- Economic Issues Dominate at the Bloggers Briefing
- Pushback Against EPA’s Attempts to Regulate Carbon Emissions Grows
- Minnesota Gubernatorial Candidate Running on a Platform of Tax Hikes
Thursday, March 11, 2010
- Michigan Jobs Ain't What They Used To Be...Unless You Work For The Government
- ATR and CFA Support Earmark Moratorium
- CFA Supports Earmark Moratorium (CFA Site »)
- Voter Fraud in the Name of Tax Hikes
- Ballooning Deficits in Greece Foreshadowing Future for the U.S.? (ASA Site »)
- Green Jobs FAIL
- The Evergreen Tax and Fee Spree
- Pelosi: "But we have to pass the bill so that you can find out what is in it" (CFA Site »)
- ATR Staffer Testifies Before U.S. House Energy & Commerce Select Committee
Wednesday, March 10, 2010
- The endemic rot in government run health care
- Senate Unanimously Passes Coburn PAYGO Transparency Amendment (CFA Site »)
- The Debt Panel's 800-lb. Gorilla: Why Andy Stern Stands Out
- The Left Agree: Obamacare Ushers In Their Radical Ideological Agenda
- We Ought Focus On Cutting Taxes & Spending, Not Deficits
- The Debt Panel's 800-lb. Gorilla (AWF Site »)
-
Does the Obamacare Investment Surtax
Apply to Capital Gains? - ATR Urges Opposition to Sen. Isakson Pension Bailout
- Taxpayers to Legislators: Clean Virginia Budget of Taxes
- ATR Supports the Georgia JOBS Act
Tuesday, March 9, 2010
- ATR Urges Utah Governor Herbert to Veto Tax Increase
- More on the VAT
- Public Sector Jobs
- How 550,000 jobs were destroyed by the minimum wage hike
- How Obamacare Will Hurt Poor Women & Children Most
- Federal Workers Make $11,000 More Than Private Sector Workers, and There’s More of Them (AWF Site »)
- Really?!? If This is Transparency, Beware of Opacity (CFA Site »)
Monday, March 8, 2010
- Legislation Introduced to Put Ronald Reagan on the $50 Bill
- Pledge Signer Wins Illinois Republican Gubernatorial Primary
- New Jersey Transparency Legislation Broadened to Encompass Localities (CFA Site »)
- "Net Neutrality" To Kill Jobs
- NY Supreme Court Votes to Evict Residents and Close Businesses (PRA Site »)
- California US Senate Candidates Square Off in First Debate
Friday, March 5, 2010
- ATR and CFA Support the Spending Limit Amendment
- Utah Representative Breaks Tax Pledge
- AWF Will Rate Vote on House Jobs Bill (AWF Site »)
- Energy Tax Hike Series: Use it or Lose it Tax
Thursday, March 4, 2010
- The reliability of spending "estimates"
- Utah State Senator Tries to Sweeten Tax Hike with Pork
- Obama Administration Makes Attempt to Seize Millions of Acres Across America (PRA Site »)
- More "Stimulus" Boondoggles - Social Engineering and Lobbying for Higher Taxes
- Energy Tax Hike Series: Raises Taxes on Tertiary Injectants
Wednesday, March 3, 2010
- Is This Reality or a Science Fiction Dystopia?
- Andy Stern Update: US Attorney Reviewing Case & Obama Appoints Stern to Debt Panel
- Texans: Do You Know Which Candidates Have Signed the Taxpayer Protection Pledge?
- AWF Asks White House to Take Position on Andy Stern Investigation After Appointment to Debt Panel (AWF Site »)
- AWF Continues Andy Stern Investigation (AWF Site »)
Tuesday, March 2, 2010
- Energy Tax Hike Series: Superfund Tax Reinstated
Monday, March 1, 2010
- Rick Berg First Pledge Signer in North Dakota Congressional Race
- Give a Hoot, Don’t Pollute . . .the Economy with Taxes or Unnecessary Spending
- Raise Taxes or Raise Taxes? Washington’s Solution to $2.8 Billion Budget Deficit
- Andy Stern Appointed to Debt Panel While Under Criminal Review for Lobbying Activities
- Andy Stern Appointed to Debt Panel While Under Criminal Review for Lobbying Activities (AWF Site »)
- Energy Tax Hike Series: IRS Sec. 199 Repeal
Friday, February 26, 2010
-
Pwned!
Paul Ryan on Healthcare and Deficits
Thursday, February 25, 2010
The President's Budget: No Fiscal Restraint in Sight
From Sandra Fabry on Tuesday, February 2, 2010 11:48 AMOn Monday, February 01, 2010 President Barack Obama unveiled his budget for Fiscal Year 2011. Despite ongoing verbal nods to the need for fiscal restraint, this budget however delivers little of that. The budget, rather than freezing spending – let alone cutting it – continues down the path of fiscal recklessness and continues to increase total government spending.
Quick Facts:
- Overall 2011 Spending: $3.834 trillion – a 5.7 percent increase over the current budget
- 2011 Discretionary Spending: $1.415 trillion
- 2011 Public Debt: $10.498 trillion, soaring to $18.573 trillion in 2020 – expressed as a percentage of GDP this means an increase from 53% in 2009 to 77.2% in 2020, the highest since 1950. Note that even after the Senate just passed a $1.9 trillion increase in the Federal debt ceiling, this will warrant another increase in 2011.
The Discretionary “Spending Freeze:”
The President’s discretionary spending “freeze” proves to be little more than a sleight of hand. A more accurate portrayal than “discretionary spending freeze” was given by Republican staff on the Committee on the Budget, who referred to the “freeze” as a “freeze in non-defense, non-homeland, non-Veterans, non-international affairs, non-Pell Grant, non-emergency discretionary spending.” Indeed, the three-year freeze only applies to 13% of the budget and does not go into effect until 2011.
What is needed is an across-the-board roll back of Federal spending to pre-binge levels, not locking in increased levels. And there is no reason such a spending cut could not occur immediately rather than in 2011. Leaving “stimulus” and TARP aside, the FY2010 appropriations bills signed by President Obama have increased non-defense, discretionary spending by 12% over last year.
“Terminations, Reductions, and Savings:”
The budget touts a list of 126 “terminations, reductions, and savings” in areas and programs that range lower on the President’s priority list. The budget document claims that these would amount to more than $23 billion in 2011. 78 discretionary terminations and reductions are said to save $10 billion in 2011, while 33 mandatory terminations and reductions would save $240 billion over ten years.
However, even at first glimpse, this list fails to impress when the $23 billion in “savings” for 2011 is compared to the sheer size of the overall budget - $3.834 trillion.
The picture gets worse when reviewing the list of individual proposals for program termination or reduction. The list is disingenuous, as it mixes tax increases in with spending cuts. For example, under “mandatory terminations,” the list boasts $36.5 billion in energy tax increases, disguised as ending “oil and gas company tax preferences.”
Experience shows that most of the spending reductions put forth by Presidential budgets fail to make it through Congress, further evidenced by the fact that some of this year’s proposals were already part of last year’s budget. Consequently, when political realities are factored in and tax increases are taken out of the equation, the actual savings are a drop in the bucket when compared to the overall Federal spending spree.
More Gimmickry
To create the illusion of fiscal responsibility, the budget touts some other gimmicks which will do little to rein in Federal spending but will likely lead us down the path of higher taxes. Among them are:
The enforcement of pay-as-you-go, which is nothing more than a fig leaf to provide political cover for tax-and-spend policies, and would in fact set the stage for higher taxes being touted as the only way to avoid across-the-board cuts in entitlement spending.
A Presidential bipartisan tax and spending “reform” commission, modeled after the Conrad/Gregg bipartisan commission proposal which would have guaranteed a tax increase. While not binding, the Presidential commission will most certainly put “everything on the table,” and seek to build momentum to increase taxes. In doing so, any such commission looking at both tax increases and spending reductions is placing a misguided emphasis on the “deficit” when the real problem of our fiscal woes is total government spending.
A prudent way to address the issue would be to set up a commission modeled after the successful Base Realignment and Closure commission (BRAC), which would subject all Federal agencies and programs – across the board – to a BRAC-style review process.
Permalink | Email | Print | Tags: TAXES, CONGRESS, SPENDING, OBAMA, BUDGET, CFA
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Comments
Put down the pipe. BRAC did not save any money. Take for example Fort Monmouth, original estimates said it would take 25 years for the ROI. As it get closer to moving to Maryland the cost have more than doubled. BRAC is just as political as any other government body.
>> JOE Friday, February 5, 2010 8:13 PM