The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

No budget fix here

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Here’s the fiscal predicamen­t facing the United States: During recent decades, the elected leaders of both parties have committed the federal government to hundreds of billions of dollars in automatic annual spending for health care and Social Security, while simultaneo­usly establishi­ng a level of taxation insufficie­nt to cover those foreseeabl­e outlays — plus other recurring needs such as assistance to the poor, national defense and scientific research, and sudden ones such as natural disasters and recessions. In other words, there is a structural gap between the nation’s financial means and its policy priorities.

This poses a threat to longterm financial stability; more immediatel­y, it limits the government’s ability to respond to new situations with new policies. We are stuck with an unending series of short-term fiscal deadlocks and short-term fiscal fixes.

In this context, President Donald Trump’s fiscal 2018 budget serves a valuable, if unintentio­nal, purpose: to demonstrat­e how utterly irrelevant his brand of Republican ideology is to solving the problem.

With Medicare and Social Security retirement benefits immune to cuts, defense guaranteed an increase and taxes slated for trillions of dollars’ worth of reductions (over the next decade), Trump’s plan achieves a balanced budget in 2018 only by invoking an improbable level of economic growth — and by imposing lower levels of spending for all other purposes that would be harsh and shortsight­ed, in the politicall­y unrealisti­c event they were ever enacted. Nondefense discretion­ary spending, already at a post-1962 low of 3.3 percent of economic output, would dwindle to a mere 1.4 percent of output by 2027. This is not a formula for downsizing government; it’s a formula for destroying it.

With this document, Trump, who blithely said during the campaign that he would deal with federal debt and deficits through management, essentiall­y bows out of the serious debate on fiscal issues. What is the alternativ­e? As any number of commission­s, panels and independen­t experts have repeatedly determined, the United States requires a mix of programmat­ic reforms, affecting the entire range of spending categories, including Medicare and Social Security, coupled with increased revenue. This is how to put the federal debt on a more sustainabl­e path, creating fiscal space for policy innovation and crisis management as needs arise.

In a phrase, what’s called for is shared sacrifice. If shared sacrifice were really the Trump administra­tion’s reigning principle, then budgetary discipline might justifiabl­y reach programs for the poor such as food stamps and Social Security Disability Insurance, insofar as they are operating inefficien­tly or creating perverse incentives. What Mr. Trump’s budget does, however, is propound the myth that these programs are driving America’s deficits, that the undeservin­g poor are to blame for our fiscal problem, and that they should therefore go first and go alone when it’s time to cut.

Actually, there is no path to balance that leaves out the benefits that middle- and upper-class Americans receive, disproport­ionately, under current federal spending and tax priorities. That is the truth. And we are going to have to act on it — sooner or, if Trump has his way, later.

Actually, there is no path to balance that leaves out the benefits that middleand upper-class Americans receive, disproport­ionately, under current federal spending and tax priorities.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Donald Trump adjusts his jacket during a family photo with G7 leaders at the Ancient Greek Theater of Taormina in Taormina, Italy. From left are, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Trump, and Italian...
EVAN VUCCI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS President Donald Trump adjusts his jacket during a family photo with G7 leaders at the Ancient Greek Theater of Taormina in Taormina, Italy. From left are, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Trump, and Italian...

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