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Tag Archives : deficits

We Need Shock Collars to Stop Republicans from Saying Stupid Things

We Need Shock Collars to Stop Republicans from Saying Stupid Things

Posted on July 16, 2011

Republicans say (and do) lots of stupid things, but the current fiscal debate has me focused on two specific statements. Both get me very agitated. Indeed, I’m so irritated that all Republican politicians should be fitted with shock collars and then zapped when they utter either one of these statements. Dumb Remark #1: “We shouldn’t […]

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Let’s Copy the Baltic Nations and Really Cut Spending

Let’s Copy the Baltic Nations and Really Cut Spending

Posted on May 10, 2011

All the talk of spending cuts in Washington is fictitious. Even the House Republican Study Committee budget allows spending to increase, on average, by 1.7 percent each year for the next decade. The Ryan budget, which critics deride for its “savage” cuts, allows spending to rise by an average of 2.8 percent each year. And […]

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Do Budget Deficits Threaten American Competitiveness? Dan Mitchell vs. the Establishment

Do Budget Deficits Threaten American Competitiveness? Dan Mitchell vs. the Establishment

Posted on May 7, 2011

I recently took part in a symposium on “The Budget Deficit and U.S. Competitiveness.” Put together by the Council on Foreign Relations, five of us were asked to concisely explain our thoughts on the issue. Here’s some of what I wrote: Excessive government spending can slow growth by diverting labor and capital from more productive […]

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Obama’s Tax Increase Trigger: Punishing Taxpayers with Automatic Tax Hikes When Politicians Overspend

Obama’s Tax Increase Trigger: Punishing Taxpayers with Automatic Tax Hikes When Politicians Overspend

Posted on April 13, 2011

Responding to widespread criticism of his AWOL status on the budget fight, President Obama today unveiled a fiscal plan. It already is being criticized for its class warfare approach to tax policy, but the most disturbing feature may be a provision that punishes the American people with higher taxes if politicians overspend. Called a “debt […]

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Phony Deficit Hawks Criticize the Ryan Budget

Phony Deficit Hawks Criticize the Ryan Budget

Posted on April 6, 2011

Washington is filled with groups that piously express their devotion to balanced budgets and fiscal responsibility, so it is rather revealing that some of these groups have less-than-friendly responses to Congressman Ryan’s budget plan. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, for instance, portrays itself as a bunch of deficit hawks. So you would think […]

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English Riots, Faux Austerity, and Krugman’s Fairy Tale

English Riots, Faux Austerity, and Krugman’s Fairy Tale

Posted on April 1, 2011

London was just hit by heavy riots as part of a protest against the “deep” and “savage” budget cuts of the Cameron government. This is not the first time the U.K. has endured riots. The welfare lobby, bureaucrats, and other recipients of taxpayer largesse are becoming increasingly agitated that their gravy train may be derailed. […]

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Norquist Is Right and Coburn Is Wrong: Tax Increases Will Lead to More Spending, Not Lower Deficits

Norquist Is Right and Coburn Is Wrong: Tax Increases Will Lead to More Spending, Not Lower Deficits

Posted on March 11, 2011

There’s a significant debate now taking place in Washington – largely behind closed doors, but sometimes covered by the media – on whether fiscal conservatives should maintain a rigid no-tax-increase position. One side of the debate features Grover Norquist of Americans for Tax Reform, which is the organization that maintains the no-tax increase pledge. The […]

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Obama’s Budget Means the Burden of Government Spending Will be $2 Trillion Higher in Ten Years

Obama’s Budget Means the Burden of Government Spending Will be $2 Trillion Higher in Ten Years

Posted on February 16, 2011

Fiscal policy wonks (like me, I’m forced to admit) sometimes miss the forest because we focus too much on individual trees. So while I think my posts on the spending and revenue sides of Obama’s new budget contained lots of useful information, I didn’t pay any attention to the elephant in the room (I’m really […]

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Deconstructing the Spending Side of Obama’s Proposed FY2012 Budget

Deconstructing the Spending Side of Obama’s Proposed FY2012 Budget

Posted on February 14, 2011

President Obama’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2012 has been released and there is lots of rhetoric in Washington about “budget cuts.” At first glance, this seems warranted. According to the just-released fiscal blueprint, the federal government is spending about $3.8 trillion this year and the President is proposing to spending a bit more than […]

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Even Studies from the European Central Bank Show Spending Restraint Is Key to Controlling Red Ink

Even Studies from the European Central Bank Show Spending Restraint Is Key to Controlling Red Ink

Posted on January 21, 2011

I’m not a big fan of central banks, and I definitely don’t like multilateral bureaucracies, so I almost feel guilty about publicizing two recent studies published by the European Central Bank. But when such an institution puts out research that unambiguously makes the case for smaller government, it’s time to sit up and take notice. […]

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