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Opinion: ‘It’s the spending, stupid’


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By Tom McClintock

Imagine a family that earns $50,000 a year but is spending more than $88,000 with a credit card balance of $330,000. The discussions around the kitchen table are likely to be a little tense.

Proportionally, that’s where Washington’s finances are today, and that’s why the national discussion is a little tense, too.

Even these figures belie the magnitude of the fiscal crisis. Shutting down the entire federal government and firing every federal employee is no longer enough to balance the budget. Mandatory spending – mainly entitlements – consumes more than the government takes in.

Tom McClintock

Tom McClintock

Fortunately, revenues vastly exceed debt payments, so threats of an actual default are so much flimflam. The president has both the legal authority and constitutional obligation to prioritize payments to prevent a default. The problem is that a lot of other bills would go unpaid, causing a downgrade to the nation’s triple-A credit, forcing up interest costs, wiping out all of the savings now on the table and jacking up everything from mortgage interest costs to family credit card rates.

But avoiding a downgrade will take more than just raising the debt limit. Without a credible plan to place the Treasury back on the path to fiscal solvency – which Standard and Poors defines as reducing the deficit by $4 trillion over the next decade — the nation’s credit will be downgraded no matter what happens with the debt limit.

So what to do?

The president wants to raise taxes on “corporate jets” and “millionaires and billionaires.” But the awful truth is that there aren’t enough corporate jets or millionaires and billionaires to make more than a dent in these numbers.

That’s why the president has actually proposed raising taxes on those earning $200,000 per year ($250,000 for couples). These are families who are already paying more than half of all income taxes, many of whom are struggling to keep up with upside-down mortgages while putting kids through college without financial aid. Worse, over 80 percent of small businesses’ net income would be subject to the president’s “millionaires and billionaires” tax at a time when we’re depending on them to produce two-thirds of the new jobs that people desperately need.

The folly of the left’s tax nostrums is to assume that high taxes are the path to prosperity and an antidote to deficits. They are neither.

As Adam Smith warned, raising taxes in a recession makes as much sense as a shopkeeper raising prices in a sales slump. New revenues are needed, but the healthy way is to remove the burdens that government has placed on the economy and produce those revenues through economic growth. Prosperity is the only true source of revenue.

Nor are taxes an antidote to deficits. In fact, they’re close cousins: a deficit is simply a future tax. Both are driven by spending. It’s no coincidence that while annual spending increased by $1.2 trillion in the last five years, the annual deficit increased by $1.4 trillion. It’s the spending, stupid.

So how do we reduce spending when promised entitlements are pushing the nation to bankruptcy? A family grappling with a problem as big as the federal government’s would rapidly come to several conclusions.

First, it’s going to need a work-out plan, starting with a family budget. In March, the House passed the first federal budget since 2009. It would ultimately balance the budget and pay off the debt. The Senate tore it up.

Second, that family’s going to have to review its spending and pull out everything that it can do without. The House has begun that process but has a long way to go. The Senate frets over losing the “Cowboy Poetry Festival.”

Finally, it’s going to have to renegotiate any promises it has made but just can’t keep. And that’s the biggest budget challenge, because an entire generation of Americans has made retirement plans based on those promises.

For example, an average couple earning $89,000 and retiring in 2011 will have paid $110,000 into Medicare and will consume $350,000. Is anyone really surprised the system is collapsing?

Paul Ryan has done the nation a great service by offering an alternative that stops provider flight and guarantees seniors the choice of the health care plan that best meets their own needs, underwritten by a solvent Medicare system in a manner that provides higher support to those who are sicker, poorer and older.

Facing grim financial reality after decades of profligacy is a difficult, time-consuming and thoroughly unpleasant process. But there’s an infinitely worse alternative.

Just ask the Greeks.

Tom McClintock represents the 4th Congressional District, which encompasses Lake Tahoe on the California side.

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Comments

Comments (12)
  1. T. Michael Lee says - Posted: July 30, 2011

    Stop the robo calls Tom, we can not opt put of them and i’ve called your office asking you stop calling us.
    I disagree on your stance on taxing. Please go away….

  2. Bob Rockwell says - Posted: July 30, 2011

    I agree with T.Michael Lee, stop the robo calls. To quote Mr.McClintock’s opinion piece “Paul Ryan has done the nation a great service”. Oh really? The far right teabaggers are whats bringing this country down with their radical agenda. Go away Tom…

  3. Local Yokle says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    Mr. McClintock:

    Please check your facts. Taxes are at an all time low for the wealthiest and highest for the least wealthy (check any tax bracket you dare to… http://blog.wolframalpha.com/2010/04/16/historical-ustax-statistics-in-wolframalpha/

    The true myth is the idea that businesses will somehow spend any tax savings in these times on anything other than their own bank accounts.

    Deregulation by both the Democrats and Republicans of post Great Depression laws are what got us into this mess. We will likely need a balanced solution that includes both revenue increases (taxes) as well as serious cuts in social programs (social security and medicare being the largest ticket items). Most of us who are paying the majority of the taxes (the middle and lower classes) are right to ask the more wealthy to kick in a little more considering these are the vary people who have received the greatest benefit from our many bail outs and historically low tax rates.

    Stop the lies and fear mongering as well as the robo calls. Better yet, go back to Southern California and save us all your baloney.

    My two cents
    -Local Yokle

  4. Steven says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    How do we get off the robo call list?

  5. Bob says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    I was disappointed in his last visit to SLT. Just another politician trying to get elected. No real answers to anything. Told everyone what they wanted to hear.

  6. PubWorksTV says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    McClintock gave lots of details and facts. I like that. Gives the brain some chow.

    Ya know what I mean?

    Then I read the local responses.

    In the end I think McClintock titled the article right.

  7. snoheather says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    I agree with everyone on stopping the robo calls. It is very annoying to receive these on a regular basis and not having a way to opt out of receiving them.

    Has anyone been able to get the carpet one to stop? I have been trying for years to call and get them to stop calling with no success. So tired of hearing, “Hello, Do you need your carpets cleaned….”

  8. Skibum says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    The carpet place is based in Carson. All you have to do call them and set up an appointment and when they show up……..

  9. tahoegal says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    OK, which is the most annoying, the carpet creep or Tom? Guess I prefer the carpet creep. Tom, we don’t agree with you on ANYTHING – so stop calling us. If we get rid of our landline, it will be because of empty suits like you.

  10. Steve says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    Getting unwanted phone calls from politicians is what happens when you list your phone number (optional) on your voter registration application.

    Regretfully, these politicians exempted themselves on the “Do Not Call” law.

  11. Steven says - Posted: July 31, 2011

    Are your carpets dirty? Want to get off the phone list? Unfortunately you have to listen to the entire message and at the end they give the option to op-out. I did and haven’t been bothered since. Of course skibum has a good idea..set up an appointment and when they show up tell them no thanks and take me off the phone list.

  12. K9woods says - Posted: August 2, 2011

    It’s not the spending ….it’s about jobs. This “deal” is a real job killer. Get unemployment down to 4%.
    Mr McClintock….you do not represent me!!!