Ron Paul Statement - 'We Are Already Over the Fiscal Cliff'
Statement on the Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendments to H.R. 8
We Are Already Over the Fiscal Cliff
2 January 2013
Despite claims that the Administration and Congress saved America from
the fiscal cliff with an early morning vote today, the fact is that
government spending has already pushed Americans over the cliff. Only
serious reductions in federal spending will stop the cliff dive from
ending in a crash landing, yet the events of this past month show that
most elected officials remain committed to expanding the welfare-warfare
state.
While there was much hand-wringing over the
“draconian” cuts that would be imposed by sequestration, in fact
sequestration does not cut spending at all. Under the sequestration
plan, government spending will increase by 1.6 trillion over the next
eight years. Congress calls this a cut because without sequestration
spending will increase by 1.7 trillion over the same time frame. Either
way it is an increase in spending.
Yet even these minuscule
cuts in the “projected rate of spending” were too much for Washington
politicians to bear. The last minute “deal” was the worst of both
worlds: higher taxes on nearly all Americans now and a promise to
revisit these modest reductions in spending growth two months down the
road. We were here before, when in 2011 Republicans demanded these
automatic modest decreases in government growth down the road in
exchange for a massive increase in the debt ceiling. As the time drew
closer, both parties clamored to avoid even these modest moves.
Make no mistake: the spending addiction is a bipartisan problem. It is
generally believed that one party refuses to accept any reductions in
military spending while the other party refuses to accept any serious
reductions in domestic welfare programs. In fact, both parties support
increases in both military and domestic welfare spending. The two
parties may disagree on some details of what kind of military or
domestic welfare spending they favor, but they do agree that they both
need to increase. This is what is called “bipartisanship” in Washington.
While the media played up the drama of the down-to-the-wire
negotiations, there was never any real chance that a deal would not be
worked out. It was just drama. That is how Washington operates. As it
happened, a small handful of Congressional and Administration leaders
gathered in the dark of the night behind closed doors to hammer out a
deal that would be shoved down the throats of Members whose constituents
had been told repeatedly that the world would end if this miniscule
decrease in the rate of government spending was allowed to go through.
While many on both sides express satisfaction that this deal only
increases taxes on the “rich,” most Americans will see more of their
paycheck going to Washington because of the deal. The Tax Policy Center
has estimated that 77 percent of Americans would see higher taxes
because of the elimination of the payroll tax cut.
The
arguments against the automatic “cuts” in military spending were
particularly dishonest. Hawks on both sides warned of doom and gloom if,
as the plan called for, the defense budget would have returned to 2007
levels of spending! Does anybody really believe that our defense
spending was woefully inadequate just five years ago? And since 2007 we
have been told that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are winding down.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, over the next eight years
military spending would increase 20 percent without the sequester and
would increase 18 percent with the sequester. And this is what is called
a dangerous reduction in defense spending?
Ironically, some
of the members who are most vocal against tax increases and in favor of
cuts to domestic spending are the biggest opponents of cutting a penny
from the Pentagon budget. Over and over we were told of the hundreds of
thousands of jobs that would be lost should military spending be
returned to 2007 levels. Is it really healthy to think of our defense
budget as a jobs program? Many of these allegedly free-market members
sound more Keynesian than Paul Krugman when they praise the economic
“stimulus” created by militarism.
As Chris Preble of the Cato
Institute wrote recently, “It’s easy to focus exclusively on the
companies and individuals hurt by the cuts and forget that the taxed
wealth that funded them is being employed elsewhere.”
While
Congress ultimately bears responsibility for deficit spending, we must
never forget that the Federal Reserve is the chief enabler of deficit
spending. Without a central bank eager to monetize the debt, Congress
would be unable to fund the welfare-warfare state without imposing
unacceptable levels of taxation on the American people. Of course, the
Federal Reserve’s policies do impose an “inflation” tax on the American
people; however, since this tax is hidden Congress does not fear the
same public backlash it would experience if it directly raised income
taxes.
I have little hope that a majority of Congress and the
President will change their ways and support real spending reductions
unless forced to by an economic crisis or by a change in people’s
attitudes toward government. Fortunately, increasing numbers of
Americans are awakening to the dangers posed by the growth of the
welfare-warfare state. Hopefully this movement will continue to grow and
force the politicians to reverse course before government spending,
taxing, and inflation destroys our economy entirely.
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