Daily Camera (Boulder)

I helped balance federal budget in 1990s; here’s how hard it will be for GOP today

- By Linda J. Bilmes Linda J. Bilmes is the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Senior Lecturer in Public Policy and Public Finance at the Harvard Kennedy School.

Kevin Mccarthy reportedly promised many things to Republican hardliners en route to clinching his job as speaker of the U.S. House of Representa­tives. One of them was a “balanced budget” in 10 years.

As part of that plan, Republican­s are demanding substantia­l spending cuts and budget reforms in exchange for lifting the debt ceiling this year — putting the U.S. at risk of default.

But a look at the numbers — and the history — shows just how difficult balancing the budget will be.

Doing so requires the federal government to generate enough income to pay for all its spending. The U.S. has managed this feat only twice in the past 60 years — and both times involved raising taxes, something Republican­s are loath to do. President Lyndon B. Johnson managed to do it in 1969, and President Bill Clinton created a surplus that ran from the fiscal years 1998 to 2001, when he left office.

As a member of the Clinton administra­tion in the Commerce Department from 1997 to 2001, I participat­ed in achieving that rare balanced budget and understand the obstacles to delivering a repeat performanc­e. Republican­s are unlikely to manage a similar performanc­e.

How Clinton balanced the budget

When Clinton took office in 1993, the budget deficit in the previous year was just under 5% of gross domestic product, and the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office predicted a bleak fiscal outlook.

Clinton’s balanced-budget recipe was a mixture of higher revenues and lower spending, with help from a booming economy. In his second term, he also negotiated a bipartisan budget deal with Republican­s.

After campaignin­g on a pledge to cut the deficit, Clinton raised taxes on the wealthy during his first year in office. He introduced higher top personal income tax brackets, raised corporate taxes, increased taxes on Social Security benefits, added 4.3 cents per gallon onto gas taxes and eliminated a number of itemized tax deductions. On the spending side, Clinton took advantage of the “peace dividend” that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union to reduce defense spending from 4.3% of GDP in 1993 to 2.9% by 2000.

The higher taxes invited pushback from Republican­s, who gained majorities in the House and Senate in 1995.

As part of budget negotiatio­ns, Congress eventually passed the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, which retained Clinton’s original tax increases but cut capital gains taxes and reduced spending on Medicare and Medicaid.

Meanwhile, the economy, fueled by a tech boom, expanded rapidly during Clinton’s second term.

Higher tax rates on the wealthiest Americans, strong economic growth and continued restraint in government spending produced a budget surplus of $69 billion in 1998. The surplus peaked in 2000 at $236 billion before falling to $128 billion in 2001. The surplus — which hasn’t been seen since — allowed the U.S. to pay down the national debt by over $450 billion.

Lessons for today

The lesson for Republican­s today is that if they are serious about balancing the budget, it will require some very unpalatabl­e choices.

On the spending side, so-called entitlemen­ts — mandatory programs such as Social Security, Medicare and veterans benefits — now account for almost two-thirds of the federal budget, compared with less than half when Clinton took office. Funding for these programs is set by formula, making it difficult to change. And the population of Americans 65 or older has grown by 32% since 1993, increasing demand for entitlemen­ts.

Defense spending takes up another 14% of taxpayer dollars, greatly exceeding every other item in the so-called discretion­ary budget, which includes everything else from transporta­tion and energy to airline traffic control and national parks.

The U.S. spends 8% of the budget simply paying interest on the national debt. This percentage hasn’t changed much, but the debt itself has soared from $4.5 trillion in

1993 to $31 trillion today mainly because of massive tax cuts during the Bush and Trump administra­tions, costly wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n and vast public spending to address the 2008 financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now that historical­ly low interest rates have come to an end, the U.S. will be forced to devote a bigger slice of the pie to paying interest.

The policy nonprofit Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget recently estimated that if spending on defense, veterans, Social Security and Medicare were off the table, Congress would need to reduce all other spending by 85% to get to an overall balance. In other words, simple arithmetic means it is not feasible to achieve anything close to a balanced budget without addressing military spending and entitlemen­t programs.

Can they do it again?

Certainly, opportunit­ies do exist to close the gap between income and spending.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office has released a report outlining 76 options for reducing the deficit.

But many of the ideas require further hard choices, such as rolling back some or all of the last three tax cuts, increasing taxes on the wealthy, ending or curtailing tax deductions and adopting a consumptio­nbased value-added tax or a carbon tax, as well as fundamenta­l reforms to entitlemen­t programs.

Unfortunat­ely, Congress shows limited appetite to tackle such issues.

Back in 1997, after the smoke cleared, both the Clinton administra­tion and the Republican­s in Congress were able to claim some political credit for the resulting budget surpluses. But — crucially — both parties recognized that a deal was in the best interest of the country and were able to line up their respective members to get the votes in Congress needed to approve it. The contrast with the current political landscape is stark.

The Republican Study Committee, a bloc of more than 160 conservati­ve lawmakers, released a budget blueprint in June 2022 that promises to balance the budget in seven years. The plan proposes trillions of dollars in spending cuts, many of which would fall hardest on low-income Americans. These include shrinking Medicaid, paring veterans benefits and raising the age for full Social Security retirement benefits from 67 to 70. It also calls for higher military spending and further tax cuts — which would require even more draconian cuts to core safety net programs.

It would also lock in the Trump tax cuts of 2017 — the opposite of what the Congressio­nal Budget Office recommends or what Clinton did in the 1990s to secure a balanced budget.

Without a credible Republican deficit-cutting plan on the table, I believe that the odds favor a protracted stand-off over the debt ceiling, which could tip the precarious U.S. economy into recession.

While Congress seems highly unlikely to allow a debt default, this brawl would waste time and energy that could be better spent on figuring out how to strengthen programs like Social Security and close tax loopholes that drain revenue.

Balancing the budget is not an end in itself. Most economists agree that government­s should reduce public debt during periods of prosperity and run deficits to assist people when the economy is weak.

The U.S. was fortunate in the late 1990s to enjoy a buoyant economy that enabled Congress and the president to achieve a fiscal surplus. What the country needs now, in my view, is not more quick fixes but a sustainabl­e pathway to stabilizin­g the national debt. That requires growing revenues and reducing nonessenti­al spending in a responsibl­e way.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

 ?? CHUCK KENNEDY — KRT ?? Bill Clinton, pictured here in 2000, oversaw the first balanced budget since 1969. The U.S. was fortunate in the late 1990s to enjoy a buoyant economy that enabled Congress and the president to achieve a fiscal surplus. What the country needs now is not more quick fixes but a sustainabl­e pathway to stabilizin­g the national debt.
CHUCK KENNEDY — KRT Bill Clinton, pictured here in 2000, oversaw the first balanced budget since 1969. The U.S. was fortunate in the late 1990s to enjoy a buoyant economy that enabled Congress and the president to achieve a fiscal surplus. What the country needs now is not more quick fixes but a sustainabl­e pathway to stabilizin­g the national debt.

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