Mick Mulvaney Turns His Back on Fiscal Responsibility
"Show me the majority for cutting spending," he says.

White House jack-of-all-executive-branch-positions and former Tea Party congressman Mick Mulvaney reaffirmed Tuesday that he is abandoning his interest in bringing fiscal responsibility to the federal government. Asked during a panel discussion at the Peter G. Peterson Foundation if he was still a deficit hawk, the acting chief of staff said, "Show me the majority for cutting spending."
Sadly, he probably has the politics right. As Kate Davidson wrote in The Wall Street Journal today, Republicans, Democrats, the general public, and even some economists have all lost interest in reducing deficits over the past few years.
Instead, Mulvaney argued for reducing the rate of spending growth so that revenues can grow faster than government expenditures. According to Mulvaney, sustained economic growth of 3 percent annually would make a dent in the deficit by increasing the amount of revenue the government collects.
But that sort of growth is probably unrealistic—and even if it does happen, it won't be enough to bring the budget into balance.
While the economy did grow roughly 3 percent in 2018, the Congressional Budget Office's most recent estimates suggest that real growth will average roughly 1.8 percent over the next decade. Even if you go with the Tax Foundation's more optimistic projections about the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act's impact, annual economic growth would only be an average of 0.29 percent higher over the next decade than it would be without the tax cuts.
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan nonproft that advocates for balanced budgets, projects that it would take at least 4.8 percent average annual growth over the next decade to balance the budget. There's "no reasonable amount of sustained economic growth that would sufficiently fix our fiscal problems," the group's president, Maya MacGuineas, tells Reason.
And while higher growth does help address the deficit in some ways, it doesn't address one of the chief sources of our long-term fiscal problem: Social Security costs. Higher incomes mean more payroll tax revenue today, but also larger Social Security benefit obligations in the future.
Strong economic growth alone can't balance the budget in the short term either. Last year saw the fastest growth in more than a decade, yet the federal government ran a $779 billion deficit. And that's not just a product of the 2017 tax cuts; the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 hiked federal spending by $300 billion over the next two years. By now, Republican lawmakers like Ways and Means ranking member Kevin Brady (R–Tex) are acknowledging what every major analysis of the tax cut predicted before it was passed: It will not pay for itself.
One evergreen problem with trying to impose fiscal responsibility is that the debt lacks immediate, tangible downsides—there hasn't been a meltdown yet, so why should anybody be concerned? But its long-term effects are real. According to the Congressional Budget Office, a family of four could see up to $4,000 less in annual income by 2028 if the debt rises according to projections, and up to $16,000 less in annual income by 2048.
Mulvaney might still personally believe in the need to cut expenditures, but he hasn't had much success convincing his boss of that. In Maya McGuineas' words, the acting chief of staff is "part of an administration that has had a terrible record" on controlling spending.
And Mulvaney is making that worse. On a difficult issue like deficit reduction, political leaders need to commit to the issue. When the president's chief of staff signals a lack of interest in serious spending reforms, that only makes it harder to get that commitment.
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There's the tax increases in the form of tariffs which are going to more than offset the tax cuts. But they don't count because 'x' is different from 'riff'.
Not to mention the uncertain business climate caused by Trump's trade war.
tl;dr: Politicians suck.
>>>"Show me the majority for cutting spending."
that's such bullshit everything you have is because you told the people who made you "cutting spending" was your grail.
>>>the general public ... have all lost interest in reducing deficits over the past few years.
speculation and probably lies&slander
I'd like to see some national referendum on cutting the deficit, or a balanced budget amendment with some teeth. I bet it would be too popular for the politicians, and that's why they don't talk about it.
word. entitlement taxing/spending explained in plain English and "hey everyone what do you think?"
Sort of OT, but have people seen the videos that Emergent Order has been putting out? They are the guys who did the two Hayek v Keynes rap videos. They are doing an Indiegogo for a third one, Mises vs Marx that starts on 6/18.
They have a great little cartoon series called the Kronies which are done in the style of the GI Joe public service announcements from the 80s. They are pretty fun.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hw2cP00zbgQ&list=PLlOCkpyjIlHFmSOi2lV3FZ5FEpbGHMI1Y&index=9
(Catch them quick before YouTube bans em)
Listen, we're not going to be able to own the Dems if we don't win elections. And we're not going to win elections unless we spend like Dems. I mean, it only makes political sense!
It's a catch 22 (trillion)
Shows the difference between the Reason organization and reality. Unlike the Libertarian Party, Mulvaney knows he needs more than 2% of voters to accomplish anything.
I guess he's not content with sitting alone congratulating himself. He'd rather solve some problems.
If you have to take up your opponent's position to beat your opponent, have you really won anything?
But he's solving problems! Don't you want to solve problems?
It's for the children, even.
And by for the children, I mean paid for by the children.
Sure, compromise is practically necessary in government. That doesn't mean everyone has to compromise. It's a good thing to have some people in government who stick to their guns. Someone has to remember what is being compromised.
"He’d rather solve some problems."
Legislators who want to solve some problems need to spend more time thinking about if any given problem should / needs to be solved by their level of government and whether or not given proposals will in fact solve the problem.
Something must be done!
This is something.
Therefore, this must be done.
Is bad reasoning and the "solutions" it leads to will make the original problem worse 9 times out of 10.
Mulvaney is not a legislator
"Show me the majority for cutting spending."
If you disagree, show me the majority for cutting spending on anything. If the majority exists, and either Party ignores it, then the LP can take up the issue....and prove that the "majority" is really only about 2% when it comes time to vote.
And Mulvaney is making that worse.
C'mon. He's Chief of Staff. His job no longer involves advocating his personal agenda. He said exactly what he needed to say. "Congress doesn't give a shit, the President doesn't give a shit, so neither do I."
Someone forced him to take the job?
He voluntarily turned his back on fiscal responsibility.
He continues to do so, your attempts to excuse it notwithstanding.
To excuse what exactly? I'm pointing out that he's not "making it worse". That implies that he has, in his position, some sort of personal responsibility to continue to fight for fiscal responsibility, a belief he likely still holds.
He's not making it better. But it's unfair to assign any personal culpability to him for "making it worse".
Show me where it says in Mulvaney's current job description that he's required to vote in Congress on spending/tax bills...
Expectations management on this particular thread has gone down the rabbit hole. How many of you remember from your Civics class that the Fed Gov't, prior to 1913, received 97% of its annual operating budget from tariffs and excise taxes on alcohol, tobacco, and sugar? They could get by because expenses were relatively low and few.
In other words, from 1789 to 1913, the Fed Gov't operated within its Constitutional constraints. That is not the case any longer -- in fact, 3/4 of current Fed Gov't activity is unconstitutional -- and an argument could be made that the ratio is even larger than that.
For the last 106 years, the so-called "deficit-hawks" focused on the wrong things. They shouldn't have focused on cutting spending; they should have focused on cutting the activities of Fed Gov't activities -- a reduced level of spending would have followed by default.
Instead of concentrating their efforts on "spending caps", they should have been putting "activity caps" in place; and instead of sequestration gimmicks, they should have been focused on reductions in allowable functions -- IMHO, that would have limited Fed Gov't activities to Defense, State, Treasury, and Commerce only.
"Activity caps" - I like that idea. It's absolutely true that most in the Republican party have failed to lay out articulate reasons why the federal government should be much smaller. With so many examples of federal programs that are not succeeding (or even being audited properly to measure their effectiveness), you'd think there would be lots of low hanging fruit to get rid of - but the blob of the federal government keeps getting bigger. I think politicians are afraid of attacking the bureaucracy -and in many cases, believe they can use some of that bureaucracy to help their constituents (and get re-elected). Take federal jobs training programs. How many are there? I think close to 50. Duplication of efforts? Inefficiencies? Any of them actually succeeding? Politicians don't seem to care - in either party. To your list of limited federal government activities - shouldn't judiciary be included?
Funny, the usual Trump cheerleading squad is nowhere to be found in this particular comment section. I guess they really only do care about one "conservative" value...the war on Mexicans/Muslims.
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Don't worry, federal over-spending will be reigned in. The Feds and all the Americans that are too stupid or apathetic to realize they're fucking their own kids will see it fixed---through a violent culling of all their idiocy.
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