President Ronald Reagan's former budget director, David Stockman, disagrees
Ok.
I'll buy his assertion that Ryan's solution is indeed far too "non-radical". (Although it's worth noting that Obama called it radical.)
I'll agree that it let's things conceivably grow much worse than now. Perhaps beyond fixable.
And it allows time for future leftists to undo any fix that we might get enacted now. And believe me, they will try. Obama and compary are Fabians, after all.
So somehow we have to find a quicker solution to reducing the debt as a percentage of the GDP.
But here's where Stockman gets confused.
On one hand he says we have to massively cut government spending. (I agree. Do you?)
But this alone will not reduce the national debt as a percentage of GDP, unless revenues exceed spending or the GDP grows.
In the past, Stockmen has said the way to force lower spending that is to cut taxes. He called that "starving the beast." I agree with that in principle.
Now, inconsistently, he advocates an increase in taxes. He now apparently thinks we can tax more than we spend, and thus tax our way into a surplus that will significantly lower national debt as a percentage of GDP.
But that's a pipedream.
He underestimates how difficult it is to get government to actually spend less than revenue. He ignores 65+ years of history. Historically, our government has almost always spent more than it took in as revenues:
http://static8.businessinsider.com/...345/us-government-spending-versus-revenue.jpg .
He also overlooks the effect of higher taxes on GDP growth. In any given period, what has made all the difference historically is whether there was economic growth or not. The share of the economy that has been seized by the government has gone down at times because of economic growth … not because government spent less than it took in as revenues.
Relying on government to spend less than it takes in as revenue is a pipedream. It rarely has and rarely will … anywhere in the world. It has certainly never done that long enough in the US to measurably shrink the deficit/debt
as a percentage of GDP … which is what matters. What has reduced the deficit/debt as a percentage of GDP has been economic growth.
That's why I say that the ONLY way to fix the current economic mess is to cap spending so that government can't keep borrowing and thus increase the debt without bound,
and grow our way out of this by encouraging economic growth. And as I proved above, increasing taxes does not grow GDP.
Only reducing taxes does that, long term.
If we reduce the deficit and slow the growth of the national debt (by capping and then cutting spending somewhat), and encourage the economy to grow by cutting taxes and reducing needless government regulation of our lives, then over time, rather rapidly, we will see the size of the debt as a percentage of GDP shrink. THAT will get our economic house back in order. And a look at the period from 1995 to 2001, shows how rapidly that could occur:
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_QxBGECHec...4YsgU/s400/D.+National+Debt+as+percent+of+gdp
But it will never happen with Obama in the Whitehouse. Never. History proves that his type of economic thinking simply does not work. And it may not happen if democrats like Pelosi and Reid control even one house of Congress. So this next election is critical, if you ask me.
