A Few Ideas for the Better Government Americans Desperately Want
From cronyist subsidies to an unfair tax code, there are several key fixes Congress could make to better serve the public.

Congress' annual August recess is a good time to think about the big picture. Most Americans want government reformed for the better. We notice its many breakdowns, dysfunctions and failures to deliver on promises. Yet politicians of both parties usually only talk about more new programs, more spending, and more regulations. Will either party listen, or will they continue down their destructive and unpopular path?
In case some of them are listening, I have a few ideas.
Paul Light, a scholar at the Brookings Institution, writes that while a small majority of Americans prefer that government shrink, what they want more is reform. He reports that public demand for "very major" government reform is up to 60 percent from 37 percent in 1997, when the Pew Research Center first asked this question. Meanwhile, those who believe the government is "basically sound and needs only some reform" is down to 28 precent from 58 percent. All of that while confidence in government to do the right thing hovers around a historic low.
In that context, it makes sense that so many policy proposals from both parties are met with skepticism about the ability of a bloated and debt-burdened government to deliver. The good news is that scholars and policy people have plenty of sound reform ideas. In the 1980s and '90s, Republicans, for instance, talked about getting rid of various agencies or stopping the federal government's accumulation of power by devolving functions back to the states and the private sector. Later, they tried to reform Social Security by moving to a system of private accounts. While it failed, these politicians put forward a plan to try to improve, and not just grow, the government.
None of that is being proposed today. Republicans and conservatives are now more interested in expanding rather than reforming the government with programs straight out of the Democrats' agenda (for example: federal paid leave, the expanded child tax credit, subsidies to businesses, and various cronyist regulations packaged as a way to fight China).
That's why today I will propose three specific reforms. They aren't all new, but each is important.
First, I would end all forms of government-granted privileges, whether these are subsidies, guaranteed loans, tax credits, or bailouts. Each type of handout is unfair not only to the taxpayers who foot the bill, but also to the many companies that do not receive them. Such privileges are typically directed to companies that are not just big and politically well-connected but are already very successful at doing what they are given the handouts to do. These handouts distort the economy in all kinds of ways without even, in many cases, producing the promised results.
This reform might require a constitutional amendment forbidding Congress from producing any law or regulation that discriminates among firms that are similarly situated. Such an amendment would require that taxes, regulations, and subsidies apply to all firms, and not just a few, of a certain type. Ideally, this nondiscrimination clause should apply also to individuals.
But our world isn't ideal, so I'll reduce the scope of my second reform to the tax code. Indeed, this code now unfairly treats individuals who make the same income differently. Depending on whether they have kids or paid for their homes with mortgages or not, how they earn their incomes and how much they save or invest, two people making the exact same amount can face very different tax burdens.
This complicated and unfair tax system leads to tax avoidance, evasion and distortions—and thus lower economic growth. Our tax code needs fundamental reform. There are many ways to go about it but ignoring the problem shouldn't be an option.
Finally, we should move away from all age-based eligibility criteria, such as the ones used for Social Security and Medicare. Hear me out: Age-based programs made sense when not working due to old age meant being poor (and in fact seniors used to be overrepresented in the lowest income quintile). But no longer. Seniors today disproportionately occupy the top income quintile. So, we should now move all programs to need-based criteria, which would still allow poor seniors to receive benefits.
Many will disagree with these three ideas. That's fine. But please, let's keep the conversation focused on making government better and not just bigger. That's what Americans want.
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A Few Ideas for the Better Government Americans Desperately Want
Stop voting for what you've been getting?
No, that's too simple and doesn't allow our political class to push pointless culture wars to divide us. Stop it with ideas like that!
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Brookings institute -> bald assertion of both sides expanding (ignore tax cuts and Trump attempting reduce all debts by 10%) -> ideas w no support of those in congress.
Government has to be shrunk. Unfortunately there is a 2 party institution largely created by government design. Democrats openly want control. The GOP has too many squishes that want to play nice so they placate to the left far too much. Need to voter in people running on government reduction which is more likely to occur from the GOP (ALL THOSE ULTRA MAGA).
Libertarians need to focus locally like MC is doing. They have no chance nationally. They come across as whiny birches who the last two cycles placate to the left with anti racism and bake the cake.
Talk about buying into a Big Lie.
Republicans have no interest in shrinking government. None. The conflict between Republicans and Democrats isn't over bigger or smaller government, it's over what to control and who controls it. Talking loudly about gun rights and lower taxes doesn't equal support for smaller government.
I can't tell which party is the Turd Sandwich and which is the Giant Douche. I do know that I won't vote for either of them.
Argumentation from ignorance?
https://news.yahoo.com/trump-says-sign-order-cut-193929842.html
Also how many times do I need to remind you of the Impoundment Act?
I gave him credit for that. But in practice what happened? Cut a sentence here only to add a page there.
Did you read the part about the impoundment act?
That is your answer.
The gop has never had enough of the congressional power to actually affect change. Paul Ryan tried. But was blocked by Schumer.
Also baseline budgeting needs to end.
Tried but thwarted, nothing accomplished. I believe the other team tells the same story to their fans a lot.
Also baseline budgeting needs to end.
We can agree on something. Now what about chicken? I was a breast man but I've become a thigh man.
Never been a leg guy with birds, but if I was a Brit I'd have to say I eye birds' legs.
The pile of regulations got bigger under Trump. You might be able to argue that the rate of increase was smaller, but it still increased.
He implemented a policy of 2 removed for every 1 added. You are aware that the whole Resistance thing in the deep state worked against him correct? Or are we ignoring reality again?
Talking about Republicans shrinking government is about as honest as baseline budgeting.
"We grew government by 5% instead of 10%! That means we cut government by 5%!"
And you believe it.
More
https://www.edweek.org/leadership/trump-seeks-10-percent-cut-to-education-department-aid-5-billion-for-tax-credit-scholarships/2019/03
This graph makes you look really ignorant.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/2019/politics/trump-budget-2020/
https://www.wsj.com/articles/trump-administration-proposes-14-cut-to-interior-department-11552336280
https://www.cbpp.org/research/state-budget-and-tax/the-trump-budgets-massive-cuts-to-state-and-local-services-and
You're conflating Trump with Republicans.
Trump was not and is not a Republican.
I'm talking about Republicans. Not Trump.
I mentioned the squish Republicans. Your response was the GOP in general. There is about 30% of the GOP that has no problem with big government and work with the 90% of dems that want to grow big government. You think this makes both parties equal.
The only party that has many members for pushing reduction is the GOP. But your incessant need to both sides to deflect for the Dems makes you ignore this fact.
In the last 2 decades the only reduction of growth in planning has come from the GOP. But due to the overlap of the GOP of the Romneys and Cheney has blocked these efforts.
In fact your state is one of the primary people in the GOP often teaming with the dems to constantly grow government.
You think this makes both parties equal.
That's you being a liar as usual.
It means I'm not going to support the less-bad option anymore. I did that.
The only party that has many members for pushing reduction is the GOP.
WRONG!
They talk about it a lot. They claim to have tried and been thwarted.
But I don't believe their bullshit. I don't believe Democrat bullshit either.
People don't seek and attain positions of power so they can dismantle them. And that's the libertarian conundrum.
Show me someone I can vote for as a positive act and I might sign up. I'm done voting against the worst asshole.
Trump is and was a Populist.
He was elected on a Republican Ticket but fundamentally his outlook and policies are Populist in character.
How can anyone listen to this woman? For four years she consistently criticized Trumps policies on trade and immigration based upon libertarian principles, yet she claims to be libertarian? What a crock of shit. True libertarians have no principles other than Trump Good.
Here comes sarc to embarrass himself in public again.
he does it in private too im sure.
True libertarians don't support Trump. Fake libertarians - the kind who believe in liberty for me but not for thee or who think that the Feds should be kept away so the states can do what they want - they'll support Loo Ming Orange Face (comes with soup and fries).
Some true libertarians might - not entirely inconsistently from a pure opinions perspective - prefer Trump to Biden as the lesser of two evils But they certainly won't support him. In fact, for the factual definition of "fact", if you're a Trump supporter you cannot be a libertarian, whatever you call yourself. It's like claiming to be a Man U supporter while being satisfied when Man City or Liverpool win. Just no.
Bush, Obama and Biden were consistent big government politicians. Not one of them ever made government the least bit smaller. Trump was random, sometimes he was good (cutting corporate taxes, drilling for oil) other times he was terrible (tariffs on relatively free countries like Canada and Great Britain).
Populists are right about some things and wrong about others. The only consistency is their rhetoric about protecting American jobs and "American Values", which, in reality, means sacrificing one person's job in favor of someone else's job. Steel tariffs saved one steel worker for every eight workers who lost their jobs in industries that use steel. De Rugy understands this, but most people don't.
Culturally, populists are 1950's people minus the racism. Dad goes to work, mom takes care of the kids and everyone goes to church on Sunday.
While the populists want the 1950's, the progressives want the 1350's where a small elite group of royal personages completely dominated the peasantry. The king can bang your wife, but you can't hunt on the "king's" land. A world where the peasants scratched the earth looking for bugs to eat (they've actually advocated abandoning meat in favor of bugs).
The culture wars are over and insanity had triumphed.
I thought Progressives only wanted to back to the 1800s, where everyone traveled by train or sailboat, and all the farming was organic.
Still looking to the government to change details so that it gets better. I think that without a culture that values individual liberties, it doesn't matter how you set your government up, it will tend to corruption and totalitarianism. People in the US need to value liberty and stop looking to the government to provide it for them, only then will the politicians in power start to reflect this. Until then, they will do what they think they can get away with, which as our culture has allowed, is astonishing amounts of corruption. From the moral to the materialistic, the progressive collectivist attitude of Americans culture has enabled, and will continue to enable, the leviathan that is our government to erode more and more individual autonomy.
Unfortunately, the only way to unambiguously signal to the political class that these values are not up for grabs is to vote libertarian, as all other votes assure them that being a progressive collectivist is fine. I don't care what that libertarian sells themselves as, whether it's a maga member or moderate democrat, just so long as they represent the correct culture. Unfortunately for national politics, that usually rules out 99% of two party candidates, as viable options, and because people have rationalized voting against libertarian candidates when they are the only politicians willing to represent liberty, we will continue down the path all societies eventually seem to follow.
End the Fed..that will force the changes which America needs..the entire ponzi scheme of modern govt goes down..the MIC, the Educational Complex, the Healthcare Complex, the Nonprofit Grifter Complex, the DIE complex..and so on...kill the Fed...and it all ends very quickly.
I like the idea that each state pays an amount to the UST annually proportional to their population, and how they raise that amount is up to them.
Originally they passed the budget and each state paid the percent of that equal to their population.
I didn't know that, thanks!
Perhaps we should return to something like that.
U.S. Government - too big to fail
No. Fixing government is simple, prohibit it from initiating force. You're treating the symptoms and not the disease.
Prohibit it how? And then what?
Three good suggestions that are going nowhere. The first two government granted privileges and tax simplification will face resistance from big money supporters. Both parties like their big donors and are not going to make waves. As for tax reform look to the "Carry Interest" issue which affects a very small group of taxpayers, but which cannot be eliminated. Democrats tried in the recent IRA but were one vote short. As long as there is big money in politics there is likely now way the first two reforms happen.
The third suggestion about means testing programs like SS and Medicare also have merit. The problem I see is that once the programs are means tested, they become seen as welfare. Then the political artist come out and talk about cutting or qualifying, just like on all other safety nest programs. If there is a way to means test and then just leave the programs alone to help the needest, then I could support the idea.
No one can promise any cut at all to SS or Medicare while Florida is a swing state. See what happened to Paul Ryan.
Great idea--everyone is forced to pay INTO the SS/Medicare system, but only some people get to take OUT of the SS/Medicare system.
Thanks, but no. Fuck off, slaver.
There are insurance programs that we have been forced to pay into. The idea that this forced labor is worth NOTHING if I succeeded in life takes all the hard work I did and retcons it out of existence because I never get to use that particular insurance policy (the one I was forced to pay at gunpoint) and have to use the one I got in addition to that theft.
Which places me on the same footing as people who didn't bother.
I understand you people want equity-- equal misery for all, but fuck you.
If we're going to get rid of that system, do so. Pay out what the state owes--and it DOES owe, and shut the damned thing down. Don't continue is as a 'you pay for everyone else' system.
The problem with these ideas isn't that people won't go for them, it's that politicians won't go for them. That's the ultimate problem with representative democracy: the people never actually get to rule themselves. They are always having to be ruled by a small class of professional rulers who will always give themselves more power.
Lately I've been wondering if government power should simply be assigned at random. We select juries at random. Why not presidents? Just put every American's name in a hat, pull out ten of them, then have an election where everyone votes against the worst of the bunch (just to weed out the true nut jobs) and then top five vote getters are eliminated, of the remaining five, one is picked entirely at random. There's your president. Repeat for various other offices.
"The problem with these ideas isn't that people won't go for them, it's that politicians won't go for them."
While a broad group of people may support the ideas, it is people with influence that will get their way with politicians. As I noted above the first two ideas are doomed because big money donors will not accept them.
Why would "big money donors" not love all these ideas? Big money donors love more regulations surrounding government spending because it's more parts of government they can corrupt; they love removing loopholes from the income tax code since they don't pay much income tax; and they love abusing government programs like Social Security for redistribution.
The reason they don't pay as much income tax is because they have loopholes they can use. And how do big money donors abuse social security which is paid to individuals?
No, the reason they don't pay as much income tax is because most of their money doesn't actually come from a salary. Warren Buffett's annual salary is $100000. Jeff Bezos's annual salary is $82000.
Big money donors prefer that the general public engage in consumer spending over capital investments; that's why they favor redistributionary policies, debt, and Keynesian stimuli. Means-tested social security is just another one of those policies.
Are you kidding? Progressive politicians love these ideas: make tax avoidance harder, more oversight and regulation of government spending, and an even more redistributive social security system.
Let's hope that some sanity will prevail and Republicans will torpedo these bad ideas before they become law.
Its kinda cute how Veronique thinks government can fix government. Dumb, but kinda cute.
Veronique calls for more making tax avoidance harder, more government regulations surrounding government spending, and confiscating social security contributions and redistributing them. And her overarching goal is to give Americans what Americans want.
It is obvious that Veronique is a progressive, not a libertarian or even a liberal.
The two biggest problems are:
1: Everyone wanting to control everyone else
2: Congress spending money it doesn't have, and people thinking someone else will pay.
Two simple solutions come to mind:
1: Return to Constitutionally mandated federalism, where the scope of power of Congress and the Federal government is limited to the short list of enumerated items. Let the states and the people determine the rest of the policies. (See the 10th Amendment.)
2: Divide total federal spending each year by the number of adult Americans, and send everyone a bill for the same amount. If you want to spend 6 trillion dollars, everyone ponies up 30 grand. (Assuming 200 million adults living here.) If you want to spend another 1 trillion fighting the weather or bailing out deadbeats, everyone ponies up another 5K. Spending increases would suddenly become a lot less popular.
Good god, are you really naive enough to think that you can formulate a law that does this? That "similarly situated" wouldn't become a tool for just the kind of arbitrary government overreach you are trying to prevent in the first place?
Well, nothing says "libertarian" like a statement like "we need an income tax system that makes tax avoidance harder"!
A normal worker contributing 12% to a retirement plan for a 40 year working life should end up with a nest egg of around $1.5 million dollars (in constant 2022 dollars). Instead of giving him that much, you are simply going to confiscate that money and redistribute it to others.
Why is a progressive a--hole like you writing for a nominally libertarian publication like Reason?
For your reference, here are the actual libertarian positions:
(1) Cut government spending to the point that the government cannot significantly subsidize anything in the first place.
(2) Eliminate taxes on productive activities, foremost the income and capital gains taxes. To the degree that taxes are needed, use consumption taxes like sales taxes and tariffs.
(3) Eliminate social security, Medicare, and Medicaid and replace them with private plans; to avoid people becoming burdens on society in old age, make some plan participation mandatory.
3 interesting ideas, but I'm not holding my breath.
Everyone is ignoring the elephant In The Room, which is the ~fact~that the Grifters in Congress [of which there are way too many] will never allow the necessary legislation to come onto the floor for debate, much less a vote.
Fortunately, the Founding Fathers gave us a remedy, contained in Article V of the US Constitution.
"All of that while confidence in government to do the right thing hovers around a historic low."
Unless there is a crisis, like covid, then everyone trusts that government!
The only thing that could make government better, is if there was a whole lot less of it, pure and simple.