The GOP's Current Plan To Cut Spending Is a Political Failure
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are still the chief drivers of our future debt. But Republicans aren't touching them.

The long and tedious battle for House speaker ended with the GOP arguably more focused on fiscal responsibility and cutting spending. To accomplish this, Republicans are demanding spending cuts in exchange for raising the debt ceiling. Asking for some future fiscal discipline before allowing Uncle Sam to borrow yet more money is well worth it, but carelessly chosen goals could derail the whole enterprise.
Congress will eventually have to pass legislation to authorize the Department of Treasury to borrow money above and beyond the current debt-ceiling level to avoid a default. Besides, when previous Congresses—both Republican- and Democratic-controlled—passed spending bills paid for with money they didn't have, legislators implicitly agreed to raise the debt ceiling as needed. But that doesn't mean that today's legislators can't demand some spending restraint going forward.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has already announced that the Treasury will begin "extraordinary measures" to ensure the federal government is able to meet its payment obligations even if the ceiling isn't immediately raised. That should allow payment obligations to be met without default until early June, giving legislators time to negotiate an agreement to raise the debt ceiling. That has been done before and can be done again.
And this is the path Republicans now intend to follow, which is, in theory, great. But from the look of it, they're going about it the wrong way. According to the Manhattan Institute's Brian Riedl, the GOP plan so far is to cut $130 billion from discretionary appropriations. Unfortunately, the defense budget and veterans health funds are excluded from cuts, despite making up $993 billion out of $1,602 billion discretionary budget. As Riedl notes, their plan will require "freezing those two items and cutting everything else by 21% immediately."
This maneuver guarantees political failure for the Republicans' plan. Don't get me wrong, there's easily 21 percent worth of spending cuts to be made in programs like the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Departments of Transportation, Education, and Energy. In fact, some of these discretionary programs should be eliminated altogether. However, imposing cuts on only a small share of the discretionary budget excludes trillions of dollars from scrutiny and is a political nonstarter.
This mistake was made decades ago with the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985, known as the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act. The legislation set a maximum amount for the deficit, which would be lowered over time until the deficit disappeared. If these limits were breached, the president was required to cut nonexempt spending, a process called budget sequestration, by a uniform percentage to bring the budget back into balance. But the Act's framework proved unsuccessful at constraining spending, in part because Congress exempted too many programs—the two biggest ones being defense and entitlement spending—from sequestration, allowing the overall budget to continue ballooning. In 1990, the deficit limit was breached by nearly $100 billion, which would have required the nonexempt programs to be cut by about a third.
Just like those cuts, unfortunately, Republicans' fiscal goals will likely be politically impossible. Instead, legislators could freeze most discretionary appropriations this year and then impose an annual 2 percent growth cap. As Riedl correctly notes, "Each 1% we trim the annual growth rate of discretionary spending (such as from 3% to 2% per year) saves $1 trillion over the decade. Over the long-term, savings get big." Better yet, while these caps seem reasonable, especially after inflation gets under control, they will require that some programs, including defense spending, undergo meaningful reforms or get cut.
All that said, while limiting discretionary spending is a good start, fiscal sustainability requires that Congress also cut the mandatory side of the budget. Indeed, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid—not defense or education—are still the chief drivers of our future debt, just as they have been in the past. Along with the interest the Treasury must pay on the debt, these three programs will be responsible for 86 percent of federal spending between 2008 and 2032, says Riedl. In other words, no level of discretionary spending cuts will ever be enough to control the upcoming debt explosion.
I applaud Republicans' commitment to fiscal restraint. But they need to go at it the right way or they will fail like others have before them.
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I’ve been wondering for years when the Republicans would finally decides fiscal prudence was a good campaign topic. They’re been pretty wimpy about it, but maybe they will get enough feedback to stiffen their spines a little.
At some point, Congress, including the Democrats, will have to do more. Interest rates going up beyond their control, their only hope being the Fed getting inflation under control, but that flies in the face of wanting to get the economy going.
Looks like the next few years will be an interesting game of chicken with the budget choices. Spend vs cut, tax vs cut, inflation vs recession, and all the while, the deficits just increase the borrowing and the interest.
No they won't do more - and whatever incentive they may once have had to restrain spending is now pining for the fjords.
De Rugy is just part of this perpetual lie and flim flam at this point. Future debt is now mostly on autopilot. Tens of trillions in CURRENT principal need to be rolled over each year.
Government spending from now on is almost entirely a function of keeping current on interest payments - and reassuring banks and FIRE that the pyramid of leverage (hundreds of trillions) that sits on top of the 'risk free collateral ' that is US dollar denominated debt will not turn into the next financial crisis.
Economists like De Rugy were part of the flim flam and scam for decades re 'spending'. They have never actually BEEN advocates of fiscal responsibility. Merely posers.
They still are. And at this point will never be anything but posers and frauds. The only honest responsible discussion that can occur re spending now is - how and when will we default and how will we deal with all the consequences of that for future generations.
Hate to agree, but yeah. Even pretending there's a hard distinction between "discretionary" and "mandatory" spending is a fraud. The only Constitutionally mandatory spending is payments on the debt. EVERYTHING ELSE is discretionary. EVERYTHING.
It's easy enough to handle the looming budget crisis. Just stick your fingers in your ears, go "la, la, la, la", and pray you can hang on for a few more elections.
What, you think the Republicans in Congress would have an easier time getting broader cuts past the Democrats?! I think they have a more reasonable feeling for the size of bite they can chew.
The GOP has a bare majority in the House, are the minority in the Senate, and De Rugy wants to tell them which hill they should go die on.
Yeah, best to settle for what you MIGHT be able to get instead of longing for what you certainly CANNOT.
Veronica Rugby ignores that the core problem is the existence and presence of democrats. Who prevent any meaningful change to the budget.
Maybe leave social security, medicare and medicaid off the table for the time being, but put defense spending on the chopping block.
Reality: SSA and Medicare are not going anywhere. These are programs that can be funded and managed differently, though.
Medicaid is state administered. Maybe stop inflation adjusting block grants?
Reality: The USA as a national whole might go before the 'not going anywhere' goes anywhere by itself. Not as if Venezuela didn't experience that just recently.
The Dems are 80% neocons, and the GOP is 60% neocons. That's not going to happen.
We can gradually transition away from those programs without much impact on current retirees.
I'm curious what you think the term "neocon" actually means? Because by the classic definition, it's basically impossible for a Democrat to be a "neocon"; "Neocons" were Democrats who jumped ship to the Republican party over the Democratic party not taking opposition to communism seriously enough.
That's why they were "neo"cons: They were new conservatives.
They are called "neocons", not "neo-Republicans", for a reason. They can be "neocons" in whatever party accommodates their militaristic, interventionist, globalist, and imperialistic views. For a while, that was Republicans, now it's mainly the Democrats again.
Arguably, even "neocons" is a misnomer, since military foreign interventionism and globalism are not conservative values.
How about getting rid of the Federal workers who produce the exact same Medicaid paperwork that is already produced at the State level?
Grandma and grandpa need to take a major pay cut or the system will topple. One cannot simply tax harder or printer harder to get put of this mess.
The problem being that Grandpa and Grandma have been told all their lives that this is their just due, they are in the demographic group which is most likely to vote, and they will single issue vote en masse to protect their perceived interests.
May as well tell the Democrats not to demagogue against reforming those programs, too.
i.e. Pay the Nazi's now and just hope/pray they'll return something down the road. So long as everyone worships the Gov-Gods..
That is, you may have to limit yourself to what is politically achievable rather than tilting at windmills.
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No, they don't. We can phase out Social Security gradually, with little impact on current retirees, allowing people to plan ahead for a new retirement system.
"retirees". You haven't looked at the social security rolls lately, have you?
I have. Hence my statement "We can phase out Social Security gradually, with little impact on current retirees, allowing people to plan ahead for a new retirement system."
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Don't "cut" spending. Eliminate functions not authorized by the constitution.
Dept of education
Dept of labor
EPA
HHS
HUD
SBA
etc
Any discussion about the deficit or national debt that does not even countenance raising taxes or consider policy alternatives to Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid is not a serious one.
You can bloviate all you like about "mandatory spending," but those programs serve a real need that will have to be addressed somehow. Right now Medicare pays for a lot of people's elderly parents last years in nursing homes. What happens when that is cut? What happens when people on Medicaid can't get the healthcare they need? Do we think those needs will cost us less, overall, when the federal government isn't involved?
Think of how much less college costs now that the government is involved.
People can go into nursing homes with money they have saved, their kids can take them in, etc.
In fact, we know that they will cost us less overall when the federal government isn't involved. A lot of people would choose not to waste $300000 on medical "care" during the last six weeks of their lives. A lot of people would save and invest the money they are spending on Medicare/Medicaid for later medical treatments, getting a better deal than they get from the government. A lot of people would choose cheaper and more effective treatments than they are getting on Medicare/Medicaid.
You think that's not an option already? How do you think people end up on Medicare in the first place?
I hate to break it to you, but we're heading off a cliff with our retirement population. The reason Boomers are putting off retirement is because they're at the precipice and they don't know how they're going to survive financially for another couple of decades. And they still have things like pensions to rely on. When the Gen X-ers get there, there's going to be a whole generation of people who haven't saved enough for retirement, to say nothing of end-of-life housing and medical care.
Saying, "tough" isn't a policy solution. You can talk about taxing people less and empowering them to plan for themselves, but humans are reliably and predictably short-sighted about this kind of planning. People just don't understand how much money they need to save - have needed to save, since adulthood - to plan for the exigencies of old age. The result of your default "policy" is going to be a lot of old, poor people, starving and dying for lack of adequate healthcare.
So the question is - why? Why do that to ourselves?
"You can talk about taxing people less and empowering them to plan for themselves, but humans are reliably and predictably short-sighted about this kind of planning."
LOL... "I know! We can SUBSIDIZE that behavior and pretend paying more and more for it won't just make it worse and worse."
Why do people rob banks? Because that's where everyone else's money is... SOLUTION --- Just give any criminal who shows up with a gun all the money and forget about it; cause humans are "reliably and predictably" criminally minded.
People don't save and kids don't take in their parents because government is footing the bill.
No, we are not "heading off a cliff", we are just facing a gradual decline, a decline that can be managed without panic or radical changes. Furthermore, that "decline" is only to a level that would still be considered generous in other nations.
Gen-X-ers still have time to save a lot privately for retirement if we reform now.
That's the result of the current policy, because it's not economically sustainable: the nation is going to go bankrupt and medical care is going to be more and more curtailed, with euthanasia more and more encouraged, and you are going to have no way of escaping that or making choices.
Most people are smart enough to know what to do to save for retirement and healthcare if they have to. The reason Americans don't save is because they understand the moral hazard the US government has created with its tax and welfare systems. That's why we need a transition period.
But the very first step to reforming Social Security is to limit payouts to actual return on what's been paid in, instead of the pyramid scheme we currently have.
And Medicare needs to stop reimbursement useless and painful end-of-life tests and interventions; that is what is bankrupting the system.
Is this parody? I mean, this sentence alone: "Do we think those needs will cost us less, overall, when the federal government isn’t involved?"
Is it parody to want libertarians and conservatives to be able to provide actual policy arguments, based on evidence, in favor of their positions? Or are we all just living in fantasy lands?
Is it parody to want libertarians and conservatives to provide (by Armed-Theft) actual *entitle* me policy??? Because I have evidence that I'm *entitled* to legally commit armed-robbery....
There; fixed that for you. Yes; your deceptive talk about things you desire without address how they get collected is living in fantasy land.
Look, if you wanted to prove to me that most online libertarians are colossal morons, you're doing a great job.
Only those who support collective Armed-Theft aren't morons! /s
And at the end of the day when everyone is sick of producing so robbers can take everything where's the collective Armed-Burglars going to be? Where does that 'finish' line sit?
UR type is the moron's whether you can use your brains or not.
Your argument is "Americans are stupid and that's why we need to continue going on with programs that demonstrably are not sustainable". That's not a policy argument.
Some cutting is better than no cutting.
This is what always irritates me. Someone will propose cutting like $20 billion in spending and the invariable response is, “pffft, that’s pocket change compared to all the spending done.” But at least it’s something. The fact that we spend such huge portions of money we don’t have shouldn’t be a reason to be against cuts, no matter how small in comparison they are. Afterall, death by a thousand cuts is a thing. A little here, a little there, and eventually you’re talking about meaningful cuts.
It won't be easy but let's at least try to get that snowball rolling down the hill.
"Do we think those needs will cost us less, overall, when the federal government isn’t involved?"
Yes, to a point. Consider how Federal subsidies to college tuition have affected the cost to go to college.
"those programs serve a real need that will have to be addressed somehow."
OK, but how? That is the question. The recital of needs without saying how to address them is bloviating.
We don't have any evidence that Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security are what's driving health care cost inflation.
What? We have a system that is addressing them now. The OP is complaining that politics makes it impossible to cut those programs, but has no suggestion for how else to address the needs they currently serve.
I have a suggestion...
1) The Union of State's Government has no Authority for welfare. This isn't Venezuala. It's the land of freedom (Liberty and Justice).
2) LOCAL governments can implement a WELFARE office and determine just how NEEDY one has to be in order for them to be dependent on collective armed-theft.
The amount of "poor" "needy" people driving BMW'S around here is absurd.. If people are going to pretend to be "poor" and "needy" they should first have to loose (pay for) service by any assets they contain.. Today; It's not about serving dire needs but more just serving selfish needs by pointing Gov-Guns at working people. (i.e. Legal Armed-Theft).
This is the part your kind wants to play ignorant about.
At the end of the day; The only thing that makes 'government' is GUN-Forces. Think about it. What makes 'government' any different than any group or run-of-the mill business?
Now; What do GUNS 'make'? GUNS by themselves don't make any human resources do they? So where do 'government' *entitlements* really come from? .......ARMED-THEFT against someone else. When is ARMED-THEFT a justified living career?
You can look at actual “needs” by comparing US programs with programs in other nations. What you find is that those programs pay out a fraction of what US programs pay out (in terms of $PPP). We can cut US Social Security and healthcare spending to those levels found in France, the UK, Iceland, Luxembourg, etc. while still meeting the needs of everybody.
How do those countries limit their spending?
First, retirement programs pay out based on actual returns on investment, rather than an inflation guaranteed, politically determined handout, with a minimal welfare fallback.
Second, their healthcare programs limit useless medical interventions and tests; every treatment needs to be justified based on years of life gained. That eliminates hundreds of thousands of dollars of wasted medical interventions on people who are invariably dying within a few weeks anyway.
The problem is that Americans demand large government handouts that they never paid for. Americans are greedy, entitled, and privileged, and that simply isn’t sustainable.
Medicare and Medicaid pay worse than almost all private insurers. They are definitely not driving health care cost inflation, but they're part of the problem in the sense that it's our system of insurance paying, which includes government insurance. But it's mostly our private insurance system driving the cost increases compared to other countries. People need to know how much a service (like seeing a doctor) will cost up front like grocery shopping and patients need to pay the own bill. Then get partially reimbursed by some sort of insurance program. Currently, patients have no idea how much a bill will be in advance and can't use the free market to control prices.
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Hey, de Rugy, why don't you stop pontificating and run for office? Put your stupid political ideas to the test.
Political failure to cut spending equals political success at the ballot box. That's the real problem, anymore.
To solve our fiscal issues, the government needs to meaningfully cut spending and raise taxes on everyone. One side won't cut spending, one side won't raise taxes. Both would rather get reelected again than solve this issue.
Wash, rinse, repeat.
Or maybe that's why the Supreme Law didn't authorize 90% of what government is doing.
You cannot cut spending with gimmicks, it takes hard work, something foreign to the Congress. It means getting down to the nitty gritty of the Federal budget finding areas to cut, making a sound case for the cuts, making the cuts, and accepting the consequences, which may include losing your seat.
There are members on both sides of the aisle that are more interested in their stardom than the work they were elected to do. They will be on media taking about cuts or talking about protecting services from cuts and asking for people to send in money for themselves. We need moderates that are more interested in the work than on getting on the nightly news.
You cannot cut spending with gimmicks, it takes hard work, something foreign to the Congress.
But yet we've been able to consistently increase spending with gimmicks. Why doesn't it work in both directions?
You missed the "it takes hard work".
Spending money is easy. Did you ever have money that you could not find a way to spend? Cutting money is hard because every dollar has some interest group behind it and that group will fight like hell to keep the money.
Not only fight like hell, but paint it up that some vulnerable group will be destroyed, or starved to death, or impoverished, all while damaging the economy and eliminating tens of hundreds of thousands of millions of jobs and causing untold environmental damage, and allowing our foreign enemies to impact our national security, and imparting a death nail to our democracy, and etc etc etc.
And of course, the appropriate partisan news media will be right there to spin it into hysterics and outrage that party or candidate X is a reckless Nazi/communist traitor to the US and wants people to die and the earth to suffer.
Or, just vote yes on spending, go and have a nice dinner, and get reelected again and again.
If you agree spending should be cut, why did you vote for the guy that wants a baseline annual budget of $8 trillion by 2025?
Which is why it is wrong to approach this in terms of "cutting" in a federal budget.
Social Security and Medicare should be self-contained programs with balanced budgets and payouts based on their revenues.
All it takes is going back to the baseline from 5 years ago, instead of the pandemic baseline.
Again the "gimmick" and I say it will not solve the problem. It requires hard work, making decisions and accepting the consequences of those decisions.
No, going back to that budget would solve the problem. If you really wanted to fix the budget you would turn against your party, and renounce their evil works.
I agree the Congress does need to go back to budgeting. That is not a gimmick, it is hard work. Looking at spending, making hard decisions, compromising when necessary, and accepting the consequences that you may lose your seat.
It's not hard at all. Social Security and Medicare should be self-contained programs that are run like insurance companies and whose payouts are determined by how much money their investments yield and how much money they have taken in. Their overall size should be limited based on median European levels (in terms of $PPP).
For Social Security, that's completely straightforward, since payouts would simply be adjusted based on the current economic and demographic situation.
For Medicare, the necessary rationing of healthcare would have to be determined by expert committees, just like it is in all other nations; Congress shouldn't intervene in that.
You make good suggestion, but that not what's on the table. The reason is that what you are talking about is hard work. A group of legislators would need to come up with a bill that spell out in detail what you are suggesting, sell that bill to the American people, line up votes for the bill, and accept that the consequences which could mean losing their seats.
Every time the GOP tries to cut spending, somebody says, "That's not going to be enough." Probably it won't, but isn't it better than nothing? Shouldn't we at least consider it a starting point? If we can't even put through small spending cuts, how are we ever going to tackle Social Security? (I know, I know, we won't deal with it until we're bankrupt. But I keep hoping for better.)
“The entire U.S. Government is a Ponzi Scheme” Bernie Madoff
Poor guy, his career should’ve been Senator or Governor
Sorry, SS, Medicare and Medicaid cuts are political suicide. Maybe not Medicaid cuts, but that's the smallest, and the most needed.
But none of those are driving the deficit. What drives the deficit is the fact that spending has increased 50% in the past 5 years (from 4 trillion to 6 trillion per year). Cutting spending back to 2018 levels (4.1 trillion) would balance the budget right away. The government wasn't way too small in 2018, it was way too big then.
Where is the extra money even going?
Cutting medicare and social security is NOT popular. Many republicans oppose this. The ones who are serious about that are libertarians and a segment of a very conservative crowd that listens to talk radio and read books about gold standard.
In their last debate Fetterman yelled at OZ for trying to “cut medicare”. That’s been the democrat game plan in the midterm and it worked to some degree. The republicans benefitted from this rhetoric back when seniors were spooked at that prospect of ACA taking money away from medicare.
Libertarians are largely irrelevant outside of local matters. It’s easy for them to write “Gee, republicans have to do X, why don’t they just do it”. Well, that’s not how it works. Do you expect politicians to severely go against the grain, because that’s the principled thing to do? They may cost them elections, and if that happens your agenda not represented in government.
Republicans will need a coalition and a willing electorate to pass more ambitious libertarian agenda. In other words, this isn’t about republicans per se, it’s more about moderate democrats and voters making the right decision and joining their cause, and ultimately a saner president occupying the white house.
Right now voter have little appetite for fiscal restraint. Even red state voters approve of min wage hikes. The people on this side will have to make a compelling case to the OTHER side, not republicans. And “we’ll go bankrupt if we don’t” isn’t quite enough, even if its true.
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To point out the obvious, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid provide useful benefits that actual US citizens find extremely valuable. SS and Medicare are close to self funding, and could be completely with small tweaks to FICA taxes. If Medicare could negotiate drug prices like private insurers do, it could get the same services for less money.
How about starting by doing that, and cutting the parts of the military budget that even the Pentagon didn't ask for? Oh, noooooo, we couldn't do that.
Legal Armed-Robbery is always a *useful benefit*..... FOR the armed-criminal. The fact so many can't see a MAJOR ethical problem with these systems *IS* the massive problem with them.
"SS and Medicare are close to self funding"
This isn't all that relevant if the trust funds are on the verge of running out of money in the near future.
I often hear proponents SS and medicare insist that those programs will endure with only a small rise in FICA, but I've never seen anyone substantiate this. Some of those programs run on money borrowed from other aspects of spending.
A recession is looming. Job losses plus a gazillion people crossing over the borders mean whatever baseline we're working from will change.
To make really meaningful changes to cut spending and the deficit would require a committed population in congress holding a majority in the house, 60 seats in the senate and the Presidency.
As it is, one might generously say we may have the house only - but I doubt it. Regardless, how do you make meaningful cuts when a particular population in congress, in lock-step and with near full media backing, will always claim that you're throwing grandma over a cliff anytime some cut is proposed?
I really don't see how any of this gets resolved until everything comes really crashing down and there is no other choice.
Or SCOTUS could just be honorable instead of criminal hacks; and deem 90% of them UN-Constitutional as the USA was suppose to do.
Anyone remember the stories in the 80s of military spending on $400 hammers and $640 toilet seats? On a more current note - my neighbor served in the military - now a healthy active mom of two. Spends the last year visiting the VA for fibromyalgia - a disease that, conveniently, cannot be tested - relying solely on patient testimony. The payoff - 100% disability determination. Don't think there isn't a whole scam network for that shit either.
The author, Veronique De Rugy, thinks Social Security and Medicare should be on the table...calls them "entitlements"! Every year the massive amount of government waste is identified and published; highlighting billions in bizarre and inappropriate programs, studies, grants, etc...cuts should target those.
The Democrat's Current Plan To Cut Spending Is Non-existent and a Political Failure Imperiling Our Immediate Future
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid are still the chief drivers of our future debt. But Democrat's aren't touching them. Along with The Democrats Spending Trillions on green energy, funding of CRT and Trans in foreign nations, and giving unaccounted for Billions for foreign wars.
I will still go with the GOP plan myself.
A bit? Just imagine the type of unprincipled, politically-suicidal egomaniac it would take to get the job done.
Better to let people with no verifiable identity vote for establishment politicians because of COVID lockdowns.