The Congressional Budget Office's latest projections should
serve as a wake-up call to fiscal conservatives in Congress and the
White House. Unless they restrain spending, they will see budget
deficits jeopardize the tax-relief agenda and imperil much of the
hard-fought progress achieved over the past three years.
The CBO projects deficits of $401 billion in 2003 and $480 billion
in 2004, and $1.5 trillion over the decade. Even those estimates
exclude the costs of offering a Medicare drug benefit, extending
expiring tax provisions and reforming the alternative minimum
tax.
Furthermore, they assume that discretionary spending - including
defense - will grow no faster than inflation, rather than the
typical 7.7 percent annual increase over the past five years.
Factoring in those costs raises the projected annual deficits to
between $600 billion and $700 billion through most of the
decade.
Where did this expanding deficit come from? A sluggish economy, tax
relief and necessary defense spending played a part. But one cannot
overlook the largest domestic spending spree since the Great
Society. Mandatory spending will reach 11.1 percent of gross
domestic product this year, its highest level ever. New pressures
on Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid will combine with recent
legislation, such as last year's farm bill, to push those costs
even higher in coming years.
Nondefense discretionary spending in 2003 will hit 3.9 percent of
GDP for the first time since 1985. Yet rather than balancing new
homeland security spending with cuts elsewhere, lawmakers ramped up
funding for education, health research and dozens of small,
low-priority programs. The corporate welfare budget has not been
touched, and the number of pork projects has doubled since
2000.
Such spending may be acceptable to President Bush, who has
recently been described as a "big government conservative" who
couples tax relief with high government spending. But these goals
are contradictory. All government spending must eventually be
funded with taxes, and budget deficits only delay the inevitable
taxes (with interest). This year's $401 billion budget deficit will
add $3,774 to the average household's future tax burden. If the
budget deficit reaches $600 billion to $700 billion, the annual tax
increase will top $6,000 per household. Unless they balance tax
relief with spending cuts, Mr. Bush and Congress will leave a
legacy of temporary tax relief followed by permanently higher
taxes.
Some insist that economic growth alone will solve the deficit
problem. It is true that the recent tax rate cuts will aid economic
growth and tax revenues by providing new incentives to work, save
and invest. But the CBO's dire projections already assume revenue
growth of 13 percent in 2005, 10 percent in 2006 and approximately
6 percent thereafter. The economy won't grow the budget into
balance any time soon.
Thus far, the public has accepted mild budget deficits as the
predictable result of the September 11 attacks and the 2001
recession. As we move further from these events, though, the
expanding deficits will become more difficult for people to
swallow. White House officials and congressional leaders can't
escape blame, and heading into an election year, their opponents
surely won't let them off easy.
Lawmakers will now find it difficult if not impossible to further
reduce the tax burden on American families. Increasing deficit
projections led the normally tax-averse President Reagan to raise
taxes in 1982. Mr. Bush may now have to expand more
energy-protecting previous tax cuts than proposing new ones.
Broad-based tax increases may remain a political "third rail," but
class-warfare calls to raises taxes on "the rich" may find an
increasingly receptive audience.
The only alternative to tax increases is spending restraint. An
obvious first step: Scrap the proposed budget-busting Medicare drug
benefit and start over. Now is not the time for the largest
expansion of government since the Great Society. Targeted help to
poor seniors, combined with real Medicare reforms, makes more sense
than creating a new $7 trillion liability that funds many seniors
who don't need the benefit.
There are other ways to save money: The $90 billion corporate
welfare budget can go, along with an additional $50 billion in
waste, fraud and abuse identified by the Heritage Foundation.
Create an independent commission to identify outdated and
ineffective programs ripe for elimination.
Yes, cutting spending can be difficult. But it sure beats raising
taxes.
Brian Riedl
is the Grover M. Hermann fellow in federal budgetary affairs in the
Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at the Heritage
Foundation.
Appeared in The Washington Times