« How A Bad Dancer Becomes Many Bad Dancers | Main | The View From Your Recession, Ctd » 11 Jun 2009 08:52 am The Aftermath Of Bush's Fiscal VandalismShawn Tully worries about the coming debt crisis:
Put simply, spending is following a steep upward curve, while revenues are basically fixed as a portion of GDP. Why? Because future spending is driven mostly by entitlements, which are programmed to rise far faster than national income, while revenues depend heavily on the personal income tax, which yields receipts that typically rise or fall with GDP. Under George W. Bush, the U.S. experienced a prelude to the crisis before us: Spending rose rapidly, while revenues remained reasonably flat. Bush created an expensive new entitlement, the Medicare drug benefit (cost this year: $63 billion), and let spending on domestic programs from education to veterans' benefits run wild. Over seven years the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq added a total of some $900 billion to the budget. All told, Bush raised spending from 18.5% to 21% of GDP, setting in motion a chronic budget gap by piling on new spending without paying for it. The magnitude of the damage Bush did is still amazing. But when those tax increases come, they need to have his name attached to them. He made them inevitable; and deserves to go down in history for them. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e201156ff8fe76970c Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'The Aftermath Of Bush's Fiscal Vandalism' |
