Hey Libertarians: Prepare To Be Disappointed in Trump's 10-Year Budget Plan
He'll cut less than we want, exaggerate economic growth, and pretend it all balances out in 2028.

Tomorrow should be exciting: It's the day that Donald Trump will release his first full budget plan, which will carry with it a 10-year window over which 3 percent annual economic growth will be restored and outlays and revenues will magically match up in a way they haven't since fiscal 2001.
Yet if past is prologue—and by past, I mean the budget plans offered over the years by the George W. Bush and Barack Obama administrations—don't expect a document worth the pixels it is printed with.
Bush pushed tax cuts through and while revenue dipped at first, it started climbing back up after a few years, he ultimately raised real federal outlays by about 50 percent over his two terms. He was never credible, then, either on pushing for a balanced budget and, as important, in reducing the spending of government and hence its impact on all of our lives (as Milton Friedman used to say, government spending is the ultimate measure of government influence over the economy; whether spending is paid-for or based on borrowed money, it represents a tax on us now or in the future).
Barack Obama's fiscal trajectory is a little more complicated. Via his stimulus plan and expansion of various bailouts, he helped Bush grow fiscal 2009 spending to record levels. But after the 2010 midterms, he lost his congressional majority and per capita spending actually dropped year-over-year before resuming its seemingly inexorable climb. It's hard to believe that Obama had actually campaigned in 2008 on a net spending cut because he never even made the lamest feint in that direction. And of course, the national debt soared on his watch—and the very notion of passing a budget rather than using continuing resolutions sunk to the bottom of the tidal basin.
So what might we expect from Trump's budget plan? His earlier iteration of his "skinny budget" only covered discretionary spending (a category that accounts for outlays that must be renewed every year and comprises about one-third of all federal spending) didn't cut overall spending. Yes, it proposed some double-digit trims to various programs and agencies, but it funneled all savings into a bigger defense budget.
Since 2008, overall spending levels have been north of 20 percent of GDP, which is considerably higher than the historical average for the last 50-plus years of the postwar 20th century. There's no reason to believe that Trump will put a stop to that, especially since he has promised not to touch the major drivers of government spending, Social Security and Medicare. Neither of those plans is self-sustaining, so each require larger and larger subsidies from taxpayers, especially as more and more baby boomers hit the Depends years. While USA Today and others are reporting that Trump will call for massive cuts to Medicaid, most of that will come from recent increases tied to expansions under Obamacare. Yet a huge amount of Medicaid actually goes to pay for longtime care for elderly people and won't be affected by Trump's likely trims.
White House Budget Director Mick Mulvaney has said the administration wants to reach 3% levels of growth. While that's the historic average, experts say 3% growth will be difficult to achieve because of a slowdown in the growth of labor, capital and productivity. The main reason for that is the aging population — which is also driving the projected increases in spending for Social Security and Medicare.
As Nicholas Eberstadt notes, between 1946 and 2000, annual per-capita economic growth averaged 2.3 percent, already below Mulvaney's 3 percent. Since 2000, however, the United States has been looking at average per-capita growth of less than 1 percent a year. Sure, tax cuts might help kickstart the economy to some degree, but the plain fact is that there's every reason to think any increases in activity will be more than swallowed up by automatic increases in spending tied to Medicare, Social Security, and probably defense spending. From USA Today's crystal-ball article:
Hardline conservatives have been pushing for a balanced budget, and Mulvaney has said he wants to get there in 10 years. But even he acknowledged that's difficult. Deficits are projected to more than double over the next decade. Experts, such as those at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, say they will be on the lookout for "gimmicks" that would make a path to a balanced budget look easier than it is. Those include: overly optimistic projections of economic growth, unspecified savings and unrealistic proposals.
Here's hoping that budget hawks continue not just to push for a balanced budget, but that they do so by pushing for spending cuts. There is a generational storm on the horizon, as Millennials will be footing the bill for unsustainable and immoral old-age entitlements that benefit relatively older and wealthy Americans at the expense of younger and poorer ones. Cutting spending will not only reduce long-term deficits and debt, which tend to have a smothering effect on economic growth, but there is ample reason to believe that reductions in government spending spur private-sector activity.
Tune in tomorrow for specific responses to Trump's budget plan.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
He'll cut less than we want, exaggerate economic growth, and pretend it all balances out in 2028.
You know who else cut less than we wanted, exaggerated economic growth and pretended it would all balance out in 2028?
Every President post Coolidge?
Every Congress post the Coolidge era?
Gee, Matt Welch says: "Is Donald Trump really turning out to be a deregulatory president? And is his gimmicky kill-two-regs-for-each-new-one executive order (which, I've come to find out, is known as the "Stossel Rule") actually making a dent in the administrative? Yes to both, argues an article today in Bloomberg BNA. The evidentiary nut:"
Before getting all "disappointed" about the Trump budget, maybe we should A) wait to see it, and B) ask ourselves whether there was any more libertarian candidate that could plausibly have been elected (and I include in that assessment Gary Johnson)?
We're not disappointed in it, we're preparing to be disappointed.
ask ourselves whether there was any more libertarian candidate that could plausibly have been elected
Why would we ask that?
Gee, Matt Welch says: "Is Donald Trump really turning out to be a deregulatory president? And is his gimmicky kill-two-regs-for-each-new-one executive order (which, I've come to find out, is known as the "Stossel Rule") actually making a dent in the administrative? Yes to both, argues an article today in Bloomberg BNA. The evidentiary nut:"
Before getting all "disappointed" about the Trump budget, maybe we should A) wait to see it, and B) ask ourselves whether there was any more libertarian candidate that could plausibly have been elected (and I include in that assessment Gary Johnson)?
Butthurt.
Eric they make topical creams for that. Although I find it odd for you to make such an admission here. Perhaps you should consult your pharmacist?
Could we please recognize kick-start as the contradiction in terms it is? In the real world of lovable (?) antiquities, your motorcycle engine ran on its own once you kicked it. In Washington, the kicking is mostly of the can down the road. The economic engine never goes anywhere.
I got your back on kick-start if you've got mine on "steep learning curves".
Time is the X axis, productivity is the Y axis. A steep learning curve means you get to the plateau quicker. It means the task is easier to master. Yet we persist with "He faces a steep learning curve, don't expect results too quickly."
I guess I have a really old copy of the constitution. Mine says the house has to do the spending. Nothing in there about the President doing a budget.
And who started the 10 year window madness? At best the President has 8 years before all the assumptions get dumped by the new guy.
Trump should present a budget that is balanced by eliminating TSA, HHS, Education, HUD, transportation, energy, and agriculture. Drop the tax rates to just cover the expenses of what remains.
The outrage would not be much more than whatever will actually come out, but it would be an elegant comment on the current farce.
The Senate with its "Reconciliation" rules.
I see your point, but it would just make him look stupid. Those things cannot be realistically cut entirely in a single fiscal year. Although large sweeping cuts are feasible.
"annual per-capita economic growth averaged 2.3 percent, "
Gosh, Mr. Nick, you're not trying to pull a fast one on us by inserting that itsy bitsy qualifier, are you? I mean we all know that the capitas stay the same forever, right?
"as Millennials will be footing the bill for unsustainable and immoral old-age entitlements that benefit relatively older and wealthy Americans"
Cut the shit. Millenials aren't anywhere near their prime earning years (and barely out of your basement). It's Xer's that are shouldering the burden right now but there are a lot fewer of them than there are boomers.
Have they been footing the bill for the last 80 years as well?
yep funnel more money into the DOD where there is already at least 125bil dollars of waste a year and probably 200 billion. I wouldn't be surprised if 30-40% of the DOD is 100% waste!
My time in the DOD showed tons of waste at all levels.
What a fucking joke. This is why I go by Retired DOD Contractor to be as vague as possible and preferable just not tell people what I did in the government in any way shape or form.
Use before I saw the paycheck which said $9025 , I didnt believe that my friends brother was like they say actualey receiving money part-time on their computer. . there great aunt haz done this for under 19 months and as of now repayed the depts on there appartment and bourt Mazda
Most of us want to have good income but dont know how to do that on Internet there are a lot of methods to earn huge sum, but whenever Buddies try that they get trapped in a scam/fraud so I thought to share with you a genuine and guaranteed method for free to earn huge sum of money at home anyone of you interested should visit the page. I am more than sure that you will get best result.
Best Of Luck for new Initiative!
?????????????!!!!!!!!!!!!!.
?????????????????????????
????????????????????-????
But, but, it'll be better than Hillary's would have been!
/sarc
Think Clinton would have cut discretionary spending 2 percent per year for 10 years? Or even tried to pretend balance it in 10 years? Or cut taxes?
Nope. They're both different shades of awful, but awful Trump is. We aren't going to get our way out of this with 2 percent discretionary cuts per year that's for fucking sure.
The 2 percent cuts are a good start. Too bad they don't extend to the military, or to Social Security or Medicare.
Yet Democrats somehow think if the government goes back to Obama first term level spending there will be people starving in the streets, turning into zombies.
===|||=====|||== My Uncle Aiden just got an awesome red Honda Ridgeline Crew Cab just by parttime work from a home computer... more info here ????-