Albuquerque Journal

Welcome to USA’s 2,700-page infrastruc­ture swindle

- CAL THOMAS SCyonludmi­cantisetd Columnist Email tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

Remember those “shovelread­y jobs” promised by the Obama-Biden administra­tion in 2011? When many failed to appear after passage of this spending boondoggle, President Obama joked, “Shovel-ready was not as shovel-ready as we expected.”

That law, noted Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW), cost $787 billion, of which $48 billion was supposed to go for infrastruc­ture. It was disingenuo­usly called the American Reinvestme­nt and Recovery Act. Harvard economist Martin Feldstein calculated that each job created would cost taxpayers $200,000. When asked about this statistic in a Sept. 26, 2011, interview with ABC News, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner did not dispute the figure, saying, “the price tag is the wrong way to measure the bill’s worth.” We’re hearing similar assertions about the new law.

Welcome to “shovel-ready 2.0” and another swindle that has just been perpetrate­d on us in the name of “infrastruc­ture.” Swindle means “to obtain by fraud or deceit.” The administra­tion and congressio­nal Democrats claim the bill will cost us nothing. That’s because they have used accounting gimmicks and rely on money they hope will come in through tax increases. Won’t that cost something?

The new law is 2,700 pages long. I would bet my house payment that no member of Congress read it all before voting on it. The Heritage Foundation has dug into the details and revealed items that add to the debt, probably increase already high inflation, and likely boost the cost of essential goods and services.

For starters, says a team of Heritage analysts, “it bails out the Highway Trust Fund to the tune of $118 billion. The fund suffers from chronic deficits due to overspendi­ng. Rather than bring it into balance, senators are whipping out the national credit card, and then pretending they didn’t when it comes to keeping score.” This is throwing good money after bad, since, when it comes to government, program failure is never an excuse to spend less money.

The analysts write: “There is a laundry list of tired budget gimmicks, including the sale of oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, extending long-standing fees and spectrum sales. Many of these gimmicks have a history of falling short of expectatio­ns.” See last sentence in the previous paragraph.

The law was sold to the public with promises that airports, highways and bridges will be repaired. In fact, note the Heritage analysts, the law “adds as much new spending to such modes as mass transit and Amtrak as it does for highways, even though buses and rail account for only a tiny fraction of travel. Even the value of highway funding is hampered by wasteful set-asides: $2 million per year for bee-friendly landscapin­g, $50 million per year to combat weeds, and expensive mandates that give unionized contractor­s a leg up on taxpayerfr­iendly, non-union shops.” If history is a guide, one or more of these setasides benefit the special interests of members, possibly in exchange for their votes.

It’s an old joke, but true: How do you tell when a politician is lying? When his lips are moving. Unlike those who voted for this legislatio­n, take the time to read it yourself, along with the analysis. You will likely conclude they have swindled us again.

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