lomiller
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2007
- Messages
- 13,208
True. It's sometimes difficult to express things in short sentences when you can't be perfectly, 100% accurate, without much longer descriptions.
My point is that since the end of the Clinton administration, we have been on an unsustainable path. One way or another, it will stop. I prefer an attempt to get the situation under control and manage a soft landing.
Unfortunately, the politicians involved have a very weak incentive to make that happen. If the electorate doesn't care, then it doesn't matter. Better yet, if they can successfully blame the other party, it's actually a win for them. They can't be expected to do the right thing if the voters don't demand it.
We have met the enemy, and they are us.
The major contributions to the structural deficit (The part that is transient responses to economic conditions) are as follows:
- Medicaid part D was never funded
- The Bush 43 stimulus tax cuts were not allowed to expire as originally called for. (they were proposed as economic stimulus to the 2003 recession. They were not neither needed or well implemented, but nominally at least they were short term stimulus not structural until they were made permanent.)
- The Trump tax cuts
The following added a lot to the total US debt, even if they were transient.
- Bush tax cuts before they were made permanent. Bad idea or not they nominally temporary
- Stimulus for the 2008 recession. Mostly tax cuts, IIRC mainly a suspension of FICA payments.
- Extended UI benefits following the 2008 recession.
- Operational cost of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. These were never funded, and indeed under Bush were not even included in the budget so they went right to the national debt without even showing up as a budget deficit.
"Us" in this case seems to mostly mean "Republicans"