Tuesday, March 31, 2009

'Government gone wild'

Brian Wesbury and Bob Stein:

"Government spending does not cause a net increase in jobs over the long run; it costs jobs. Every dollar the government spends is
either taxed or borrowed from the private sector, which
means it “crowds out” private sector job creation. And
because government spending is less efficient than private
sector spending the economy actually grows more slowly in
the long run as the government gets bigger.

What’s interesting is how all these numbers are being
bandied about with very little pushback from the press. In
recent years, the press has complained loudly about “$200
billion deficits as far as the eye can see.” And almost all the
press argued that budget deficits lifted interest rates and hurt
the economy. But in recent weeks, the press seems to have
forgotten its old argument.

This is especially frightening when the US now faces $1
trillion deficits. President Obama says that this is all OK,
and that he is cutting the deficit in half (to $533 billion using
administration math, or $672 billion according to the CBO)
in just four years. What he doesn’t say, and what no one
seems willing to say, is that without his new budget the
deficit would have been cut by 75% in four years to about
$250 billion. The budget deficit and the size of the
government are exploding and no one seems to care.
But it doesn’t end there. Americans are the most
generous people on the face of the earth (when measured in
dollars donated to charities). At the same time, private
charity does a great deal of good and often does it more
effectively than government. But now the government wants
to limit deductions for charitable contributions.

Some conservatives have argued that this might be a
good trade off if marginal tax rates were lowered. They
argue that the benefits of higher GDP (resulting from lower
tax rates) would outweigh the losses from slimmer donations
(as a share of income). That is an economic argument that
reasonable people can disagree about.

But this time around, the government wants to limit the
charitable deduction and raise tax rates to make way for
more spending. What government is really saying is that it
doesn’t like the competition from private charities. It wants
more people to depend on government."


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2 comments:

  1. We are all riding a train with no brakes going down a mountain and the people who could possibly do something about this are either sleeping or watching the scenery go by because they are believing what the conductor is telling them that all is well and going to be better when the train gets to the bottom of the mountain.

    Then there is our very little voices from the aisle seats that no one is hearing. BB

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  2. "Then there is our very little voices from the aisle seats that no one is hearing."

    Brenda, I'm sure there were some of those in Rev. Jim Jones's Guyana compound as well.
    But most just drank the Kool-Aid and...

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