Townhall
Broke U.S.
Resumes Spending
by John Stossel
Oct 23, 2013
What
would you think of a
person who earned $24,000 a year but spent $35,000? Suppose on top of
that, he was already $170,000 in debt. You'd tell him to get his act
together -- stop spending so much or he'd destroy his family,
impoverish his kids and wreck their future. Of course, no individual
could live so irresponsibly for long.
But tack
on eight more
zeroes to that budget and you have the checkbook for our
out-of-control, big-spending federal government.
Yet when
Congress and
President Obama agreed on a deal last week to raise the debt ceiling
and resume government spending, people reacted as if a disaster was
averted -- instead of reacting as if a disaster had resumed. It has.
And it continues.
Congratulating
ourselves
for raising the debt ceiling once again, the way we do every time
this drama plays out, is like congratulating an alcoholic for talking
the bartender out of cutting him off.
As with
alcoholics, there's
a deeper problem here. It's not just that America is addicted to
debt. Everyone agrees we should pay our bills, just not when or how.
The deeper addiction is to government.
For most
of the history of
America, federal spending never took up more than 5 percent of the
economy. Spending increased during wars, but after World Wars I and
II, spending dropped back to prewar levels.
Then came
Presidents
Johnson and Nixon and the "great society." From then on,
spending rose even in peacetime. Now, if you include local
government, government spending makes up more than 40 percent of the
economy.
"Government
has
exploded in size," warned economist Dan Mitchell of the Cato
Institute. It happens because of "politicians promising things
they cannot deliver and imposing tax burdens that are crippling
private sectors."
Politicians
from both
parties criticize spending when they're out of power. But then they
increase spending once they're in power.
I'd
forgotten that when
Obama campaigned for the presidency, he was very upset about his
predecessor's deficits. Sen. Obama complained, "The way Bush has
done it over the last eight years is to take out a credit card from
the bank of China. ... We now have over $9 trillion of debt that we
are going to have to pay back. ... That is irresponsible."
I agree!
$9 trillion in
debt is totally irresponsible. That makes it all the more remarkable
that just a few years later, under President Obama, debt increased to
$17 trillion. But now, suddenly, this vast debt is no longer
irresponsible. Today the president says what is irresponsible is for
Congress not to constantly raise the debt ceiling.
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