The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Dysfunctio­n decades in making

- By Linda J. Bilmes Harvard University The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

In an eleventh-hour twist, Sen. Rand Paul protested the costs of Congress’ latest budget deal and briefly shut down the federal government.

Then, in the wee hours of Feb. 9, both houses of Congress eventually voted to pass the budget deal - a bipartisan agreement to repeal expenditur­e limits and fund the government for the next two years, if everything goes to plan. However, Paul’s midnight brinkmansh­ip cast a sour note on its passage. Paul had a point. Based on my experience in government and as a professor of budgeting at Harvard, I predict that this latest deal, like most short-term fixes, will cause a lot of pain down the line for younger Americans who will have to pick up the tab. Critics of the budget deal may dub it the “Kick-the-can-downthe-road Act.”

Congress’ budget deal would raise military spending to its highest level in decades and boost most nondefense programs. To pay for this US$300 billion binge, lawmakers have decided to abandon any pretense of fiscal conservati­sm and borrow whatever it takes. As part of the bargain, Congress will raise the debt limit until March 2019. The agreement should keep the government open for the next two years - leaving members of Congress free to focus on the serious business of campaignin­g for their midterm elections.

The good news is that government agencies are likely to have some stability after decades of “continuing resolution­s,” “fiscal cliffs,” shutdowns, sequestrat­ion and debt ceiling brinkmansh­ip. Shutdowns hurt the morale of our civil servants, whether they are working to halt Ebola at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention or to protect historical sites like Gettysburg. Budget impasses also end up costing the government more in wasteful lastminute spending. The bad news is twofold. First, the current deal technicall­y only funds the government through March 23. Congress still must navigate a number of procedural hurdles such as getting the new spending figures into specific appropriat­ions bills. For now, Democrats have called off their attempt to link rescuing the young American “Dreamers” to a budget deal. The broader immigratio­n issue remains unresolved.

Second, the agreement does not solve any of the underlying flaws in the federal budget. It provides no solution to ensure that Social Security, Medicare, military retirement trust funds and other entitlemen­ts are made sustainabl­e. These mandatory expenditur­es have risen from 4 percent to 12 percent of Gross Domestic Product since 1970 and now account for twothirds of the federal budget.

The present dysfunctio­n in the congressio­nal budget process can be traced back to the budget reforms of 1974 when Congress passed the sweeping Congressio­nal Budget and Impoundmen­t Control Act. The law was the first fundamenta­l change in national budgeting since 1921 and was driven by Congress’ effort to reassert its constituti­onal “power of the purse” in the aftermath of Watergate. The act strengthen­ed the role of Congress in the budget process and establishe­d the House and Senate Budget committees to determine the size and allocation of the annual budget pie.

These committees have failed to control the budget process. In the intervenin­g 44 years, Congress has ratified the annual budget bills on time only four times - in 1977, 1989, 1995 and 1997. The combinatio­n of rising mandatory spending on entitlemen­ts and deep tax cuts in 2001 and 2003 has led to a chronic imbalance between government revenues and expenditur­es.

The budget “sequester” that Congress has just lifted was adopted in 2011. It imposed across-the-board limits to federal spending in a crude attempt to deal with this ongoing budget shortfall. Congress subsequent­ly resorted to a series of gimmicks and financial work-arounds to circumvent the spending caps, including raising billions of dollars through “tax expenditur­es” - amending the tax code to reduce revenues coming in to the Treasury. They also increased “user fees” for government services such as TSA airline ticket charges and shifted regulatory burdens from federal agencies to state and local government­s. Meanwhile, the huge costs of the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq have been paid for outside of the regular budget using “emergency” and “exempt” funds that are financed by borrowing.

One consequenc­e of all these policies is that the public debt has climbed to more than $20 trillion, and now accounts for more than 100 percent of GDP. Racking up this debt has been made possible by historical­ly low interest rates and a global appetite for U.S. Treasury bonds. These benign economic conditions made it easy for the Treasury to issue increasing amounts of government debt without any material impact on the cost of borrowing.

Perhaps the most pernicious aspect of the current deal is its corrosive effect on the Republican Party. For decades, Republican­s have at least aspired to stand for smaller, leaner, more efficient government. Now that they control both houses of Congress, they have rolled back spending limits and pushed through one of the most out-ofcontrol spending packages in U.S. history. In the budget, as elsewhere in our national politics, traditiona­l political certaintie­s are out the window.

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