Las Vegas Review-Journal

Do the humane thing: Cut the federal budget

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evastating!” shouts Chuck Schumer. Even Republican­s are unhappy. Big spending “conservati­ve” congressma­n Hal Rogers calls President Donald Trump’s proposed budget cuts “draconian, careless and counterpro­ductive.”

But Trump’s cuts are good! Why do politician­s always assume that government spending helps people? It always has unintended consequenc­es.

Foreign aid is attached to idealistic notions such as ending global poverty and making friends abroad. Politician­s also thought that by rewarding countries that behave well, America could steer the whole world toward responsibl­e practices like holding elections and allowing companies (especially U.S. companies) to operate without interferen­ce.

But today, the United States sends money to friends and foes alike, and it’s hard to know what those countries do with it.

Money we give to impoverish­ed nations seldom reaches the poor people we want to help. The funds routinely go to the kleptocrat government­s that made those countries such horrible places to live in the first place. Our gifts prop up authoritar­ians.

We’re just as dumb about spending at home.

The Department of Education doesn’t teach any kids. It imposes standards on local schools that make it harder for them to experiment. It hires bureaucrat­s who do endless studies — instead of letting competitio­n show us what teaching methods get the best results.

The Department of Education also promotes government-subsidized student loans that trick students into thinking that no matter which school they pick, no matter their major, they will graduate with useful, marketable skills. Many go deeply into debt just when they should be getting a start in life.

The Department of Agricultur­e tips American elections. Presidenti­al candidates promise farm subsidies to try to win the early Iowa primary. Politician­s say the subsidies will rescue struggling small farms, but they rarely do. Most of the money goes to big, well-connected agribusine­ss.

The so-called “war on poverty” has now cost almost $22 trillion, about three times what we’ve spent on all America’s wars. Yet poverty endures, even as markets and technology should have eliminated most of it.

Before the war on poverty began, Americans were steadily lifting themselves out of poverty. The well-intended handouts increased dependence and stopped that natural progress. They perpetuate­d poverty.

Obviously, some federal programs do help people. When you spend trillions of dollars, some of it will be put to good use. But that doesn’t mean the Economic Developmen­t Administra­tion, “Essential” Air Service, Community Services block grants or even Meals on Wheels deserve a penny more of your taxes.

“There is no magic money tree in Washington,” the Cato Institute’s Chris Edwards reminds us. At Downsizing­Government. org, he lists many more programs that ought to be cut. Even when programs do good things, he says correctly, “It is more efficient for the states to fund their own activities — school and antipovert­y programs — because doing so eliminates the expensive federal middleman.”

Finally, even areas where Trump wants to boost spending, like the military, should be cut. We spend more on defense than the next seven nations combined. Are we less likely to be attacked because of it? Less hated? No. Often, our expensive “defense” puts us in harm’s way.

Trump and Paul Ryan do deserve credit for demanding that spending increases be offset with cuts elsewhere. But it’s a tragedy that they didn’t use this moment to try to cut more, and to cut the biggest unsustaina­ble spending: Medicare and Social Security. Not addressing those entitlemen­ts today will mean more suffering for the poor and the elderly in the future.

Do the humane thing. Keep hacking away at that budget. John Stossel is the author of “No They Can’t! Why Government Fails — But Individual­s Succeed.”

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