Monday, October 26, 2009

Despite increasing deficits, Dems planning more spending

I remember that as early as the 2004 presidential election, Democrats were decrying the increase of the federal deficit.

Five years later they're largely silent. With Congress and the White House in Democratic hands, the deficit isn't an issue for them anymore.

But the 2004 deficit is dwarfed by the Obama deficit, as the Wall Street Journal tells us:

The White House disclosed the other day that the fiscal 2009 budget deficit clocked in at $1.4 trillion, amid the usual promises to do something about it. Yet even as budget director Peter Orszag was speaking, House Democrats were moving on a dozen spending bills for fiscal 2010 that total 12.1% in more domestic discretionary increases.

Yes, 12.1%.

Remember, inflation is running close to zero, or 0.8%. The good news, if we can call it that, is that Senate Democrats only want to increase nondefense appropriations by 8% for 2010. Because these funding increases become part of the permanent baseline for future appropriations, the 2010 House budget bills would permanently raise annual outlays for discretionary programs by about $75 billion a year from now until, well, forever.

These spending hikes do not include the so-called mandatory spending programs like Medicare and Medicaid, which exploded by 9.8% and 24.7%, respectively, in the just-ended 2009 fiscal year. All of this largesse is also on top of the stimulus funding that agencies received in 2009. The budget for the Environmental Protection Agency rose 126%, the Department of Education budget 209% and energy programs 146%.

There's a way out of this deficit mess. Increase NASA's budget, find extraterrestial life, and borrow money from then.

Technorati tags:

No comments:

Post a Comment