Trump's Budget Plan: The Good, the Bad, and The Ugly
It doesn't cut overall spending, it's based on gimmicks, but it does slash some programs.
As Ronald Bailey notes, Donald Trump's first full budget plan is based on what Ronald Reagan's budget director David Stockman denounced as "rosy scenarios." Trump's budget rests upon an assumption of 3 percent annual growth, which is in stark contrast to the 1.4 percent average growth between 2008 and 2016.
As important and despite headlines talking about the massive spending cuts embodied in Trump's plan, his budget increases spending:

When you look at the overall numbers (above), spending increases to $4.1 trillion in 2018 and rises to $5.7 trillion in 2027. So much for reductions. When figured as a percentage of the economy (GDP), we see a slow decline from 20.5 percent next year down to 18.4 percent in 2027, but those figures are screwy because they're based on the phoney-baloney growth projections. The same goes for receipts, whether estimated in dollars or percentages. Only in the fantasyland of government accounting can a budget that projects spending $900 billion more in 2027 than 2018 be described as "Trump seeks to slash $3.6 trillion in austere budget."

If Trump's rosy growth projections are bad and his year-over-year increases in spending are ugly, what's good about his budget? The president is calling for the elimination of no fewer than 66 programs, including four in the Department of Agriculture that will spend nearly a billion dollars, another four in Commerce that cost $633 billion, and almost $5 billion worth in Education. Similarly, he is calling for rolling back food-assistance programs whose ranks swelled during the recession but have stayed high despite low unemployment rates. While many of these sorts of cuts won't be realized at all, it's always worth pushing the idea that government programs shouldn't always become permanent fixtures.
In this sense, Trump's budget encapsulates his promise and peril as president. He is devoid of clearly articulated principles and there are many reasons to expect him to do real damage to the economy and the country. At the same time, he also may well augur the end of the slow car wreck that represents consensus politics in the post-World War II era. The United States is running out of other people's money and we need to start the hard work of figuring out a sustainable level of government that we can both pay for and thrive under. In some of his deregulatory gestures, Trump points in that direction, and he has clearly shown himself willing and able to push hard against the status quo.
If we're lucky, he is the last 20th-century president and will set the table for a much-needed, much-delayed way of doing politics for the 21st century.
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He is devoid of clearly articulated principles and there are many reasons to expect him to do real damage to the economy and the country. At the same time, he also may well augur the end of the slow car wreck that represents consensus politics in the post-World War II era.
What we need is an analysis of what the current president can put in place that will have lasting consequence past his term in office. That's your assignment, Reason.
What have clearly articulated principles of others done for us so far?
We have a long proud history of well-spoken Presidents lying to our faces.
For Trump, the answer can only be tax reform. We need this desperately. And it will not be forthcoming.
I'm really going out on a limb here with the following prediction: Proposed increases in spending under Trump's plan to military, Medicare, SS, national security, etc. will be realized or exceeded, proposed cuts will mostly not happen if any happen at all, and economic growth will be less than predicted.
You daredevil!
Well, that's, uh, just like your opinion, man.....
You can't just say things without any historical reference.
Funny - there was no mention in any of the press analysis' I read that said anything about Obama's first few budgets, with a Democrat controlled Congress, that were voted down UNANIMOUSLY - 99-0!
Given the overall increase in spending, I think it's fair to question whether the cuts are actually good. If spending is going up anyway, then I think we need to examine the specific cuts, and consider, for example, if cutting X dollars from food stamps in order to spend X+1 dollars on defense contractors is a good trade off.
Cutting spending across the board is a good thing. But once we're haggling over increases, we shouldn't just assume that cutting program 1 is a good thing when program 1 will be cut not to cut spending, but to fund program 2.
That's right, screw program 2.
Seriously though: screw every Federal program.
It probably is good because cuts in military expenditures have been accomplished in the past. So if the hard-to-impossible thing (cutting non-military spending) gets done, then it augurs well for the future, when both the hard & easy cuts may be accomplished.
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Why should I care about the POTUS budget proposal? Last I checked it is Congress that fashions, debates, and establishes the government budget. POTUS plays a minor and potentially meaningless role in all this (he either signs the budget bill or not and if not his position may be set aside by a super majority vote of Congress).
So this is just a political event, like a speech.
Yes and that super majority has to take responsibility for the reckless spending versus the President. He has so far done better than most so called conservatives in his proposed cuts to the rate of increases. It is ridiculous that we have raise spending automatically each year on social programs. You want Americans to do the jobs that Americans won't do, stop giving them free food. Hunger is a wonderful motivation.
It's funny that I keep seeing this stuff about Trump's growth figure of 3% being completely ridiculous and full of fantasy, yet Obama NEVER proposed a budget that expected growth of less than 4.3% and was usually in the 5% to 6% range.
That's before we begin to address the idea that 3% growth is considered absolutely impossible thanks to years of creeping government's drag on the economy.
Creeping government? GDP = federal spending + non-federal spending + net exports
Money does not stop with first use. Recipients of federal money spend, just like you spend...perhaps YOU should spend more to make up the difference?...what the fuck is wrong with you? It's obvious you are clueless. If the federal government spends way less, then the private sector must borrow to spend to match the GDP loss-otherwise there's deflation and guaranteed recession/depression...perhaps you are tool of the bankers (who love debt slaves) and/or the rich (who only desire is to steal your wealth & the very limited power you might possess)?
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Do I really need to remind Reason that it's not the president who sets the budget, but Congress? Yes, the pres can and (with the exception of Obama who couldn't be bothered) does propose a budget. When, in the history of this nation has Congress actually accepted a presidential budget?
My second gripe with Reason is that they suggest that we need a know kind of politics for the 21st century. No, we need government devoid of politics. That's what we've always needed. There's nothing unique about this new century.
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