The national debt virtually doubled in the 8 years of
President Barack Obama. From the $10.6
trillion debt when
he took office in 2009 that was created by all the presidents before him, until the end of his terms in
2017, the debt grew to nearly $20 trillion. That was, of course, the largest
increase under any president in history.
President Donald Trump claimed that in his first month in
office he actually saved money, reducing the national debt by $12 billion. That
is true, but is a mere pittance compared to the $20 trillion total. It was a baby
step in the right direction, but it was also only a moment in time for a number
that rises and falls month-to-month.
Campaigning in 2016, Trump promised voters he would balance
the budget. His first budget does not accomplish that difficult task, and in
fact, the budget for fiscal year 2019 is projected to add another trillion to
the existing debt, contrary to his promise to voters.
Trump’s proposed spending plan is a $4.4 trillion monster for
fiscal year 2019 that some describe as dangerously unbalanced. He still has some
time to balance the budget, but what a great thing it would be if his first budget
actually moved decidedly in that direction.
Everyone who manages a business or organization, or a home
budget understands the situation: ideally, income exceeds expense. Historically,
the federal government achieves surpluses only rarely, and a properly operated government
shouldn’t produce large surpluses, or large deficits.
Our gargantuan national debt is the result of gross
budgetary malfeasance, and it is at crisis proportions. The
nation’s debt now exceeds its GDP, and net interest payments on the debt
are estimated to be 6.8 percent of all federal outlays at $276.2 billion this
fiscal year. That is enough to pay for all administrative office employees for this
year.
A comparison of what the government is doing with what it is
allowed to do by the U.S. Constitution needs to happen.
The Preamble to the Constitution lays out its purpose, in
broad terms: “We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more
perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the
common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of
Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this
Constitution for the United States of America.”
James Madison, one of the Constitution’s creators, certainly
can be cited as an expert on the document. “The powers delegated by the
proposed Constitution to the federal government are few and defined,” he wrote
in Federalist No. 45, in 1788. “Those which are to remain in the State
governments are numerous and indefinite.”
But in direct opposition to this founding principle, phrases
such as “promote the general Welfare,” have been expanded well beyond what the
Founders intended, and contribute greatly to a government that has grown in
size, control and cost beyond all reason.
The federal government has its nose and fingers in far too
many areas of our lives. It should not regulate mud puddles or control
education. It should not use its power against some legal businesses or
organizations to the benefit of others. The federal government owns and controls 640 million acres
of America’s land, about 28 percent of its total surface, the majority of it in
western states. The list goes on.
Given the degree to which these improper activities have
grown and are so much a part of life, it may not be possible to completely
eliminate them, but there are certainly areas ripe for reduction.
As designed, the federal government should not require much
money from citizens to operate, and the tax cuts that finally made it through
Congress have been a boon to taxpayers and businesses. Businesses can expand,
replace equipment, hire new workers and/or increase wages, and taxpayers will
have more of their earnings at their disposal to buy things they need and want,
which will increase spending in the private sector and increase tax collections.
And government positions left unfilled by the administration
will provide some reduction in government spending. But even under the best of
circumstances, these factors will not make a large dent in the deficit.
According to downsizinggovernment.org, “The federal government employs
2.1 million civilian workers in hundreds of agencies at offices across the
nation. The federal workforce imposes a substantial
burden on America’s taxpayers. In 2017 wages and benefits for executive branch
civilian workers cost $276 billion.” And that does not
count the courts, the Congress or postal workers.
Getting federal spending down to the balanced budget level
requires drastic cuts in government, and will require closing some unnecessary administrative
agencies, and reducing the number of federal workers in the remaining agencies.
As Madison reminds us, the powers delegated to the federal government are few
and defined, and the rest of the things needed are to remain the responsibility
of the state governments.
One of Trump’s favored phrases in the campaign was “draining
the swamp.” Getting government under control and reduced to its proper size and
function has never been more important than it is today.
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