting. I'd say the spending going on in this administration is anything but conservative.

Last edited by Ch'i; 10-08-2006 at 11:00 PM..
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Old 10-09-2006, 05:27 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Bush has gone overboard with spending, and his fellow Republicans have not restrained him.

However, ignoring a recession (which was coming before Bush was elected)... and the high cost of fighting the war on terror is intentionally putting blinders on reality. We have gone vastly into debt after EVERY war, it'll happen.
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Old 10-09-2006, 05:32 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
Edit:As a side note I'd love for ratbastid to be correct on this one, I'd like it to be a grand plan instead of porkbarrel
Hey, your boys have said as much.

I've posted these links before, so I'm not going to quote them here, just give the URLs again.

The financial mismanagement of our nation isn't at all accidental or the result of incompetence. It's a deliberate scheme to bankrupt the nation and force smaller government.

http://www.pkarchive.org/economy/TaxCutCon.html This is long, the relevant stuff starts about 1/3 of the way down the page. The tone of this is pretty partisan, but it makes a pretty compelling case nonetheless.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starve-the-beast Wikipedia article, very thorough and factual.

This isn't a conspiracy theory. This was the stated financial policy of the Regan administration. "Supply-Side Economics" is the pretty face of it. There are many other articles there, ripe for the googling.
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Old 10-09-2006, 09:20 AM   #6 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
Hey, your boys have said as much.

I've posted these links before, so I'm not going to quote them here, just give the URLs again.

The financial mismanagement of our nation isn't at all accidental or the result of incompetence. It's a deliberate scheme to bankrupt the nation and force smaller government.

http://www.pkarchive.org/economy/TaxCutCon.html This is long, the relevant stuff starts about 1/3 of the way down the page. The tone of this is pretty partisan, but it makes a pretty compelling case nonetheless.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starve-the-beast Wikipedia article, very thorough and factual.

This isn't a conspiracy theory. This was the stated financial policy of the Regan administration. "Supply-Side Economics" is the pretty face of it. There are many other articles there, ripe for the googling.
ratbastid, the data....the math.... confirm that <b>"a deliberate scheme to bankrupt the nation and force smaller government"</b>, is a fait accompli.

Two remarkable results, that the reversal of the downward trend in ederal borrowing and deficit spending was accomplished in such a short time, and that folks will continue to support this financial coup, with their rhetoric and at the ballot box, until the ballot is pried from their "cold dead hand".

The excuses for "why it happened", and the rationale to vote for "more of it", seem to be stunning denials of the intent of those who did it, and of the damage that it caused/is causing.

Dispute of the data and the math in the OP is not included in the posts that attempt to justify this treason against the treasury and the currency. This "tax cut" and massive borrowing and spending scheme required, in 2005, $1.15 in deficit "inputs" and MEW from home refinancing, for every 75 cents increment of GDP increase. The MEW source has dried up.

Let us see what happens to the economy, and the direction of the deficit, next:
There is now a second "force" working to destroy US financial prospects. It is the result of "low doc", "no doc" loans to unqualified mortgage applicants, interest rates driven down by Fed rate cuts, and then increased by Fed rate increaeses, 103 percent mortgage loans, initial zero interest rates on adjustable rate ARMS (mortgage applicants were approved only on the basis of their ability to make payments on the temporarily low, initial payment schedules on their loans...) and by the repackaging of multiple mortgage loans into "groups" that were sold by Wall Street to investors, as MBS's (Mortgage Backed Securities) that disguised the actual quality of the individual loans; the actual ability of each individual borrower to reliably make the monthly mortgage payments.

Appraisers co-operated by providing residential realty appraisals on the "high side", aided by "flippers" who invaded the market and pushed realty prices ever higher. Builders built for a rate of demand growth artificially stimulated by the flippers and second home buyers influenced by a "can't lose" mentality..."if we don't use the second home enough or if it turns out to be too expensive to own, we can always sell it....whenever we want to....for much more than we are paying now..."

The question now is....sell to whom? The folks who extracted money from their rapidly rising home values, and the builders who stimulated the GDP growth by seemingly building as many new housing units as possible, as quickly as possible, drove increases in GDP that actually validated the bullshit mantra that "tax cuts" create more federal revenues, not less....

If this was true, why did the party in power, stop at such comparatively modest levels of tax reduction? The truth is, that GDP and revenue collected from individual income taxes, did not rise because of tax cuts, at all. Now the "process" that "goosed" the GDP is in the infancy of a long period of unwinding, and this is a glimpse of what it will look like:

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogsp...s_archive.html

Will there be any homebuilders, subcontractors, realtors, or banks still in business, who are now overexposed to this ridiculous speculative bubble after the scenario reported at the link above plays out, over and over....in every local market in the US?

Will any political party be able to lower the rate of increase of the treasury deficit, or increase taxes, without further extracting stimulus for GDP growth?

I don't see how....
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Old 10-09-2006, 10:28 AM   #7 (permalink)
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Sometimes, some people just have to learn the hard way.

Let them reap what they sow and refuse to listen to them cry later.

Then be quite liberal with the "I told you so"
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Old 10-09-2006, 11:32 AM   #8 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lady Sage
Sometimes, some people just have to learn the hard way.

Let them reap what they sow and refuse to listen to them cry later.

Then be quite liberal with the "I told you so"
Except in this case we're all reaping what they have sown. And our children and grandchildren will be crying later.
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Old 10-09-2006, 01:44 PM   #9 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Lady Sage
Sometimes, some people just have to learn the hard way.

Let them reap what they sow and refuse to listen to them cry later.

Then be quite liberal with the "I told you so"
Yes, when the baby boomers are told there are no funds in the SS "Trust Fund" to pay them back.
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Old 10-09-2006, 02:04 PM   #10 (permalink)
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We generally....already know the reality

such is life
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Old 10-10-2006, 07:50 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Question:

Can it be wise for a government to spend more than it collects ?

Answer:

Yes, when the return on the money spent is greater than the cost of borrowing.
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Old 10-10-2006, 07:57 AM   #12 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
Question:

Can it be wise for a government to spend more than it collects ?

Answer:

Yes, when the return on the money spent is greater than the cost of borrowing.

Ok...and?

What does this have to do with the conversation at hand? Are you implying there is a "return" coming that covers all of this?
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Old 10-10-2006, 08:02 AM   #13 (permalink)
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Example:

There was deficit spending during WWII. Most agree the return on the money spent was well worth it.

Assumption:

The conversation at hand gave the impression that government deficit spending is bad regardless of the circumstance. This is a false assumption.
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Old 10-10-2006, 08:55 AM   #14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Most agree the return on the money spent was well worth it.
From where do you derive that assumption? The same mythical place from which people support the current spending? Just because you justify a "War on Terror" as the intellectual benefit of financial idiocy doesn't mean everyone does.

I'm not trying to attack you, but the difference in budgetary balance between Clinton and Bush makes me irate when I consider how much of my money was wasted.

Even if I operated under the assumption that everyone supported our financial waste in Iraq and Afgahnistan, that wouldn't in any way defeat the argument that there are more cost-effective ways to destroy countries and take their oil.
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Old 10-10-2006, 09:26 AM   #15 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JinnKai
From where do you derive that assumption? The same mythical place from which people support the current spending? Just because you justify a "War on Terror" as the intellectual benefit of financial idiocy doesn't mean everyone does.
I don't want to get into a discussion about the Iraq war or the war on terror. I can not add anything new to that topic.

Quote:
I'm not trying to attack you, but the difference in budgetary balance between Clinton and Bush makes me irate when I consider how much of my money was wasted.
I thinke there is a big difference between government deficit spending and wasteful government spending. I do not think wasteful spending is new - and that it did not occur during the Clinton years. Given the size of our economy and our normal economic cycles, I am not sure an annual measurment of the effeciency of government spending in terms of deficits is reasonable. I would perfer 5 or 10 year measuring periods. Given that - I don't think most Presidents will see the impact of their policies until their terms in office are over.

I do not give Clinton full credit for the economic boom during the 90's, nor should Bush get the blame for the economic slow down during his first term in office. I believe we will see budget surpluses again, and then after that we will see deficits again.

I do agree our federal government wastes a heck of a lot of money.

Quote:
Even if I operated under the assumption that everyone supported our financial waste in Iraq and Afgahnistan, that wouldn't in any way defeat the argument that there are more cost-effective ways to destroy countries and take their oil.
We don't take oil nor destroy countries. I don't understand this point.
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Old 10-10-2006, 09:45 AM   #16 (permalink)
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I believe that both major parties are responsible for over taxing and over spending and it will make little difference as long as we keep on electing them.

I wonder if it is even possible to get elected without funding voter's pet projects and campaign contributor's pet causes. You probably can't get elected by telling people that you will have to raise their taxes and/or that they will have to cut back.
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Old 10-10-2006, 10:45 AM   #17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by flstf
I believe that both major parties are responsible for over taxing and over spending and it will make little difference as long as we keep on electing them.

I wonder if it is even possible to get elected without funding voter's pet projects and campaign contributor's pet causes. You probably can't get elected by telling people that you will have to raise their taxes and/or that they will have to cut back.
The big issue is people refuse to cut the stupid pet projects because it looks bad no matter how craptastic the program is.

So we keep the same entitlement programs and then add new pet ones.

We don't need to raise taxes, we don't need to cut back our own budgets, we need to spend less as a government. We need to quit buying votes with other peoples money, we need to state that the government is not a nanny state and if you don't work, plan, and save you are going to starve or hope for private charity.

The republicans were put in place in 1994 to start doing that, and they blew it. Now there really isn't a choice beyond whos new pet projects you like the best.
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Old 10-10-2006, 10:50 AM   #18 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by flstf
I believe that both major parties are responsible for over taxing and over spending and it will make little difference as long as we keep on electing them.

I wonder if it is even possible to get elected without funding voter's pet projects and campaign contributor's pet causes. You probably can't get elected by telling people that you will have to raise their taxes and/or that they will have to cut back.
<b>The deficit accumulated over 212 years, increased by 50 percent in just the last five fiscal years! This came after a period of reducing it from $347 billion to $18 billion, in just 7 years.....with no negative impact on GDP growth......</b>

Your "belief" either has to be suspended, or you have to ignore "the math" in my OP, to sustain your belief.

!993 to 2001....annual treasury deficit reduced from $347 billion <a href="http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opdhisto4.htm">Historical Debt Outstanding - Annual</a>
09/30/1993 $4,411,488,883,139.38
09/30/1992 $4,064,620,655,521.66

.....to $18 billion....

09/30/2000 $5,674,178,209,886.86
09/30/1999 $5,656,270,901,615.43

The reduction was accomplished by reducing the size of government. A measure of that, is the fact that is that there were a smaller number of federal employees, in addition to the 284,000, mostly civilian DOD jobs that were eliminated, by the end of Clinton's 8 years, in office, than at the beginning.

1993 progressive tax increases that were designed to avoid additional taxes on those most likely to spend all of their income, due to the smaller size of that income, vs. the economic circumstances of the wealthiest taxpayers,
also contributed to elimination of the deficit.

Here is what happened after the 2001 inauguration:
(From my OP):
Quote:
The actual 2006 treasury deficit, with "off-budget" appropriations for Katrina "relief" and military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, added, will total $574 billion, vs. $553 billion in 2005, $496 billion in 2004, $555 billion in 2003, $421 billion in 2002, $133 billion in 2001, and just $18 billion, in 2000,....
The annual deficit exploded from just $18 billion in 2000, to $421 billion in 2002. If "recession" is the excuse for this, and the "GWOT", consider
tha the 2002 $421 billion deficit was accrued between 10/01/2001, and 9/30/2002.

The "recession" never even amounted to an impact of negative GDP growth:
Quote:
<a href="http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:LK4mcAFfc4cJ:www.cbo.gov/budget/historical.pdf+2005+revenue+tax+revenue&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=7#2">CBO html link</a>
Year GDP Revenue Spending Surplus/Deficit
1993 ______1,154.5 1,409.5 -300.4

2000 9,817 2,025.5 1,789.2 86.4 (This line displays an $86.4 billion budget surplus.....
2001 10,128 1,991.4 1,863.2 -32.4 (a small deficit here, and then the tax cut
2002 10,470 1,853.4 2,011.2 -317.4
2003 10,971 1,782.5 2,160.1 -538.4
2004 11,734 1,880.3 2,293.0 -568.0
2005 12,487 2,153.9 2,472.2 -493.6
There was a small impact on the increased deficit, by 9/30/2002, because of the commencement of GWOT spending, and a much bigger impact, because of
tax cuts that even included the mailing of rebate checks to most taxpayers.

The facts demonstrate a massive overreaction to the "recession", further justifying tax cuts that were promised by Bush during the 2000 presidential campaign.

We have enough information now to conclude that the current administration is incapable of sound fiscal management. The "other party" achieved "cred" in this area, massively so....when compared to the deficits that occured before their 1993 to 2001 administration, and more dramatically, after it.

flstf, for the life of me....I see nothing besides ideology to validate your belief, and I see nothing besides ideology that would prevent concerned voters from voting for representatives of the "other party".

The point of this thread is to compare the fiscal management track records of both parties. The accomplishments in that area, of the "other party", in just 8 years, compared to the record of nearly 18 years of the "responsible conservatives", makes the painting the "other party" with the label, "loony left", a ridiculous mistake. Voting for more of this "responsible conservative" total control of the federal government, simply because you don't want to pay higher taxes, or because the "better represent your values", while they bond your children's future to horrific deficit obligations and backbreaking interest payments that further increase that deficit, is mindnumbing to observe.

Last edited by host; 10-10-2006 at 10:54 AM..
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Old 10-10-2006, 10:53 AM   #19 (permalink)
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What entitlements are people willing to give up, what are you willing to give up?

I think the tax deduction for mortgage interest is unfair to those who rent or those unable to itemize. I personally benefit from the deduction but I would give it up.

Quote:
Originally Posted by host
We have enough information now to conclude that the current administration is incapable of sound fiscal management. The "other party" achieved "cred" in this area, massively so....when compared to the deficits that occured before their 1993 to 2001 administration, and more dramatically, after it.
Congress controls spending and your charge against the administration is unfair in my opinion. Social Security, a problem not even included in the numbers you cite, is a much bigger problem. Bush wanted reform, congress did not.

Quote:
The point of this thread is to compare the fiscal management track records of both parties. The accomplishments in that area, of the "other party", in just 8 years, compared to the record of nearly 18 years of the "responsible conservatives", makes the painting the "other party" with the label, "loony left", a ridiculous mistake. Voting for more of this "responsible conservative" total control of the federal government, simply because you don't want to pay higher taxes, or because the "better represent your values", while they bond your children's future to horrific deficit obligations and backbreaking interest payments that further increase that deficit, is mindnumbing to observe.
Perhaps a comparison of discretionary spending would better support your point. When budget items are mandated by law today that impacts budgets ten years from now who gets the credit, who gets the blame?
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Old 10-10-2006, 11:12 AM   #20 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ustwo
The big issue is people refuse to cut the stupid pet projects because it looks bad no matter how craptastic the program is.

So we keep the same entitlement programs and then add new pet ones.

We don't need to raise taxes, we don't need to cut back our own budgets, we need to spend less as a government. We need to quit buying votes with other peoples money, we need to state that the government is not a nanny state and if you don't work, plan, and save you are going to starve or hope for private charity.

The republicans were put in place in 1994 to start doing that, and they blew it. Now there really isn't a choice beyond whos new pet projects you like the best.
The "math" in my posts here, totally counter the points in your post. IMO, they are nothing but a variation of Reagan's divisive, misleading, "welfare queen", propaganda.

The government that you accuse of "coddling" the poor, the lazy....is actually spending, without accounting for it as part of the deficits, more than $150 billion per year in surplus SSI payments that are supposed to go into the SSI trust fund.

By far, the largest measure of wasted spending goes to farm subsidies to agribusiness, and to the defense industry, as a direct result of the "one party" "K Street" lobbying conglomerate. That is what has changed, in addition to the budget busting tax cuts passed into law since 2001.

Your predictable tactic of "demonizing" the "poor and the lazy", is an attempt to divert attention from what we know....from your own fellow "conservatives":
<center><img src="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Budget/images/11362187.gif"></center>
Quote:
http://www.heritage.org/research/budget/bg1924.cfm
A Primer on Lobbyists, Earmarks, and Congressional Reform
by Ronald D. Utt, Ph.D.
Backgrounder #1924

April 27, 2006

....Turning Pennies into Dollars. As the number of earmarks has escalated, there has been a similar increase in the number of lobbyists registered with the House and Senate, indicating their intentions to pursue clients’ interests with the Appropriations Committees. According to a Knight-Ridder article on lobbying, 1,865 lobbyists were registered with Congress in 2000 to pursue appropriations issues, but by 2004, the number is estimated to have increased to 3,523 lobbyists, an increase of 89 peromgcent in four years.[13] Even if Mr. Abramoff’s activities were an aberration or a “not widespread” practice, 3,522 other lobbyists would still be registered to pursue earmarks for paying clients.
It is a fact that Tom Delay cut off access to lobbying firms that employed democrats as lobbyists. Partisans who make reliable points to support their arguments are...partisan. Partisans who post propaganda are propagandists.
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Old 10-10-2006, 11:33 AM   #21 (permalink)
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For the sake of clarity please give a few examples of Republican programs you would cut. I think you wrote that you would cut farm subsidies and defense(I am not sure those are "Republican programs", but I won't argue that point). Would those cuts be enough to generate surpluses? If not what else would you cut?
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Old 10-10-2006, 11:40 AM   #22 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
For the sake of clarity please give a few examples of Republican programs you would cut. I think you wrote that you would cut farm subsidies and defense(I am not sure those are "Republican programs", but I won't argue that point). Would those cuts be enough to generate surpluses? If not what else would you cut?
I, for one, would pretty much cut the whole war on terror. Or shrink it to something affordable that might actually work.

I know, I know, I'm handing the terrorist the keys to the kingdom. Whatever. There'd be about 1/10th the number of terrorists in the world right now if we hadn't declared war on them.
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Old 10-10-2006, 11:42 AM   #23 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
I, for one, would pretty much cut the whole war on terror. Or shrink it to something affordable that might actually work.

I know, I know, I'm handing the terrorist the keys to the kingdom. Whatever. There'd be about 1/10th the number of terrorists in the world right now if we hadn't declared war on them.
psssssst, rat. they declared war on us first
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Old 10-10-2006, 11:51 AM   #24 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
For the sake of clarity please give a few examples of Republican programs you would cut. I think you wrote that you would cut farm subsidies and defense(I am not sure those are "Republican programs", but I won't argue that point). Would those cuts be enough to generate surpluses? If not what else would you cut?
ace, the following partially addresses your earlier statement that Bush, "wanted to reform Social Security", and congress did not." It should be framed in a more accurate context, and it is, below. It also partially addresses your questions, above. You offer no support for your "reform of SS" comment. I don't have to pick individual programs. I've provided enough support for the idea that voting for more of these folks' "control", is indefensible....

by the way....the author is a journalist on the subject of economics, not an economist, as I earlier described him:
Quote:
http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/fea...9.mallaby.html
September 2004

The Deficit Conquers All

By Sebastian Mallaby

....To the contrary, indeed, the best guess is that Bush won't merely seek to make his tax cuts permanent. He will actually want new ones. His has already proposed new tax breaks for retirement savings, and he favors tax-sheltered health savings accounts. It seems inevitable that a president from either party will want to "fix" the Alternative Minimum Tax, a device that prevents high earners from claiming too many deductions. Perish the thought that the well-off should raise their kids without the help of tax deductions from the government.

If this is the likely shape of tax policy in a second term, how will history judge the Bush presidency? Some early reviews are already available: "Past administrations from the time of Alexander Hamilton have on the average run responsible budgetary policies," says the Nobel laureate George Akerlof. "What we have here is a form of looting." Is that judgment going to stand? The more you consider the country's options, the more Akerlof appears to be on target.

To see why this is so, consider the following thought experiment. Assume that a second-term Bush will stick to his tax cuts, and then ask: Is there something, anything, that can possibly be done to stop future deficits from exploding?

The Bush administration's stock answer to this question can be dispensed with quickly. Officials declare their solemn intent to restrain government spending, but their record suggests the opposite. President Bush has presided over an explosion of spending not just on defense and homeland security, but in other areas, too. He has signed into law an enormous subsidy program for farmers; he has increased foreign aid by 50 percent; he has participated in the creation of a Medicare drug entitlement. Some of these programs are deserving, to be sure. But the Bush promise to restrain spending simply isn't credible, especially since the president has never once wielded his veto pen to block Congressional pork-barreling.

The next way the Bush administration claims to be able to address the deficit is to reform Social Security. Let's be generous, now: We'll set aside the fact that Bush ignored the various reform proposals put forward by his own Social Security advisory commission, judging the topic too politically hot to handle. Let's assume that, in a second term, Bush acquires a burst of reformist courage on Social Security. What impact is that likely to have on the nation's budget outlook?

There are two answers. In the short term and even the medium term, a shift to private retirement accounts would increase the budget deficit, since the government would have to carry on paying existing retirees while forgoing the Social Security contributions of younger workers, who will have opted out of the system. In the longer term, meaning after 2048, by the administration's own calculations, real savings are possible, because the money in private retirement accounts can be invested in equities, which tend to earn decent returns over the long term. That investment income represents money to finance retirement that isn't available now. Whatever the disadvantages of private accounts--notably, that they transfer investment risk onto individuals--the Bush administration can fairly claim that privatization would improve the long-term budget outlook.

How big is this effect, though? Surprisingly small, is the answer......
If you think that the author is partisan, google his name with Kerry....
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Old 10-10-2006, 12:56 PM   #25 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by host
ace, the following partially addresses your earlier statement that Bush, "wanted to reform Social Security", and congress did not." It should be framed in a more accurate context, and it is, below. It also partially addresses your questions, above. You offer no support for your "reform of SS" comment. I don't have to pick individual programs. I've provided enough support for the idea that voting for more of these folks' "control", is indefensible....

by the way....the author is a journalist on the subject of economics, not an economist, as I earlier described him:

If you think that the author is partisan, google his name with Kerry....
On the issue of support - Here is a link to Bush's plan:
http://www.whitehouse.gov/infocus/social-security/

I am not aware of any action on the part of congress to fix Social Security.

Also a general note - Quoting the opinions of journalists means nothing to me. I am a numbers guy, and a big picture guy. Numbers can move my opinion. The logic in an argument can move my opinion. The author of the source you cite presents his opinion with nothing to support it, so why not give your opinion rather than his, I would find that more interesting. I generally disagree with his assumptions, but that is not the point of this thread.
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Old 10-10-2006, 12:59 PM   #26 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stevo
psssssst, rat. they declared war on us first
Well, okay, and they spent a few thousand dollars to do it, and there were fewer of us when they were done. How come we're not so efficient?

By the way, it's a good thing this thread is about economics, because it saves me having to post a five paragraph diatribe on this mythical notion called "them".
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Old 10-10-2006, 01:01 PM   #27 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
I, for one, would pretty much cut the whole war on terror. Or shrink it to something affordable that might actually work.
Since this is a thread related to partisanship - I love the irony in the Democratic response to this issue. A) When asked about specifics - you get a response like the one above. B) The pretense that a Democrat Party controlled congress would actually cut spending. You have to agree the best they would do is raise taxes and hope for the best.
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Old 10-10-2006, 01:23 PM   #28 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ratbastid
By the way, it's a good thing this thread is about economics, because it saves me having to post a five paragraph diatribe on this mythical notion called "them".
yeah. I think we've done that enough.
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Old 10-10-2006, 02:30 PM   #29 (permalink)
 
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The issue is not the annual budget deficit. The far more serious issue that has long-term fiscal impact is the total accumulated national debt.

Reagan and the Bushs have increased the national debt at a far greater rate then recent Democrat presidents. You can blame Democratic-controlled Congress at the time, but the fact is the President submits the annual federal budget; Congress acts on it and often adds spending to benefit their districts or pet interest group, but the President has the final say and can veto any budget bill. (sorry about the size of the chart)



The current total national debt is over $8.5 TRILLION and growing exponentially if the full BUsh tax cuts are made permanent.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
Question:

Can it be wise for a government to spend more than it collects ?

Answer:

Yes, when the return on the money spent is greater than the cost of borrowing.
Currently, the interest alone is over $400 BILLION/year...the third largest expenditure in the federal budget and not a very good return on the money,particularly since over 20% of our national debt is owned by foreign governments and banks, with Japan, China, UK and OPEC leading the way.



Clinton and the Repub Congress demonstrated how you can have a responsible fiscal policy by drawing down the national debt with sensible and disciplined spending and without tax increases

I'll save my comments re: Bush's so-called Social Security reform for another time
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Old 10-11-2006, 07:01 AM   #30 (permalink)
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This graph paints a different picture. I agree spending is out of control in Washington, but it is not going to lead to disaster. We survived WWII, we will get through this war too.

http://zfacts.com/metaPage/lib/National-Debt-GDP.gif



Here is another graph I found. Also paints a different picture than yours. I guess the main point is that no administration has controlled spending
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Old 10-11-2006, 07:43 AM   #31 (permalink)
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That first chart certainly makes you wonder why we let the Republicans portray themselves as the party of small government and controlled spending.
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Old 10-11-2006, 08:14 AM   #32 (permalink)
 
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Ace...I fail to see how your charts paint a different picture than mine.

Your first one shows how the national debt as percent of GDP went down during all Dem presidents and up during Reagan/Bush I and Bush II

Your second shows how receipts exceeded outlays for the first time in a long time under Clinton(i.e. surplus) and how outlays are exceeding receipts under Bush. And, the annual budget deficit has been worse in each of the last 5 years than anytime since WWII.

Maybe you can explain your interpretation a little better.

I dont think it will lead to a disaster, but simply that the fiscal policy of the last 5 years has taken us in the wrong direction.

The fact that the interest on the national debt is the third larget expenditure in the budget does not promote a productive economy and the fact that a growing percent of our debt is owned by foreign governments and banks, particularly when its China and OPEC, is not in our financial or security interests.
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Old 10-11-2006, 08:24 AM   #33 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
Since this is a thread related to partisanship - I love the irony in the Democratic response to this issue. A) When asked about specifics - you get a response like the one above. B) The pretense that a Democrat Party controlled congress would actually cut spending. You have to agree the best they would do is raise taxes and hope for the best.
A) That's not specific enough for you?

B) I don't have to agree any such thing, nor does anyone who actually looks at the records of our last five administrations.
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Old 10-11-2006, 10:56 AM   #34 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
Ace...I fail to see how your charts paint a different picture than mine.

Your first one shows how the national debt as percent of GDP went down during all Dem presidents and up during Reagan/Bush I and Bush II
It shows an upward trend during Clinton's first few years in office, then a decline. When Bush II comes into office the down trend reverses but stays in the same range as it was when Clinton was in office. Like I posted earlier, I think you don't see the impact of a new administration immediately. I think the downward trend started during Clinton's term was in part a result of the previous administration. I also give Clinton some responsibility for the reversal during Bush II's term. I think today we are getting some announcements on deficit reductions due to the Bush tax cuts.

Quote:
Your second shows how receipts exceeded outlays for the first time in a long time under Clinton(i.e. surplus) and how outlays are exceeding receipts under Bush. And, the annual budget deficit has been worse in each of the last 5 years than anytime since WWII.
True. I also see an overall upward trend in outlays. An argument could be made that the dot com bubble burst had an impact on tax collection at the start of Bush's term. The increase in deficit spending was a result of a sudden drop in tax collections. This drop seems to have occured before the Bush tax cuts would have had an impact.

Quote:
Maybe you can explain your interpretation a little better.
Looking at the deficit in absolute dollars is misleading. If your income is $100,000 and you have $50,000 in debt, that's a 50% ratio. If you income is $1,000,000 and the debt is $250,000, that's a 25% ratio. I would not compare the $50,000 to the $250,000, I would compare the percentages. equally important, at least to me, is measuring the deficit in consistant dollars, or making adjustments for inflation.

Quote:
I dont think it will lead to a disaster, but simply that the fiscal policy of the last 5 years has taken us in the wrong direction.
An important question is what was the cause. I don't think the cause was a policy issue or the tax cuts. The overall trend shows no spending discipline in Washington - democrat or republican

One more observation. If you look at my second graph, and the look at the receipts line - if you draw a straight line from 1996 to 2006 connecting those two points. What you see is an anomoly - a 'N' pattern. This tells me there was a spike in reciepts and then a sudden drop. This had nothing to do with spending, but had a big impact on the deficit both positive and then negative. If you see it and agree, then we need to discuss the cause of that pattern to arrive at our answer.
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Old 10-11-2006, 11:40 AM   #35 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aceventura3
It shows an upward trend during Clinton's first few years in office, then a decline. When Bush II comes into office <b>the down trend reverses but stays in the same range as it was when Clinton was in office. Like I posted earlier, I think you don't see the impact of a new administration immediately. I think the downward trend started during Clinton's term was in part a result of the previous administration. I also give Clinton some responsibility for the reversal during Bush II's term.</b> I think today we are getting some announcements on deficit reductions due to the Bush tax cuts.
ace....the portion of your statement that I highlighted in bold, above is bullshit.
This was the second quotebox in the OP:
Quote:
<a href="http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:LK4mcAFfc4cJ:www.cbo.gov/budget/historical.pdf+2005+revenue+tax+revenue&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=7#4">CBO html link</a>
Table 1.
Revenues, Outlays, Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt Held by the Public,
1962 to 2005
(Billions of dollars)
Sources: Congressional Budget Office; Office of Management and Budget.
Note: n.a. = not applicable (the Postal Service was not an independent agency until 1972); * = between -$50 million and $50 million.
a. End of year.
1962 99.7 106.8 -5.9 -1.3 n.a. -7.1 248.0
1963 106.6 111.3 -4.0 -0.8 n.a. -4.8 254.0
1964 112.6 118.5 -6.5 0.6 n.a. -5.9 256.8
1965 116.8 118.2 -1.6 0.2 n.a. -1.4 260.8
1966 130.8 134.5 -3.1 -0.6 n.a. -3.7 263.7
1967 148.8 157.5 -12.6 4.0 n.a. -8.6 266.6
1968 153.0 178.1 -27.7 2.6 n.a. -25.2 289.5
1969 186.9 183.6 -0.5 3.7 n.a. 3.2 278.1
1970 192.8 195.6 -8.7 5.9 n.a. -2.8 283.2
1971 187.1 210.2 -26.1 3.0 n.a. -23.0 303.0
1972 207.3 230.7 -26.1 3.1 -0.4 -23.4 322.4
1973 230.8 245.7 -15.2 0.5 -0.2 -14.9 340.9
1974 263.2 269.4 -7.2 1.8 -0.8 -6.1 343.7
1975 279.1 332.3 -54.1 2.0 -1.1 -53.2 394.7
1976 298.1 371.8 -69.4 -3.2 -1.1 -73.7 477.4
1977 355.6 409.2 -49.9 -3.9 0.2 -53.7 549.1
1978 399.6 458.7 -55.4 -4.3 0.5 -59.2 607.1
1979 463.3 504.0 -39.6 -2.0 0.9 -40.7 640.3
1980 517.1 590.9 -73.1 -1.1 0.4 -73.8 711.9
Revenues Outlays Budget Security Service Total the Publica
1981 599.3 678.2 -73.9 -5.0 -0.1 -79.0 789.4
1982 617.8 745.7 -120.6 -7.9 0.6 -128.0 924.6
1983 600.6 808.4 -207.7 0.2 -0.3 -207.8 1,137.3
1984 666.5 851.9 -185.3 0.3 -0.4 -185.4 1,307.0
1985 734.1 946.4 -221.5 9.4 -0.1 -212.3 1,507.3
1986 769.2 990.4 -237.9 16.7 * -221.2 1,740.6
1987 854.4 1,004.1 -168.4 19.6 -0.9 -149.7 1,889.8
1988 909.3 1,064.5 -192.3 38.8 -1.7 -155.2 2,051.6
1989 991.2 1,143.8 -205.4 52.4 0.3 -152.6 2,190.7
1990 1,032.1 1,253.1 -277.6 58.2 -1.6 -221.0 2,411.6
1991 1,055.1 1,324.3 -321.4 53.5 -1.3 -269.2 2,689.0
1992 1,091.3 1,381.6 <b>-340.4</b> 50.7 -0.7 -290.3 2,999.7
1993 1,154.5 1,409.5 -300.4 46.8 -1.4 -255.1 3,248.4 Deficit decline starts
1994 1,258.7 1,461.9 -258.8 56.8 -1.1 -203.2 3,433.1
1995 1,351.9 1,515.9 -226.4 60.4 2.0 -164.0 3,604.4
1996 1,453.2 1,560.6 -174.0 66.4 0.2 -107.4 3,734.1
1997 1,579.4 1,601.3 -103.2 81.3 * -21.9 3,772.3
1998 1,722.0 1,652.7 -29.9 99.4 -0.2 69.3 3,721.1
1999 1,827.6 1,702.0 1.9 124.7 -1.0 125.6 3,632.4
2000 2,025.5 1,789.2 86.4 151.8 -2.0 236.2 3,409.8 Deficit eliminated
2001 1,991.4 1,863.2 -32.4 163.0 -2.3 128.2 3,319.6
2002 1,853.4 2,011.2 -317.4 159.0 0.7 -157.8 3,540.4
2003 1,782.5 2,160.1 -538.4 155.6 5.2 -377.6 3,913.4
2004 1,880.3 2,293.0 -568.0 151.1 4.1 -412.7 4,295.5 SSI Revenue= $151.1b
2005 2,153.9 2,472.2 -493.6 173.5 1.8 -318.3 4,592.2
Revenues Outlays Budget Security Service Total the Publica
Deficit (-) or Surplus Debt
On-
The deficit trend was headed up under Bush I, and there is absolutely no case to be made that supports your attempt.....to move from the extreme numbers of Reagan & Bush I, reversed and actually ended under Clinton's watch, and then renewed and launched to extreme new highs, in just two years, under Bush II, that does not demonstrate fiscal mismanagement in all but the Clinton period of budget oversight... This is reinforced by the fact that total federal employment under Clinton declined vs. Bush I, and accelerated under Bush II....

I thought you posted that you are persuaded by "numbers". This example convinces me that nothing sways you. You've spun this badly, ace...

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Old 10-11-2006, 12:07 PM   #36 (permalink)
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Perhaps my eyes decieve me. But I am looking at the graph. I did not spin. All I did was show two different kinds of graphs compared to earlier graphs presented. I also explained why I don't give as much weight to absolute dollars as comparared to the ratios or percentages. I understand folks not agreeing with my approach, but my approach is not spin.

If I am the "village idiot" for saying the world is round, when everyone else says it flat - I proudly accept the label.
If you see no substance in what I presented - that's cool with me. However, I do accept the substance in the OP, I just disagree with the conclusions drawn from the data.
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Old 10-11-2006, 02:21 PM   #37 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
I think the downward trend started during Clinton's term was in part a result of the previous administration. I also give Clinton some responsibility for the reversal during Bush II's term.
So you credit, in part, the downward trend during CLinton's term to Bush I and you blame, in part, the upward trend in Bush II. to Clinton.....and you don't spin?

Quote:
An important question is what was the cause. I don't think the cause was a policy issue or the tax cuts. The overall trend shows no spending discipline in Washington - democrat or republican
The Center on Buget Policy Priorties did an analysis last year of a CBO report on the causes of the deficit.
The new Congressional Budget Office budget projections released today show that the nation faces a fourth consecutive year of substantial budget deficits. Some seek to portray “runaway domestic spending” or growth in the costs of entitlement programs as the primary cause of the shift in recent years from sizeable surpluses to large deficits. Such a characterization is incorrect. In 2005, the cost of tax cuts enacted over the past four years will be over three times the cost of all domestic program increases enacted over this period.

The new CBO data show that changes in law enacted since January 2001 increased the deficit by $539 billion in 2005. In the absence of such legislation, the nation would have a surplus this year. Tax cuts account for nearly half — 48 percent — of this $539 billion in increased

The Administration has repeatedly defended its tax cuts as a needed stimulus during the recent economic downturn. But the downturn is behind us, and the cost of the tax cuts is scheduled to increase in the years ahead. Indeed, some of the tax cuts enacted in 2001 that benefit only high-income households have not even started to take effect yet. The repeal of the “personal exemption phase-out” for high-income taxpayers, as well as repeal of the limitation on itemized deductions for high-income taxpayers, do not start to phase in until 2006 and do not take full effect until 2010. Estate tax repeal also does not take effect until 2010.

A growing number of studies from highly respected institutions and economists have concluded that the negative effect on long-term growth of the increased deficits that the tax cuts are generating is likely to cancel out — and quite possibly to outweigh — any positive effects on long-term growth from reductions in marginal tax rates and other tax incentives in the 2001 and 2003 tax-cut packages. Stated simply, the tax cuts are more likely to reduce long-term growth than to increase it.
http://www.cbpp.org/1-25-05bud.htm



Of course, you can question the credibility of the CBPP analysis.
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Old 10-11-2006, 03:05 PM   #38 (permalink)
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.....................

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Old 10-11-2006, 03:07 PM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dc_dux
So you credit, in part, the downward trend during CLinton's term to Bush I and you blame, in part, the upward trend in Bush II. to Clinton.....and you don't spin?
Let's be clear. I spin stuff regularlly, but I did not spin the graphs. The graphs speak for themselves.

I need to understand who I am dealing with on this issue. I think there is latency in federal tax and spending policy. Do you agree or not - and why?

P.S. - I am betting $100 to your favorite charity that you avoid a direct answer to the question. If by chance you do answer the question, one way or the other - I think it can lead to a more productive exchange.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ch'i
.....................
In todays news.

Quote:
Deficit falls to lowest level in 4 years
Bush hails figures; Democrats say trouble ahead
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By William L. Watts, MarketWatch
Last Update: 2:57 PM ET Oct 11, 2006

WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- A surge in tax receipts outpaced growth in spending, trimming the size of the federal deficit to $247.7 billion in fiscal 2006 -- the smallest gap in four years, the Treasury Department announced Wednesday.
President Bush and congressional Republicans trumpeted the figures as a triumph for the White House's economic policies, particularly the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts.
"The budget numbers are proof that pro-growth economic policies work. By restraining spending in Washington and allowing Americans to keep more of what they earn, the economy's creating jobs and reducing the deficit, making our nation a more prosperous nation for all our citizens," Bush said at a White House news conference otherwise dominated by questions about North Korea and Iraq.
Democrats said the shortfall was nothing to brag about, and that the long-term budget picture remains gloomy.
Bush and the Republican-controlled Congress "have raised the statutory debt limit four times in five years, adding more than $3 trillion to the national debt, which today stands at $8.6 trillion," said House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer, D-Md.
The final figure marked a decline of $71 billion from the $319 billion shortfall recorded in 2005. The fiscal year ended on Sept. 30.
Bush boasted that the final figure shows the White House managed to outperform his original goal of cutting the deficit in half by fiscal 2009 from its 2004 projected peak of $521 billion, or 4.5% of GDP.
Budget watchers note that the $521 billion projection actually never materialized, with the actual fiscal 2004 shortfall totaling $412 billion.
Receipts and spending at record levels
Both receipts and spending growth outpaced the economy in 2006, with both sides of the ledger rising to record levels, according to the Treasury Department. Revenues surged 11.8% to $2.407 trillion, while outlays grew 7.4%, to $2.654 trillion. The final deficit figure was an improvement on the White House's summer estimate of a $296 billion shortfall.
Individual income-tax receipts grew by 12.6% from fiscal 2005, to $1.044 trillion. Corporate income tax receipts grew 27.2%, totaling $343.9 billion in fiscal 2006.
The figure is a more dramatic drop from the White House's initial February estimate of a $423 billion deficit, which would have been a record in dollar terms.
Meanwhile, economic data show "that this economy continues to thrive," said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Judd Gregg, R-N.H. "We have met the president's goal of cutting the deficit in half - three years earlier than planned."
Democrats say the flow of red ink remains a daunting problem.
"The fact that some are trumpeting this year's deficit number as good news shows just how far we've fallen. Our budget picture today is extremely serious by any measure," said Sen. Kent Conrad of North Dakota, the senior Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee.
"Every year, the Bush administration puts out a high deficit estimate at the beginning of the year so that it can claim an improvement at the end of the year. This year is no different. No one should be fooled by the game being played here," Conrad said.
Economists and budget watchers have cautioned that revenue growth could be tempered in the next year amid signs of a slowing economy.
That means revenue growth is likely to slow to around a 6% pace, said Brian Bethune, U.S. economist at Global Insight.
Meanwhile, spending is expected to continue outpacing the growth of the economy, driven by defense-related spending and outlays for programs such as the Medicare prescription drug benefit, he said.
"As a result, upward pressure on the deficit is in the cards for fiscal 2007. While mild upward pressure on the deficit in fiscal 2007 is not particularly egregious, the persistent underlying structural deficit could prove to be an Achilles' heel should the economy slow down more rapidly than expected," Bethune said, in a research note. End of Story
William L. Watts covers Congress and politics for MarketWatch.
http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Stor...2FA5987D2C3%7D

The OP noted when the deficit started to drop and gave credit to Clinton. Now we have a peak in '04, a drop in '05 and another drop in '06. Who gets the credit for that?
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Old 10-11-2006, 03:33 PM   #40 (permalink)
 
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There are both immediate and long term impacts of tax and spending policies.

But.....

Much of Bush I's budget deficit and contribution to the national debt was the result of excessive spending....the primary reason why Perot ran in 1992. The downward trend in deficits/gdp under Clinton came four years into his term and as a result of spending limits that he and the Repub Congress agreed to. Show me any data that suggests it was in any way the impact of Bush I tax/spending policies.

Under Clinton, tax revenues were the hightest in US history and spending was frozen for many domestic programs. The Bush II contribution to the debt is coming more in his second term (and beyond) than the first. Again, show me how the disciplined tax and spending policies of the late 90s is contributing to the exponential growth in the national debt.

Quote:
A surge in tax receipts outpaced growth in spending, trimming the size of the federal deficit to $247.7 billion in fiscal 2006 -- the smallest gap in four years, the Treasury Department announced Wednesday.
The biggest reason for the "low" deficit number is that borrowing from the Social Security trust fund is "off-budget". All reason Presidents have used the SS trust fund to pay for current programs and put an IOU in the trust fund.

But no recent president has raided the SS trust fund anywhere near the level that Bush has.

I will say what I said previously....the annual deficit is not the real issue....it is the accumulated national debt that is the concern of most economists and fiscal analysts. And no president has added to the national debt as much as Bush, with no indicators of any draw down on the debt in the foreseeable future.

Quote:
The U.S. government closes the books on fiscal 2006 Saturday, and politicians are likely to trumpet that the federal deficit came in almost $60 billion below projections. Problem is, they won't be using the same math you use.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office has projected that the federal deficit for the fiscal year ending Sept. 30 will total around $260 billion, aided by a surge in revenues. That's $58 billion lower than last year's deficit and about $77 billion lower than projections at the beginning of the fiscal year.

Great news? Budget experts in Washington and on Wall Street say it's a welcome development, but misleading. Washington's funny math excludes the Social Security trust fund, which is running a $177 billion surplus this year. Washington spends it, but doesn't count it as spending. It's officially listed as "off-budget" borrowing.

"In practice, all the money Washington collects goes into the same pot and gets spent the same. On paper, we say we'll pay Social Security back later," said Brian Riedl, chief budget analyst for the Heritage Foundation, a conservative research center.

So the deficit is actually about $437 billion, the CBO calculates: the $260 billion official deficit plus the $177 billion borrowed from the trust fund. Since the money is "borrowed," it adds to the gross federal debt, which is expected to reach about $8.5 trillion by Jan. 1.

This is why New York investment bank Goldman Sachs & Co. issued a dour report Sept. 22 titled "The U.S. Budget Outlook: No Lasting Improvement."

Spending trust-fund money to mask the true size of the federal deficit is a longtime Washington gimmick, but even so, Heritage calculates that the Bush administration and the Republican-led Congress have increased government spending by 45 percent since 2001. Heritage uses spending numbers from the White House Office of Management and Budget.

Federal spending increased by 9 percent in fiscal 2006, the biggest jump since 1990. It's risen sharply for education, agriculture and several nondefense programs as well as for the war on terrorism and homeland security.

"It's really been a guns-and-butter spending spree," Riedl said. "Of all the federal spending increases since 2001, defense and homeland security combined are responsible for less than a third."

Heritage calculates that discretionary spending, excluding defense and homeland security, has increased by 7 percent annually during the Bush presidency. That nearly doubles the 4.2 percent annual growth under President Clinton.

The current spending increases appear less dramatic, however, when they're viewed as a percentage of gross domestic product, the total value of U.S. goods and services produced in a year. In its midyear review, the White House projected fiscal 2006 spending in the ballpark of 20 percent of the GDP. That's about the same as it was for most of the 1990s, although up sharply from 18.4 percent in 2000.

"We're in a situation where the immediate cash budget isn't the issue. People
shouldn't focus too much on that," said Robert Bixby, the executive director of the Concord Coalition, a bipartisan grassroots organization that advocates balanced federal budgets. "The real issue we need to start paying more attention to is what sort of enormous balloon payment are we setting ourselves up for in the future."

... more

http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/15632221.htm
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