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Budget

Trump's Budget to Preserve the Swamp?

Republicans dodge another opportunity to rein in spending.

Veronique de Rugy | 5.25.2017 12:15 PM

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President Donald Trump's first budget proposal is finally out, and it boldly promises to deliver a "new foundation for American greatness." I guess that grandiose language is supposed to resonate with those voters who don't understand how the budget process actually works. The sad reality is that this budget would accomplish no such thing, for several reasons.

First, notice that I said "would," not "will." That's because the proposal is dead on arrival on Capitol Hill. Even if one believed the Trump budget would be successful in achieving its stated aims, congressional Republicans have made clear that they won't be carrying the administration's water. Specifically, GOPers have already made clear that they have zero appetite for pursuing the spending cuts and program terminations recommended in the administration's budget proposal.

Surprised? You shouldn't be. Republicans have had many opportunities over the years to ax such budget zombies as the National Endowment for the Arts, Corporation for Public Broadcasting subsidies and the Economic Development Administration. They're not going to finally go to war for those spending cuts now.

Other reforms will most likely be met with wobbly knees from congressional Republicans, too. For example, the administration wants to strengthen work requirements for able-bodied people using federal welfare programs. That should be a no-brainer, but with Democrats and their media allies ready to pounce, don't expect the GOP to put up much of a fight. The budget also proposes reforms to Medicaid that would reduce the growth in the program's ballooning costs. On top of that, studies have shown that Medicaid beneficiaries don't experience better health outcomes than uninsured people. Will congressional Republicans fight for these reforms when GOP governors start complaining about having to assume greater responsibility for the joint federal-state program? If the Obamacare reform debacle is our guide, the answer is no.

Second, although the administration's proposal contains many good ideas, it also contains the sort of budget gimmicks that have turned previous presidential budget proposals into punching bags. It claims it could balance the budget in 10 years, using rosy estimates of growth and revenue alongside a continued abuse of the budget for "overseas contingency operations," which is stuffed with $77 billion in extra spending. As Taxpayers for Common Sense notes, if the fund for overseas contingency operations were an agency, it would be the fourth-largest in terms of federal discretionary spending.

There are other problems with this budget, too. Though its designers are willing to ax counterproductive low-income programs, they won't tackle programs that serve wealthier Americans, such as Medicare and Social Security. In fact, though the budget would cut Medicaid, it might even prop up Medicare, as Reason's Peter Suderman explains in a piece about the budget. It's not OK that seniors, who are overly represented in the top income quintile, require younger and poorer Americans to transfer massive amounts of money to them through these insolvent programs.

It also would add billions to the already bloated defense budget, bringing it up to $668 billion. That would be $22 billion above the current level. Even though the proposal acknowledges the approximately 20 percent excess capacity spread across the military departments—that, if eliminated, could save $2 billion over 10 years—it fails to tackle the $125 billion of waste in the Pentagon that the president decried on the campaign trail. It renews a commitment to unworkable weapons systems and a shadow army of defense contractors.

It also caves to Ivanka Trump and would implement a paid family leave program, and it falls for the fallacy that the federal government is the best entity to pay for and implement infrastructure improvements.

That being said, the biggest problem with this budget is the fact that I can't see President Trump actually fighting for it. Sure, he'll continue to make speeches about his great wall and his anti-immigration positions with the passion that got him elected, but don't count on him to go to the mat for work requirements, Medicaid reforms and a reduction in the food stamp rolls.

This is bad news for those of us who want to see good reforms implemented, but it's good news for the swamp—which will most likely get to rule the day once again.

COPYRIGHT 2017 CREATORS.COM

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NEXT: Trump's Transportation Boondoggles

Veronique de Rugy is a contributing editor at Reason. She is a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University.

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  1. Longtobefree   8 years ago

    Actually, Trump's budget spends billions more than all of Obama's budgets added together.

    1. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

      Actually, it doesn't.

      1. Orf   8 years ago

        Correct!

        1. gclancy51   8 years ago

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          1. tavey   8 years ago

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  2. BYODB   8 years ago


    ...they won't tackle programs that serve wealthier Americans, such as Medicare and Social Security.

    Uhh...wut? 'Wealthier American's' get less out of Medicare and Social Security than they pay in. How does that 'serve them' well?

    I mean, I agree that they won't tackle those issues for a wide variety of reasons, namely that most voters love those programs, so is the critique here that Republicans refuse to put a gun to their own head? Gee, I wonder why?

    I'm all for those reforms personally, but why would Republicans vote to shoot themselves in the head? Honest question. Even if they did it, as soon as Democrats came roaring back into office (and make no mistake, they would) those programs would instantly reappear so I'm not sure 'reform' is ever going to be a possibility until the populace decides to pull it's collective head out of it's ass.

    1. creech   8 years ago

      But kids will die if they don't get to see some third rate ballet troupe come through town. And Granny would be totally uninformed if she couldn't listen to NPR every day.

    2. Blargrifth   8 years ago

      They don't "pay in" anything. Social Security isn't a savings bond or an insurance pool. It is a tax.

    3. CE   8 years ago

      The elderly are the wealthiest group in America. Social Security and Medicare are paid out regardless of income or wealth level. Yet whenever someone offers to cut either, we are told that the elderly will be living in the streets on stale dog food.

      Sure, people feel as if they paid in all their lives, and for SS it's true (Medicare got better as it went along, adding prescription drug coverage for instance), but that money was spent long ago.

      Not to mention that higher income individuals pay a lower percentage of their incomes into SS and Medicare, due to the income caps. Now I love the caps and wish they could be lowered to 0, but both programs are mostly transfers from lower wealth young people to higher wealth old people.

      1. NotAnotherSkippy   8 years ago

        So you just assume that everyone gets the same SS payment? Awww, it's so cute when they first learn their numbers...

        There are no caps on medicare so the "rich" get fewer net goodies out than the poor, subsidized middle class. And while they pay a lower % of their income for SS they get back an even lower % in SS payments.

        So other than being completely wrong on two of your main points, you got it right.

    4. tommhan   8 years ago

      It is not that they "love" those programs but they desperately NEED those programs to survive. I agree with you about extracting head from asses but I am not confident that will happen in my lifetime.

    5. JFree   8 years ago

      'Wealthier American's' get less out of Medicare and Social Security than they pay in.

      EVERYONE now gets less out of SS/Medicare than they pay in. But the reality is that spending on both those programs is completely based on life expectancy. And:

      Remaining life expectancy at age 50 for the highest income quintile: 39 years for men, 41 years for women
      Remaining life expectancy at age 50 for the two lowest quintiles: 27 years for men, 29 years for women

      And a significant minority of those lower income folks die before they even hit SS eligibility age so their entire lifetime SS contributions are a complete waste. Further, dying at age 75 tends to incur exponentially lower Medicare costs than living to 90.

  3. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

    1. The President does not control the purse, that is Congress' job.

    2. Trump knows how to play the game and Congress does not go for straight budget cutting language, so the President's budget proposal has budgetary fluff.

    I am just hoping that budgets are cut during Trump's 8 years, so the next Republican president will have a harder time getting Congress to spend more money.

    1. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

      You have got to be the most optimistic sunumbitch i've ever encountered.

      1. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

        I am. Plus, Trump has done a few things to try and curb government. Most is up to Congress though.

    2. CE   8 years ago

      Apparently, cuts in "defense" spending are off the table.

      1. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

        One thing about defense spending, it can be cut in the future because the Democrats run on cutting defense spending and Republicans have to agreed to that in the past.

        The real hurdles are SS, medicare and Medicaid and this budget changes Medicaid to something less bloated.

        Obviously, the best would be massive cuts to everything in the budget including SS, Medicaid, medicare and defense but maybe the correct strategy is to get Congress to cut Medicaid. Then next year work on cutting SS and/or Medicare and/or defense.

      2. NotAnotherSkippy   8 years ago

        There's the money shot. Nevermind that the welfare state is what is outgrowing the economy. Look over there, stop spending money on that tank! And then there's the real dirty little secret of defense spending: much of the growth is coming from personnel costs. But reason never seems to want to dwell on that topic.

        1. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

          Never?

          1. NotAnotherSkippy   8 years ago

            You found one. Fair enough. Now compare to the number of times they whined about procurement which is about 1/6 of the budget.

  4. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

    Also, dude, "swamp" is not the preferred nomenclature. "Protected wetland," please.

    1. Leo Kovalensky   8 years ago

      Walter, these aren't the people that wasted money on high speed railroads.

      Oh wait...

  5. eyeroller   8 years ago

    The only time members of Congress vote to cut spending on something is when they know they will lose the vote and the spending won't get cut.

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  7. CE   8 years ago

    Don't look at me. I voted for the guy who was going to balance the budget in 1 year.

    1. NotAnotherSkippy   8 years ago

      You mean gayjay's whopping 6bb cut to SS? Yeah, that'll do it.

  8. Juice   8 years ago

    Trump doesn't write the budget. The Swamp writes it.

    1. DanO.   8 years ago

      Then he signs it.

  9. Orf   8 years ago

    Why can't de Rugy "see" Trump fighting for his budget? He can be a fighter. But much of his own party is as corrupt and malevolent as the Demonrats. They are determined to stop his agenda, and I don't see any amount of fighting is going to change that. The voters have to get the message that their representatives in Congress are only representing themselves and the big businesses that supply them with millions for their next reelection campaign.

    1. tommhan   8 years ago

      You must have been looking in my brain, you say what I always think and say.

  10. tommhan   8 years ago

    Nether side will cut government or if they do will fight tooth and nail to preserve what they want. Government stopped being for the people years ago and is about being reelected or well known so you can be rich making speeches when you leave while collecting a much better pension from the government than most Americans will ever see. I for one am sick of politicians and a Trump win must mean many more are sick of both sides in congress. If they don't get it now when will they?

  11. sadieholloway45   8 years ago

    Stay at home mom Kelly Richards from New York after resigning from her full time job managed to average from $6000-$8000 a month from freelancing at home... This is how she done it
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  12. sadieholloway45   8 years ago

    Stay at home mom Kelly Richards from New York after resigning from her full time job managed to average from $6000-$8000 a month from freelancing at home... This is how she done it
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  14. AD-RtR/OS!   8 years ago

    Say, did you notice, Paul Ryan may not be a "conservative" after all.

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  16. ashleycorn   7 years ago

    Nice post these kind of post enhance our knowledgge

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