Much has been written since Congressman Paul Ryan (R-WI)
and President Barak Obama have released competing budget plans for Fiscal Year
2012 and much more will surely follow as the FY 2012 budget debate heats up.
Ryan’s plan has been hailed as “courageous” since he dared
to propose cuts in entitlement spending for Medicare and Medicaid, while
leaving Social Security untouched. Ryan’s plan fails to pass the sniff test for
actual budgetary reform as his plan simply focuses on one side of the budget
equation – spending, and does nothing to address revenue. This is the equivalent of your monthly budget
of $5,000 while you only bring in $3,500 a month. Your fix to the problem? Cut your grocery expenses by 20%. The math simply doesn’t add up.
On the other end of spectrum, President Obama addresses the revenue
issue by stating he wants to restore the high end tax rates on the wealthy to
the rates of the Clinton years, but does little to address mandatory spending
which accounts for the vast majority of the budget expenses.
There is so much hyperbole going on it’s time to settle on
some simple facts:
FACT #1: Neither plan
does anything to balance the budget. In
fact, the only thing either plan does is slow the rise of the overall
debt. Both plans claim to reduce
deficits by roughly $4 trillion over the next decade, but deficits and debt are
two completely different animals.
FACT #2: The Fiscal
Year 2011 budget that was finally passed (some 6 months after it should have
been) calls for estimated spending of $3.82 Trillion! Estimated revenues for the year - $2.17
Trillion. The net differential: $1.65
Trillion – there’s your budget deficit. - - Under
the Obama and Ryan plans, they’re proposing whittling down the annual budget
deficits, over 10 years, by about $4 Trillion or so. Neither even proposes a balanced budget
somewhere along the way.
FACT #3: The FY 2011 budget contains $2.4 Trillion of
Mandatory Spending. These are government
mandated spending obligations the government cannot back out of. They include: Social Security, Medicare,
Medicaid, Interest on the Debt, government pensions, Unemployment insurance and
Food Stamps. The delta between Mandatory
Spending and projected revenues for FY2011 is roughly $200 billion. That’s $200 billion that needs to be borrowed
simply to meet the government’s statutory obligations.
FACT #4: All that
other spending to the tune of $1.4 Trillion to pay for things like Defense,
Transportation, Veterans Affairs, etc. all is being done right now on borrowed
dollars.
FACT #5: Both
Republicans and Democrats will spin the numbers in a convincing way over the
next several months to sway a public that ultimately will not care an
iota about the facts but simply acquiesce to the partisan proposal and tell
anyone that disagrees with them how wrong they are.


While this doesn’t have to be a permanent position, it’s a
good bet that it will take a decade just to be at a point where the budget can
begin to run a surplus – and that’s with significant cuts to discretionary
spending as well as reform of Medicare and Social Security, but if it’s done in
a vacuum without at least raising taxes to the levels they were during the
Clinton Administration, then we might as well forget about trying to balance
the budget, or paying down the national debt.
Let’s just party like we’re Americans and if and when the bill comes due
– and it will! – then we can do the American thing and just declare bankruptcy –
make it someone else's problem.
In the meantime, we can have great knockdown drag out fights
over the peanuts in funding the National Endowment of the Arts, Public
Broadcasting and Planned Parenthood. It
will make for great theater, and be absolutely meaningless in the grand scheme
of things.
As we march down the path of the budget (and debt) debate, let's keep in mind what the facts really are and not get caught up in the rhetoric that both Republicans and Democrats are going to be throwing out there. Educate yourself - check the numbers - do the math. It's actually easier than high school algebra if you try it and it will help you not be fooled by the politicians this time around. Hope you enjoy playing with the numbers :)
Tax Year
|
High Rate
|
High Income
|
2011
|
35%
|
379,150
|
2010
|
35%
|
373,650
|
2009
|
35%
|
372,950
|
2008
|
35%
|
357,700
|
2007
|
35%
|
349,700
|
2006
|
35%
|
336,550
|
2005
|
35%
|
326,450
|
2004
|
35%
|
319,100
|
2003
|
35%
|
311,950
|
2002
|
38.6%
|
307,050
|
2001
|
39.1%
|
297,350
|
2000
|
39.6%
|
288,350
|
1999
|
39.6%
|
283,150
|
1998
|
39.6%
|
278,450
|
1997
|
39.6%
|
271,450
|
1996
|
39.6%
|
263,750
|
1995
|
39.6%
|
256,500
|
1994
|
39.6%
|
250,000
|
1993
|
39.6%
|
250,000
|
1992
|
31%
|
86,500
|
1991
|
31%
|
82,150
|
1990
|
28-33%
|
32,450-162,770
|
1989
|
28-33%
|
30,950-155,320
|
1988
|
28-33%
|
29,750-149,250
|
1987
|
38.5%
|
90,000
|
1986
|
50%
|
175,250
|
1985
|
50%
|
169,020
|
1984
|
50%
|
162,400
|
1983
|
50%
|
109,400
|
1982
|
50%
|
85,000
|
1981
|
70%
|
215,400
|
1980
|
70%
|
215,400
|
1979
|
70%
|
215,400
|
1978
|
70%
|
203,200
|
1977
|
70%
|
203,200
|
1976
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1975
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1974
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1973
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1972
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1971
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1970
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1969
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1968
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1967
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1966
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1965
|
70%
|
200,000
|
1964
|
77%
|
400,000
|
1963
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1962
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1961
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1960
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1959
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1958
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1957
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1956
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1955
|
91%
|
400,000
|
1954
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1953
|
92%
|
200,000
|
1952
|
92%
|
200,000
|
1951
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1950
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1949
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1948
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1947
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1946
|
91%
|
200,000
|
1945
|
94%
|
200,000
|
1944
|
94%
|
200,000
|
1943
|
88%
|
200,000
|
1942
|
88%
|
200,000
|
1941
|
81%
|
5,000,000
|
1940
|
79%
|
5,000,000
|
1939
|
79%
|
5,000,000
|
1938
|
79%
|
5,000,000
|
1937
|
79%
|
5,000,000
|
1936
|
79%
|
5,000,000
|
1935
|
63%
|
1,000,000
|
1934
|
63%
|
1,000,000
|
1933
|
63%
|
1,000,000
|
1932
|
63%
|
1,000,000
|
1931
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1930
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1929
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1928
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1927
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1926
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1925
|
25%
|
100,000
|
1924
|
46%
|
500,000
|
1923
|
58%
|
200,000
|
1922
|
58%
|
200,000
|
1921
|
73%
|
1,000,000
|
1920
|
73%
|
1,000,000
|
1919
|
73%
|
1,000,000
|
1918
|
77%
|
1,000,000
|
1917
|
67%
|
2,000,000
|
1916
|
15%
|
2,000,000
|
1915
|
7%
|
500,000
|
1914
|
7%
|
500,000
|
1913
|
7%
|
500,000
|
select sources used:
Just a quick caveat - As I publish this my wife is going to the post office to mail off more than a mortgage sized check to the IRS. With four kids, three in college, we do not qualify for any education credits. I think I'm feeling my freaking pain in supporting our government's errant spending ways. We paid over $32,000 in Federal taxes alone in 2010 - which is well over what I used to make 20 years ago.
ReplyDeleteOK.. Im just not even CLOSE to being smart enough to read and comprehend all of this. Trying to make an intelligent response to this would be futile on my part, so I'll depart with a hearty "GO REPUBLICANS!!!"..
ReplyDeleteA friend of mine (James Lankford) is smack dab in the middle of this as a freshman House member. I'll leave the politicing to him. =)