The American People Need Real Spending Cuts
Wednesday,February 20, 2013
President Obama and other so-called progressives insist that the
American people are not overly dependent on government. They also
predict dire consequences if the automatic budget "cuts" known as
sequestration take place March 1.
Both claims cannot be true. If modest across-the-board "cuts" —
mainly cuts in the rate of growth — in military and domestic spending
pose a threat to the American people and the U.S. economy, then the
country is alarmingly dependent on government.
Federal spending has grown dramatically
since the 1970s, with the biggest increases coming during Republican
administrations. Spending today is hundreds of billions greater than in
2008 and much higher as a percentage of the economy. True, it is lower
now than in 2009, but that year, a combination of George W. Bush and
Obama "stimulus" spending, set a record.
The sequester consists of $1.2 trillion in across-the-board cuts in
non-entitlement spending growth over ten years. To put that in
perspective, Reason editor Nick Gillespie
writes, "Remember that we're talking about $1.2 trillion dollars taken
out of a projected $44 trillion or so in spending. What kind of budget
discipline is that?"
As that March 1 sequester approaches, the Obama administration
warns of severe consequences for national security and economic
security.
It is hard to take seriously the claim that even a small and
temporary decrease in Pentagon spending would endanger the American
people. Military spending has skyrocketed since the year 2000, and the
United States spends almost as much on the means of war as the rest of
the world combined — indeed, it spends more than it did at the height of
the Cold War. The U.S. military is now out of Iraq and is beginning to
leave Afghanistan. One should expect a fall in spending under those
circumstances — unless the government plans to invade more countries.
Yet Obama and outgoing defense secretary Leon Panetta foresee great danger. Nonsense. As analyst Veronique de Rugy
writes, "Defense spending has almost doubled in the past decade in
current dollar terms and will continue to grow in spite of automatic
cuts." Summarizing Rugy's findings, Gillespie
writes, "Assuming maximum sequestration, Defense would increase only 16
percent in current dollars over the next decade, rather than 23 percent
without sequestration." Some cut.
Of course, much could and should be cut from the military by ending
the U.S. government's imperial foreign policy — which makes enemies for
the American people — and moving to a policy of strict
noninterventionism. This would not only save money; it would be the
right thing to do. The U.S. government should not be policing the world.
What about the claims that a spending slowdown would harm the
economy? We're told the economy could fall back into recession if
spending is not maintained at the vigorous pace previously planned.
After all, it is argued, if government workers are laid off and fewer
military contracts are written, less money will be in people's hands to
spend on goods and services. Considering that the government wouldn't
actually have less revenue under sequestration, this is an outrageous
exaggeration if not an outright lie. Of course, beneficiaries of that
spending — especially the parasitic politicians and the
military-industrial complex — have every reason to mislead the
taxpayers. The people's natural interest in lower taxes and lower
government spending must be overcome somehow. Frightening them into
believing that even a slowing of the growth in spending would wreck the
economy is just the ticket.
Even if it were true that the economy would slow down, it would be
no more than a short-term effect that would quickly give way to real,
sustainable economic growth, assuming the government took other needed
steps to free the economy. Government employees and contractors spend
the taxpayers' money. If the largess ends, the producers of that wealth
will be free to spend and invest as they like. That's not only just;
it's how sound economies are generated. Politicians use the force of the
state to shape the economy to their own purposes. That violates freedom
and stifles prosperity.
Contrary to the Keynesian ruling elite, government does not
generate economic growth. The free market, unburdened by spending,
taxes, regulation, and privilege, contains all that it needs to raise
living standards for all. After sequestration, let's start seeing real
and substantial cuts in spending.
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