Page 1 of 14 1234511 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 196

Thread: How would you balance the budget?

  1. #1 | Top
    Join Date
    Aug 2018
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    3,543
    Thanks
    441
    Thanked 1,874 Times in 1,170 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 202 Times in 195 Posts

    Default How would you balance the budget?

    Trump's budget proposal is out and he is proposing trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. Since conservatives used to pretend they cared about deficits, I'm wondering what conservatives here would do to remedy that.

    From a liberal perspective, achieving a balanced budget isn't that hard, since we don't treat our radically low taxes as a given, nor do we put our largest area of discretionary spending off-limits.

    For example, using 2018 data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, consider the proposal of reducing our military budget to "only" 50% more than the combined spending of our two top potential opponents, Russia and China. That would be a huge budget in its own right, but it would save us about $300 billion per year.

    Now consider taxes. The average tax revenues for a developed nation are 34.19% of GDP. So, say we wanted to be taxed less than a normal amount, but not radically less -- let's say 10% less than if we were at the developed-nation average. Based on a GDP of $20.9 trillion, that would bring in about $760 billion extra per year. So, right there, with $760 billion in extra revenues and $300 billion in lower spending, we've gone from a deficit to a surplus -- from about a $984 billion FY 2019 deficit, to a $76 billion surplus.

    Note, were not talking about any hard sacrifices there. We'd remain a significantly "under-taxed" country, by the standards of developed nations, making us more attractive to business than our peers. And we'd continue to have a military budget about twice as large as the next-closest country's. So, as I said, this isn't a terribly difficult math problem for liberals. But how do you get there as a conservative? When you insist on radically low taxes and absurdly high military-industrial pork, where can you find enough savings to reach balance?

    That's the problem Trump was tackling with his budget. Yet, despite his willingness to betray his campaign promises (and the nation's promise to its elderly) by slashing Medicare and Social Security, he couldn't even move the numbers in the right direction. So, if you could dictate the budget, could you reach balance? How, would you do it, in terms of specific numbers and programs?

  2. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Oneuli For This Post:

    PoliTalker (03-13-2019), ThatOwlWoman (03-12-2019)

  3. #2 | Top
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Posts
    62,893
    Thanks
    3,736
    Thanked 20,386 Times in 14,102 Posts
    Groans
    2
    Groaned 649 Times in 616 Posts

    Default

    From a high level view very few people actually care about balancing the budget otherwise politicians would feel pressure to address it. It's basically become an instrument to bludgeon political opponents with.

    If we want to address the deficit and national debt we have to start where the most spending goes and that's entitlements and the military.

  4. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to cawacko For This Post:

    /MSG/ (03-12-2019), anonymoose (03-12-2019), Controlled Opposition (03-12-2019)

  5. #3 | Top
    Join Date
    Jun 2018
    Location
    Dirty South
    Posts
    63,458
    Thanks
    6,240
    Thanked 13,422 Times in 10,049 Posts
    Groans
    2
    Groaned 2,947 Times in 2,728 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by cawacko View Post
    If we want to address the deficit and national debt we have to start where the most spending goes and that's entitlements and the military.
    Or, we talk about how much revenue was reduced by tax cuts.

    Remember, last year revenues were 2% below the year before, and the deficit expanded as a result.

    We didn't cut spending back from 1998-2001 when we had surpluses, we had higher tax rates that were eventually cut.

    How many times do we have to cut taxes before you admit that doing so widens deficits and decreases revenues?
    When I die, turn me into a brick and use me to cave in the skull of a fascist


  6. The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to LV426 For This Post:

    Oneuli (03-12-2019), reagansghost (03-13-2019), ThatOwlWoman (03-12-2019), TTQ64 (03-12-2019)

  7. #4 | Top
    Join Date
    Jun 2018
    Location
    Dirty South
    Posts
    63,458
    Thanks
    6,240
    Thanked 13,422 Times in 10,049 Posts
    Groans
    2
    Groaned 2,947 Times in 2,728 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Oneuli View Post
    Trump's budget proposal is out and he is proposing trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. Since conservatives used to pretend they cared about deficits, I'm wondering what conservatives here would do to remedy that.

    From a liberal perspective, achieving a balanced budget isn't that hard, since we don't treat our radically low taxes as a given, nor do we put our largest area of discretionary spending off-limits.

    For example, using 2018 data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, consider the proposal of reducing our military budget to "only" 50% more than the combined spending of our two top potential opponents, Russia and China. That would be a huge budget in its own right, but it would save us about $300 billion per year.

    Now consider taxes. The average tax revenues for a developed nation are 34.19% of GDP. So, say we wanted to be taxed less than a normal amount, but not radically less -- let's say 10% less than if we were at the developed-nation average. Based on a GDP of $20.9 trillion, that would bring in about $760 billion extra per year. So, right there, with $760 billion in extra revenues and $300 billion in lower spending, we've gone from a deficit to a surplus -- from about a $984 billion FY 2019 deficit, to a $76 billion surplus.

    Note, were not talking about any hard sacrifices there. We'd remain a significantly "under-taxed" country, by the standards of developed nations, making us more attractive to business than our peers. And we'd continue to have a military budget about twice as large as the next-closest country's. So, as I said, this isn't a terribly difficult math problem for liberals. But how do you get there as a conservative? When you insist on radically low taxes and absurdly high military-industrial pork, where can you find enough savings to reach balance?

    That's the problem Trump was tackling with his budget. Yet, despite his willingness to betray his campaign promises (and the nation's promise to its elderly) by slashing Medicare and Social Security, he couldn't even move the numbers in the right direction. So, if you could dictate the budget, could you reach balance? How, would you do it, in terms of specific numbers and programs?
    Here's a dirty secret about government debt that Conservatives hate and will never mention; it never has to be paid off.

    We don't ever have to pay off government debt because unlike individuals, government doesn't die. So there's no ultimate accounting of what is indebted when it comes to federal debt.

    So long as our GDP grows at a faster rate than our debt, we're doing just fine.

    High debt only has the effect of raising borrowing rates for the government, but the government has historically low borrowing rates, and has had them for at least a decade.
    When I die, turn me into a brick and use me to cave in the skull of a fascist


  8. #5 | Top
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Posts
    58,154
    Thanks
    35,716
    Thanked 50,648 Times in 27,302 Posts
    Groans
    22
    Groaned 2,977 Times in 2,694 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Oneuli View Post
    How would you balance the budget?
    Repeal the Trumpf trickle down tax cut scheme.

    Return to the tax rates of the booming and prosperous Bill Clinton era.

    Repeal Trumpf's massive and unnecessary peacetime military buildup, and trim the Pentagon budget to a reasonable and sane level, commensurate with protecting the conterminous United States, any vital national interests, and any treaty obligations.

  9. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Cypress For This Post:

    Oneuli (03-12-2019), ThatOwlWoman (03-12-2019), TTQ64 (03-12-2019)

  10. #6 | Top
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Posts
    57,638
    Thanks
    563
    Thanked 10,010 Times in 8,569 Posts
    Groans
    29
    Groaned 498 Times in 487 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Cypress View Post
    Repeal the Trumpf trickle down tax cut scheme.

    Return to the tax rates of the booming and prosperous Bill Clinton era.

    Repeal Trumpf's massive and unnecessary peacetime military buildup, and trim the Pentagon budget to a reasonable and sane level, commensurate with protecting the conterminous United States, any vital national interests, and any treaty obligations.
    So spend more money on nonsense social welfare programs for which the Constitution grants no authority but cut spending on one of the few things for which the federal government has the authority to do?

    I'll take building a stronger military over feeding a freeloader.
    Last edited by CFM; 03-12-2019 at 10:25 AM.

  11. #7 | Top
    Join Date
    Aug 2018
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    3,543
    Thanks
    441
    Thanked 1,874 Times in 1,170 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 202 Times in 195 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by LV426 View Post
    Here's a dirty secret about government debt that Conservatives hate and will never mention; it never has to be paid off.

    We don't ever have to pay off government debt because unlike individuals, government doesn't die. So there's no ultimate accounting of what is indebted when it comes to federal debt.

    So long as our GDP grows at a faster rate than our debt, we're doing just fine.

    High debt only has the effect of raising borrowing rates for the government, but the government has historically low borrowing rates, and has had them for at least a decade.
    The problem is that conservative policies typically result in debt rising faster than GDP. Although we had debt fall as a share of GDP almost every year from the end of WWII to the start of the Reagan administration, it then started to rise as a share of GDP -- at least until after the Clinton tax hike, which caused things to improve for a bit. But then we got Bush's upper-class tax cut and things went to hell in a hand-basket again.

  12. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Oneuli For This Post:

    LV426 (03-12-2019), ThatOwlWoman (03-12-2019)

  13. #8 | Top
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Location
    Realville
    Posts
    31,850
    Thanks
    1,475
    Thanked 6,520 Times in 5,217 Posts
    Groans
    779
    Groaned 2,477 Times in 2,299 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Oneuli View Post
    Trump's budget proposal is out and he is proposing trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. Since conservatives used to pretend they cared about deficits, I'm wondering what conservatives here would do to remedy that.

    From a liberal perspective, achieving a balanced budget isn't that hard, since we don't treat our radically low taxes as a given, nor do we put our largest area of discretionary spending off-limits.

    For example, using 2018 data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, consider the proposal of reducing our military budget to "only" 50% more than the combined spending of our two top potential opponents, Russia and China. That would be a huge budget in its own right, but it would save us about $300 billion per year.

    Now consider taxes. The average tax revenues for a developed nation are 34.19% of GDP. So, say we wanted to be taxed less than a normal amount, but not radically less -- let's say 10% less than if we were at the developed-nation average. Based on a GDP of $20.9 trillion, that would bring in about $760 billion extra per year. So, right there, with $760 billion in extra revenues and $300 billion in lower spending, we've gone from a deficit to a surplus -- from about a $984 billion FY 2019 deficit, to a $76 billion surplus.

    Note, were not talking about any hard sacrifices there. We'd remain a significantly "under-taxed" country, by the standards of developed nations, making us more attractive to business than our peers. And we'd continue to have a military budget about twice as large as the next-closest country's. So, as I said, this isn't a terribly difficult math problem for liberals. But how do you get there as a conservative? When you insist on radically low taxes and absurdly high military-industrial pork, where can you find enough savings to reach balance?

    That's the problem Trump was tackling with his budget. Yet, despite his willingness to betray his campaign promises (and the nation's promise to its elderly) by slashing Medicare and Social Security, he couldn't even move the numbers in the right direction. So, if you could dictate the budget, could you reach balance? How, would you do it, in terms of specific numbers and programs?
    You won’t like my answer. So stick with yours. I am sure you think you are right.

    PS

    where are you going to cut $300 billion out of military budget?

  14. #9 | Top
    Join Date
    Aug 2018
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    3,543
    Thanks
    441
    Thanked 1,874 Times in 1,170 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 202 Times in 195 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by cawacko View Post
    From a high level view very few people actually care about balancing the budget otherwise politicians would feel pressure to address it. It's basically become an instrument to bludgeon political opponents with.

    If we want to address the deficit and national debt we have to start where the most spending goes and that's entitlements and the military.
    Yes, I agree it's used mostly as a bludgeon. However, I think you left out the most important aspect of how we could address it: raising revenues. Our spending levels aren't actually that high, relative to GDP, for a developed nation. In fact, they're well below normal:

    https://data.oecd.org/gga/general-go...t-spending.htm

    And if you counted only non-defense spending, it's extremely low -- just 37.9% of GDP, compared to 38.5% for Japan, 42.2% for Great Britain, 42.7% for Germany, and 55.0% for France. In theory, we could further starve our already-anemic spending, but wouldn't it make more sense to address our radically low taxation?
    Last edited by Oneuli; 03-12-2019 at 11:07 AM.

  15. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Oneuli For This Post:

    LV426 (03-12-2019), Phantasmal (03-12-2019), ThatOwlWoman (03-12-2019)

  16. #10 | Top
    Join Date
    Oct 2017
    Location
    Ravenhenge in the Northwoods
    Posts
    89,003
    Thanks
    146,863
    Thanked 83,339 Times in 53,239 Posts
    Groans
    1
    Groaned 4,661 Times in 4,380 Posts
    Blog Entries
    1

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Oneuli View Post
    The problem is that conservative policies typically result in debt rising faster than GDP. Although we had debt fall as a share of GDP almost every year from the end of WWII to the start of the Reagan administration, it then started to rise as a share of GDP -- at least until after the Clinton tax hike, which caused things to improve for a bit. But then we got Bush's upper-class tax cut and things went to hell in a hand-basket again.
    This has certainly been true throughout my life time. I have never been able to figure out where (R)s got the ill-deserved reputation of being fiscal hawks. Do you know?

  17. The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to ThatOwlWoman For This Post:

    Cypress (03-12-2019), LV426 (03-12-2019), Oneuli (03-12-2019)

  18. #11 | Top
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Detroit, AKA HEAVEN
    Posts
    31,403
    Thanks
    11,769
    Thanked 10,865 Times in 7,323 Posts
    Groans
    642
    Groaned 785 Times in 732 Posts
    Blog Entries
    2

    Default

    Pull out of NATO, close all overseas bases, cut defense spending by 1/3, raise SS age to 85, allow people under 35 to opt out of paying into it (because we will never get that money back), end the War on Drugs, get rid of the DEA, ATF, and a bunch of other alphabet soup agencies, and a 25% cut to all federal administrative salaries.
    WATERMARK, GREATEST OF THE TRINITY, ON CHIK-FIL-A
    Quote Originally Posted by Sigmund Freud View Post
    The fields of mediocre chicken sandwiches shall be sowed with salt, so that nothing may ever grow there again.
    www.gunsbeerfreedom.blogspot.com

    www.gunsbeerfreedom.blogspot.com

  19. The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to /MSG/ For This Post:

    BRUTALITOPS (03-12-2019), countryboy (03-12-2019)

  20. #12 | Top
    Join Date
    Dec 2013
    Location
    In my house
    Posts
    21,174
    Thanks
    3,418
    Thanked 7,931 Times in 5,908 Posts
    Groans
    9
    Groaned 444 Times in 424 Posts
    Blog Entries
    4

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by LV426 View Post
    Here's a dirty secret about government debt that Conservatives hate and will never mention; it never has to be paid off.

    We don't ever have to pay off government debt because unlike individuals, government doesn't die. So there's no ultimate accounting of what is indebted when it comes to federal debt.

    So long as our GDP grows at a faster rate than our debt, we're doing just fine.

    High debt only has the effect of raising borrowing rates for the government, but the government has historically low borrowing rates, and has had them for at least a decade.
    Tell that to Zimbabwe
    "Those who vote decide nothing. Those who count the vote decide everything." Joseph Stalin
    The USA has lost WWIV to China with no other weapons but China Virus and some cash to buy democrats.

  21. The Following User Says Thank You to Celticguy For This Post:

    Truth Detector (03-12-2019)

  22. #13 | Top
    Join Date
    Aug 2017
    Posts
    7,863
    Thanks
    98
    Thanked 4,219 Times in 3,171 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 239 Times in 227 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Oneuli View Post
    Trump's budget proposal is out and he is proposing trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see. Since conservatives used to pretend they cared about deficits, I'm wondering what conservatives here would do to remedy that.

    From a liberal perspective, achieving a balanced budget isn't that hard, since we don't treat our radically low taxes as a given, nor do we put our largest area of discretionary spending off-limits.

    For example, using 2018 data from the International Institute for Strategic Studies, consider the proposal of reducing our military budget to "only" 50% more than the combined spending of our two top potential opponents, Russia and China. That would be a huge budget in its own right, but it would save us about $300 billion per year.

    Now consider taxes. The average tax revenues for a developed nation are 34.19% of GDP. So, say we wanted to be taxed less than a normal amount, but not radically less -- let's say 10% less than if we were at the developed-nation average. Based on a GDP of $20.9 trillion, that would bring in about $760 billion extra per year. So, right there, with $760 billion in extra revenues and $300 billion in lower spending, we've gone from a deficit to a surplus -- from about a $984 billion FY 2019 deficit, to a $76 billion surplus.

    Note, were not talking about any hard sacrifices there. We'd remain a significantly "under-taxed" country, by the standards of developed nations, making us more attractive to business than our peers. And we'd continue to have a military budget about twice as large as the next-closest country's. So, as I said, this isn't a terribly difficult math problem for liberals. But how do you get there as a conservative? When you insist on radically low taxes and absurdly high military-industrial pork, where can you find enough savings to reach balance?

    That's the problem Trump was tackling with his budget. Yet, despite his willingness to betray his campaign promises (and the nation's promise to its elderly) by slashing Medicare and Social Security, he couldn't even move the numbers in the right direction. So, if you could dictate the budget, could you reach balance? How, would you do it, in terms of specific numbers and programs?
    Before I begin with how to fix this... We do not have 'radically low taxes'. We are about 26% of GDP. The UK is 34%. The France, Germany and the Nordic countries are insanely high in the mid 40's. Switzerland is about 28%

    That said... here is what I would propose:

    1) Eliminate the tax code as it stands... all of it. All 75k pages of it. All loopholes, all deductions, all subsidies. For the individual side: Replace it with a Flat tax of 20% on earned income from 0-$500k Additional 10% tax on anything over that. This is on ALL income: Earned income, dividends AND capital gains. Standard deduction for every adult is $30k. Which will make the tax code progressive and protective of the lower income families. For the corporate side: recognize that a corporation is just paper. Eliminate the corporate tax code all together. The individual tax code will take care of taxing the money based on who gets it.

    2) Spending: We must get this under control, obviously. You pinpoint the obvious first place to start... The DoD. Way too much waste there. Let Europe pay to defend Europe. Eliminate most of the bases there, eliminate the bulk of the top of military hierarchy (we have far too many Generals/Admirals etc... who all have staff... basically too much admin). Definitely stop spending on weapons programs the military doesn't even want/need. Bottom line, I agree we could cut Defense by at least $200B.

    3) Healthcare costs: It doesn't matter how we pay for healthcare if we don't address the cost issue. What is driving the costs so high? Why is it so expensive to get a medical degree? Why are insurance costs so high for doctors/hospitals? I have more questions than answers here, but this is first place to start.

    4) Social security: Fix it with an additional 3% tax on income over $500k. That would resolve the issue. Social Security is not nearly as big of a problem as people think. Medicare is... which is due to number three above.

    All in all, I think we would agree on a lot... Not much we can do with the amount we have to pay out of SS, but we need to balance it with an increase in taxation as mentioned so that it doesn't detract from other areas in the future. Besides SS, Healthcare via medicare and medicaid is the biggest mandatory expense. We must figure out a way to get costs under control. Defense is the non-discretionary target. I think we agree that at least $200B, maybe more, could be cut.

    I think the area for discussion for the two of us would be on taxation. I want more transparency and simplicity in the tax code. There shouldn't be 75k pages to go through. My plan above is certainly open for tweaking on the numbers... but I think it is the better option than what we have today.

  23. The Following User Says Thank You to Superfreak For This Post:

    Truth Detector (03-12-2019)

  24. #14 | Top
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
    Posts
    45,121
    Thanks
    9,815
    Thanked 7,426 Times in 5,873 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 6,488 Times in 6,232 Posts
    Blog Entries
    2

    Default

    The US has in excess of a thousand military bases world-wide. Hellooooooooooo !
    " First they came for the journalists...
    We don't know what happened after that . "

    Maria Ressa.

  25. The Following User Says Thank You to moon For This Post:

    Oneuli (03-12-2019)

  26. #15 | Top
    Join Date
    Aug 2017
    Posts
    7,863
    Thanks
    98
    Thanked 4,219 Times in 3,171 Posts
    Groans
    0
    Groaned 239 Times in 227 Posts

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Cypress View Post
    Repeal the Trumpf trickle down tax cut scheme.

    Return to the tax rates of the booming and prosperous Bill Clinton era.

    Repeal Trumpf's massive and unnecessary peacetime military buildup, and trim the Pentagon budget to a reasonable and sane level, commensurate with protecting the conterminous United States, any vital national interests, and any treaty obligations.
    What the leg humping moron fails to mention is Bill Clinton is responsible for the largest tax giveaway to the wealthy EVER. Lowering long term cap gains to 20%. Gee golly, I wonder who it is that benefits the most from that?

Similar Threads

  1. Why we can't balance the budget
    By Guns Guns Guns in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 2
    Last Post: 10-24-2011, 06:59 AM
  2. Why Republicans will never be able to balance the budget
    By FUCK THE POLICE in forum Off Topic Forum
    Replies: 17
    Last Post: 03-28-2011, 07:11 PM
  3. Must taxes be raised to balance the budget?
    By Booyah! in forum General Politics Forum
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 02-21-2011, 03:33 PM
  4. You balance California's budget
    By FUCK THE POLICE in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 10
    Last Post: 08-05-2009, 08:59 PM
  5. How to balance the budget
    By FUCK THE POLICE in forum Current Events Forum
    Replies: 1
    Last Post: 12-18-2007, 10:47 PM

Bookmarks

Posting Rules

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •