But you are obviously wrong. When the deficit and budget hit near record highs, we are borrowing more to cover the costs. They are not forcing spending cuts or the deficit would not continue to increase.
The $4.11 trillion federal budget in 2018 was up 3.2% from 2017 and is 20.3% of the GDP which is the 50 year average. So spending continued to increase and continued at the average rate. Subsidies for health care insurance purchased through the AAA increased 17%. Social Security increased by 5%, Medicare by 3%, and Medicaid by 4%. [CBO]
You also can't get anything of meaning out of the metric you are using because GDP grows at a different rate each year, and it's not static or constant. Spending grows at a different rate each year as well. Revenues grow at a different rate each year because of how closely tied they are to GDP.
