Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

It’s the wrong time, the wrong place, to balance the budget.

An amendment is crazy talk

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BALANCED budgets are in the news these days, specifical­ly Arkansas’ requiremen­t to have one. Unbalanced budgets are also in the news today. Specifical­ly, the United States will spend a ton of money this year to get the nation through the coronaviru­s crisis.

Few times in this nation’s history has a better argument been made against a Balanced Budget Amendment. The year 2020 should be taught in constituti­onal law classes.

The state of Arkansas requires a balanced budget, which is why the special session. The federal government, however, needs more elbow room in times of emergency. And covid-19 certainly presents an emergency.

Those who have championed a Balanced Budget Amendment over the years call themselves conservati­ves. But if they had their way, a new constituti­onal requiremen­t to balance the budget would be anything but conservati­ve. It would be radical. And radically bad. Instead of standing on experience—on reliable observatio­n and experience— an amendment requiring a balanced budget relies on theory. The theory being if balancing a budget is good for families, and it is, it should be good for a national government.

Now that businesses have closed from New York to California, and tax receipts are drying up, and people aren’t buying gas (and paying gasoline taxes) and the unemployme­nt rate is inching up, soon to be ratcheting up, imagine how the nation’s problems would be compounded by a federal government cutting spending.

Instead of buying more emergency equipment for hospitals, the feds would be looking for places to make cuts. Instead of increasing unemployme­nt funding, the feds would be looking for places to make cuts. Instead of stimulatin­g the economy (hopefully) with checks of $1,200, the feds would be looking for places to make cuts.

Imagine the feds saying the government could provide needed ventilator­s to hospitals—but it’d have to cut Social Security checks first. Or lay off the 101st Airborne. Or shut down VA clincis.

Instead of social distancing, Americans would be talking about riots.

So what are the arguments for a Balanced Budget Amendment, not to be confused with a balanced budget?

Here are a few:

■ A few years ago, a congressme­n from out west—a Republican—said a Balanced Budget Amendment would be simple, easily understood and would “put this government back in its proper role.”

This government’s role under this Constituti­on is to provide for the general welfare, ensure domestic tranquilit­y and provide for the common defense. As far as being simple, there’s a difference between simple and simplistic.

■ Most BBA proposals include a provision that a super-majority could approve a waiver in emergencie­s.

This past week has shown what a minority party in Congress can demand if it has a crisis on its side. Imagine 30-some-odd senators holding a depression over the heads of their colleagues if their demands aren’t met.

■ The nation is in a debt spiral. A Balanced Budget Amendment would end that.

A debt spiral is indeed scary. One day all these dollars the government is printing won’t be worth as much, thus inflation. And nickels will starting costing 50 cents. But as bad as a debt spiral sounds, it doesn’t sound as bad as an unemployme­nt spiral.

ABALANCED Budget Amendment would handcuff the federal government at exactly the wrong times. Such as during pandemics. Or economic recessions. An amendment would slow recoveries (because employment wouldn’t rise as fast) and make downturns worse and longer. Or require the federal government to increase taxes just when the nation needs it the least.

Besides, how would such an amendment be enforced? Would the courts get involved to increase taxes or cut spending when deficits are projected? For those who think judicial power has expanded in the last 233 years, what would such an amendment do to expand the third branch of government? Oh, what crimes could be committed in the name of fiscal responsibi­lity!

This covid-19 crisis is going to teach mankind many lessons as the weeks go on. Let’s hope it teaches a lot of lessons to our political class, too. For even though a Balanced Budget Amendment remains a popular idea, that doesn’t mean it’s a good one.

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