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Text 2293, 99 rader
Skriven 2004-09-15 14:02:58 av Alan Hess
Ärende: trail of red ink
========================
      

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-op.deficit15sep15,1,5350105.
story?coll=bal-oped-headlines
A trail of red ink


By Robert B. Archibald and David H. Feldman

September 15, 2004

THE CLOSE of a president's term provides an ideal time to review his fiscal
legacy and to compare it with his predecessor's. Let's ask which president,
Bill Clinton or George W. Bush, left the nation's fiscal house in better order.

When President Bush took office, the federal government had just run a budget
surplus for 2000 of more than $236 billion. In the eight years of the Clinton
administration, the burden of the national debt on the average American family
of four had fallen by $9,200, measured in constant 2003 dollars. The
Congressional Budget Office was forecasting a $2 trillion surplus between 2002
and 2006.

By contrast, the CBO forecast for this year is a deficit of $422 billion, and
over the past four years the federal government has racked up almost $900
billion in added debt. This is a $3 trillion budget turnaround.

The administration would like you to believe that this sea change in the
federal budget is a result of the mini-recession of 2001 and the slow recovery.
A few years of economic growth and all will supposedly be well. The facts tell
a different story. The recession did indeed eat up the surplus in 2002, but
recent deficits have soared despite good economic growth in 2003 and this year.

Even assuming that the recovery will continue to produce solid real income
growth averaging 3 percent a year, the CBO forecasts sizable deficits for the
remainder of the decade. These estimates understate the likely flow of red ink
since they don't include pressure on discretionary spending due to population
growth and their projections assume a 15-fold increase - to 33 million - in the
number of taxpayers subject to the alternative minimum tax. Congress would
never stand for that. The CBO forecasts beyond 2010 are rosier because they
presume that the Bush tax cuts will expire.

The budget mess is not a result of explosive spending growth. When Mr. Clinton
left office, federal spending consumed only 18 percent of the nation's income,
down from the 22 percent he inherited from the first Bush administration. The
Clinton administration was truly fiscally conservative. Despite increased
spending on homeland security and the war in Iraq, the government now spends
only 20 percent of the nation's income, which is actually less than the average
over the past 25 years.

The bleak budget picture is driven largely by the Bush administration's
signature tax cuts. In 2000, federal taxes raked in nearly 21 percent of gross
national product. This year, that figure has fallen to 16 percent, a number not
seen since a brief dip in federal revenue and spending right before the Korean
War in 1950.

Why should the average American care about arcane budget numbers once derided
by candidate Bush as fuzzy math?

The first reason is that spending on Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security is
about to begin a sustained increase. The government will need to shift revenue
to these programs or severely prune the benefits. But exploding national debt
means revenues that could be used for these social programs must be diverted to
pay added interest costs. Brookings Scholars Alice Rivlin and Isabel Sawhill
estimate that by 2014, $1 out of every $5 of individual income taxes will be
needed to finance the extra debt service costs of our higher national debt.

Government borrowing also competes with private firms for scarce funds. Less
financial capital available for private firms means less investment in
productivity-enhancing tools or research and development. The result is slower
wage growth in the future.

Foreigners now purchase well over half the debt issued by the U.S. government.
Nearly $2 trillion of the national debt is owed to foreign holders, and the
interest on this debt represents a foreign claim on U.S. tax revenue that
cannot be shirked. Their historical appetite for U.S. debt obligations has kept
investment in the United States higher than it otherwise would have been. But
this dependence on foreign capital is risky.

If foreign investors lose their appetite for buying ever-increasing volumes of
U.S. debt, the result could be a precipitous decline in the value of the dollar
and/or a spike in U.S. interest rates. The dollar already has weakened
substantially against the euro, and in this era of globally mobile capital,
foreign dollar holders have alternative ways to hold their wealth that were not
available in earlier decades. While not likely at present, an Argentina-style
currency crisis is no longer unthinkable.

Mr. Bush's tax cuts have squandered the surplus that originated with his
father's more responsible tax policies and that was nurtured by the Clinton
administration's own tax policy and spending restraint. The costs of this
fiscal train wreck cannot be avoided forever. Today's children and young adults
will pay higher taxes and earn lower wages in the future as a consequence.

Robert B. Archibald and David H. Feldman teach economics at the College of
William and Mary in Virginia.

Copyright + 2004, The Baltimore Sun

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