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Budget

The Battle of Budget Ideas Rages On

The 2018 federal budget suggests small but necessary reforms.

Veronique de Rugy | 6.1.2017 12:15 AM

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Ron Sachs/Newscom

Love it or hate it, the recently proposed 2018 federal budget is dead on arrival. Some say that's because it's unrealistic. Some contend that it's too harsh on discretionary spending and/or too soft on calling for needed reform to some mandatory programs. And others say Republicans are never serious about cutting spending. Nonetheless, this budget, as bad as it is, should get credit for proposing a long list of targeted program cuts alongside justification for the requests.

The battle of ideas is important. If Nobel Prize winner Milton Friedman had never made the case and fought for school choice, many kids today would still be stuck in their falling public schools. If Nobel laureate Ronald Coase didn't defend his idea that we should auction the airwaves, there would be less innovation in the wireless telecom sector today. If no one had fought for marijuana legalization and marriage equality, neither of these battles would have been won, either. Of course, winning the battle of ideas takes time, decades even.

But it starts with fighting and making the case for what you believe.

I'm not equating cuts on the discretionary side of the budget to halting incarceration for smoking pot. But no battle is too small to fight. There are so many programs paid for at the federal level that should be left to state and private actors, and many more programs simply fail to accomplish their goals. It's a big mess.

So as bad as this budget is—with its leniency toward Medicare and Social Security, its overall overspending, its military buildup, its whimsical growth assumptions and its frankly problematic revenue projections—I'm glad it initiates the hard battle of calling for the end of or cuts to some federal programs. Here are a few examples:

The rural business and cooperative service programs in the U.S. Department of Agriculture would be eliminated. As the budget correctly states, "these programs have not been able to demonstrate that they meet the broader goals of reducing rural poverty, out-migration, or unemployment." In addition, the Government Accountability Office and the USDA's own inspectors general have been repeatedly warned about duplication, inefficiency and severe management failures. The whole department should be eliminated for its rampant cronyism, but let's start with these programs.

The Economic Development Administration in the Department of Commerce would be terminated. If you can't get rid of the whole department, the EDA is a good start. A fiscal black hole and a relic of the 1960s, the program opened the gates of federal intervention into local affairs. Its grants are highly duplicative of grants extended by other agencies. Its spending is driven by politics rather than merit or need. And it's legendary for fraud and waste. Many GAO reports have found EDA job creation claims to be meritless or, at best, inconclusive. It needs to go.

The Department of Homeland Security's Transportation Security Administration law enforcement grants would be eliminated. Created to incentivize state "and local law enforcement entities to provide law enforcement at airports by partially reimbursing those entities," these grants are no long needed, as state "and local jurisdictions have had plenty of time to adjust and reprioritize resources," the budget explains.

Occupational Safety and Health Administration training grants at the Department of Labor would also be terminated. These grants are supposed to promote safety training for workers, even though there is no evidence that they do. OSHA should be eliminated along with these grants. The Cato Handbook for Policymakers notes, "The rate of workplace fatalities has been falling for more than a half century; workers' compensation laws and liability lawsuits are a greater incentive than OSHA rules."

The Overseas Private Investment Corp. would be nixed, too. (Yea!) The crony agency distorts the capital market and displaces the private sector to encourage some exporters to invest in emerging markets at the expense of everyone else. I only wish the budget had slated the Export-Import Bank for termination, too.

Contributions to international organizations would be cut by $780 million. This makes me particularly happy because it's a chance to keep the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development bureaucrats from continuing their anti-tax competition and anti-privacy propaganda, which is all paid for by American taxpayers.

There are many more worthy terminations and cuts in this budget. It is an otherwise-disappointing budget, but because I'm in an optimistic mood today, I'll say that it's a small step in the right direction to fight the battle of ideas against wasteful federal spending. Let's hope that the next time around, the budget will extend this exercise to defense spending and Medicare.

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NEXT: Jared Kushner's Russian Escapade

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

BudgetCongressMilton Friedman
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  1. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

    Dead on arrival says the media. The same media that had Hillary 50 points ahead for election 2016!

    Until Congress' majority passes passes another budget, who knows whether Trump's budget will be used for 2018. I cannot think of one Presidential proposed budget that was just rubber stamped by Congress but it sounds like the media has its fingers on Congress' pulse.

    The truth is the media does not have anything of the sort. The media is maneuvering to prevent as many cuts as possible.

    1. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

      Known instigator The Media ("The" is short for "Theodore")?

      1. tavey   8 years ago

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    2. $park? leftist poser   8 years ago

      The media is a crafty devil for sure.

      1. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

        Antisemite!

  2. Robert   8 years ago

    These proposed budgets are always DOA. That's not news. (Hence fake news. There's more than 1 way for news to be fake. Presenting the non-novel as news is fake news whether it's true or false. In a way you could say it's "fake olds" because of its false implic'n re the past.) They're always negotiated. But this is an encouraging starting point. From our (or anyone's, really) perspective, in some ways it gets better, in others worse, from there.

    Defense programs will be easier to cut in the future as they have been in the past. Entitlements are an extremely hard nut to crack, I don't expect them to be tackled at this time. However, the cuts being proposed are of moderate difficutly, comparable to the difficulty of cutting defense at other times, so I expect a fair amt. of success in such cuts over the next 10 yrs. or so.

    1. Robert   8 years ago

      Heh, "difficutly"?couldn't've done that well on purpose!

    2. NotAnotherSkippy   8 years ago

      And just keep in mind that marriage equality is just a euphemism for expanding the entitlement state. So about that whole consistency thing...

  3. Cynical Asshole   8 years ago

    Let's hope that the next time around, the budget will extend this exercise to defense spending and Medicare.

    I wouldn't hold my breathe, but I guess it doesn't hurt to hope.

    1. Robert   8 years ago

      For defense spending it won't be the next time around. It'll come after some party swing in Congress elections that results in their seeing that defense is "too high" a proportion of total federal non-discretionary spending, when there's no great desire to "rebuild the nation's defenses".

      1. Robert   8 years ago

        It wouldn't hurt the climate for that if there were some signal event like the end of US particip'n in a war or the tearing down of the Berlin Wall preceding it. Perhaps after Russia joins NATO.

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  6. CE   8 years ago

    Trump not all bad. News at 11.

    But why are they always 10 year budget plans? Shouldn't they stick to the 4 years (or optimistically 8 years) that the president will actually be in office?

  7. Jer Citti   8 years ago

    My compliments on an article well written. It is short and to the point. Unfortunately there are not enough cuts to warrant a much longer piece. Maybe next year. Meanwhile how does one pronounce "Veronique"; is that the same as Veronica?

  8. d457789   8 years ago

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