by Dan Mitchell | Apr 22, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Welfare and Entitlements
Under current law, Social Security is supposed to be an “earned benefit,” where taxes are akin to insurance premiums that finance retirement benefits for workers. And because there is a cap on retirement benefits, this means there also is a “wage-base cap” on the...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 21, 2011 | Big Government, Government Spending
America is in fiscal peril in the short run because of a 10-year spending binge by Bush and Obama and in the long run because of a toxic combination of entitlement programs and demographics. Congressman Paul Ryan has introduced a budget plan to address America’s...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 15, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Government Spending
By taking advantage of “must-pass” pieces of legislation, Republicans have three chances this year to restrain the burden of government. They didn’t do very well with the ‘CR fight” over appropriated spending for the rest of FY2011, which was their first...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 14, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Taxation
President Obama didn’t offer a budget plan yesterday. The White House hasn’t released anything beyond a set of talking points. But that’s not terribly surprising since his speech was really the opening salvo of his 2012 reelection fight. And it’s clear that a central...
by Dan Mitchell | Apr 14, 2011 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending
Some people thought I was being unfair when I referred to the budget deal as a kiss-your-sister agreement. But as more information is revealed, it looks like the GOP got the short end of the stick – largely because they were afraid of a government shutdown (even...