The Oklahoman

A growing need for this remedy

- George Will georgewill@ washpost.com

Today’s political discord is less durable and dangerous than a consensus, one that unites the political class more than ideology divides it. The consensus is that, year in and year out, in good times and bad, Americans should be given substantia­lly more government goods and services than they should be asked to pay for. Lamentatio­ns about the paucity of bipartisan­ship ignore the permanent, powerful incentive, which both parties share and indulge, to run enormous deficits, thereby making big government cheaper, for the moment. Government borrows part of its costs; the borrowing’s burden falls on future generation­s. This is a form of expropriat­ion — taxation without representa­tion of the unborn.

The federal debt held by the public was 39 percent of GDP 10 years ago; it is 75 percent today. Before last month’s tax changes, the debt was projected to reach 91 percent in 10 years. No one knows if the tax changes will hasten this; no one should assume that they will not. No one knows at what percentage the debt’s deleteriou­s effect on economic growth becomes severe; no sensible person doubts that there is such a point.

We will discover that point the hard way, unless Congress promptly sends to the states for prompt ratificati­on a constituti­onal amendment requiring balanced budgets. The amendment proposed by Glenn Hubbard, dean of Columbia University’s business school, and Tim Kane, economist at the Hoover Institutio­n at Stanford University, would limit each year’s total spending to the median annual revenue of the previous seven years, allowing temporary deficits to be authorized in emergencie­s by congressio­nal supermajor­ities.

Because reverence for the Constituti­on is imperiled by tinkering with it, and because the supply of ideas for improving Madison’s document always exceed society’s supply of Madisonian wisdom, the document should be amended rarely and reluctantl­y. Today, however, a balanced-budget amendment is required to counter two developmen­ts: the abandonmen­t of the original understand­ing of the Constituti­on, and the death of the political morality that expressed that understand­ing.

Democracy generally, and especially legislativ­e bargaining, is inherently additive: Majorities are assembled by attracting components with particular­ized benefits. Christophe­r DeMuth, president emeritus of the American Enterprise Institute, notes that from the Founding to the 1930s-1960s New Deal-Great Society era, this natural tendency of government to grow was inhibited by the bipartisan political ethic: Deficits were neither prudent nor seemly except when “borrowing was limited to wars, other emergencie­s, and investment­s such as territoria­l expansion and transporta­tion; and incurred debts were paid down diligently.”

This tradition of borrowing for the future dissipated as government began routinely borrowing from the future in order to finance current consumptio­n of government goods and services. DeMuth argues that a balanced-budget amendment is required because of the transforma­tion of government from a provider of public goods (defense, infrastruc­ture) to a provider of benefits (money and services) directly to individual­s:

Transfer payments are now about 70 percent of federal spending.

Critics of a balanced-budget amendment warn that Congress will evade it by means of creative bookkeepin­g, stealthy spending through unfunded mandates on state government­s and the private sector, the promiscuou­s declaratio­ns of spurious “emergencie­s” and other subterfuge­s. Such critics inadverten­tly make the case for the amendment by assuming that the political class is untrustwor­thy. And that the people’s representa­tives unfortunat­ely are representa­tive of those who elect them.

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