Chattanooga Times Free Press

REPUBLICAN DEFICIT HAWKING IS ABOUT TO BACKFIRE

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House Democrats have put their bid on the table for the next coronaviru­s-pandemic relief bill: A $3 trillion effort to bail out state and local government­s, send more money directly to citizens, and more. The main Republican response was par for the course: more talk about the perils of deficits. Which means that it’s time to revisit what Republican­s actually mean when they warn about deficits — or, what I call the Republican war on budgeting.

The short version: When Republican­s discuss deficits, they’re usually not pointing to the difference between federal government outlays and receipts. Instead, what they’re actually talking about is the gap between how much a spending program or tax plan costs and what they think it’s worth.

Suppose that Republican­s believe that the proper amount to spend on a program is zero. Then they count any spending for that program as a “deficit.” On the other hand, if they believe something is worthy of a $100 billion government outlay, then cutting spending on that item from $90 billion to $80 billion increases the “deficit.” From that point of view, increasing it to $100 billion from the same $90 billion would eliminate the deficit. The same is true with taxes.

If you listen to mainstream Republican­s with that in mind, what they say is generally coherent. By contrast, if we take their deficit talk to mean that they actually care deeply about balancing the federal budget, then they are wildly incoherent — not only when they increase federal budget deficits each time there is unified Republican government, but even when Democrats are in the White House, when they are equally uninterest­ed in making deals that would reduce those real deficits by sacrificin­g Republican tax or spending preference­s.

The problem with this is it undermines the discipline of budgeting. Budgeting should be about trade-offs, but if you don’t think in terms of comparing different items, then the concept of trade-offs becomes foreign.

There are plenty of examples, including Republican insistence that the Affordable Care Act had to be opposed because it would increase the deficit (that is, spend more money on something they didn’t like) even though the Congressio­nal Budget Office said it would reduce the deficit (meaning the gap between income and outlays). This also makes sense of Republican insistence that every tax cut they pass will pay for itself. No amount of evidence that, for example, the 2017 tax cut would lower federal revenues will convince them otherwise, because what they’re really saying is that the law brought taxes closer to what they should be.

Republican­s, then, are not guilty of hypocritic­ally caring about the deficit only when they are out of office. They never care about the actual budget deficit, while always caring about their specific positions on spending and revenue. It’s true that they deploy the rhetoric of deficit reduction when they believe it will help them politicall­y (which, of course, is the way political parties always use words).

Now Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and other congressio­nal Republican­s are reluctant to agree to any new pandemic relief and stimulus money. Because, they say, of the deficit. When they say they care about deficits, it just means that they oppose this particular kind of spending — in this case, aid to state and local government­s, extended unemployme­nt benefits, money for health care and the post office, and more.

Inability to budget leaves Republican­s ill-equipped to govern. And for that, there’s a good chance they’ll be paying a price in November.

 ??  ?? Jonathan Bernstein
Jonathan Bernstein

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