by Dan Mitchell | Mar 28, 2012 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending
A couple of weeks ago, I offered some guarded praise for Paul Ryan’s budget, pointing out that it satisfies the most important requirement of fiscal policy by restraining spending – to an average of 3.1 percent per year over the next 10 years – so that government...
by Dan Mitchell | Mar 12, 2012 | Big Government, Blogs, Economics, Flat Tax, Government Spending, Taxation
Last year, while lounging on the beach in the Caribbean…oops, I mean while doing off-site research, I developed the first iteration of a rule to describe how fiscal policy should operate. Good fiscal policy exists when the private sector grows faster than the public...
by Dan Mitchell | Feb 13, 2012 | Big Government, Blogs, Government Spending
President Obama’s budget proposal was unveiled today, generating all sorts of conflicting statements from both parties. Some of the assertions wrongly focus on red ink rather than the size of government. Others rely on dishonest Washington budget math, which means...
by Dan Mitchell | Aug 20, 2011 | Blogs, Uncategorized
…Well, I’m not sure what it means. But it sure doesn’t make sense when you look at the big picture. A credit card company wouldn’t increase a deadbeat’s credit limit, so why is it a sign of fiscal prudence to give Uncle Sam more borrowing authority? That being said, I...
by Kevin Hilferty | Aug 11, 2011 | Blogs, Europe, Government Spending, Government Waste
This past week Standard and Poor’s lowered their credit rating for the U.S. for the first time ever amidst debt ceiling debates over the growing federal deficit. Our leaders have nearly all acknowledged that to get the credit rating back to AAA there will need...