All I Want for Christmas Is for Congress To Exercise Fiscal Restraint
Lawmakers can take small steps that are uncontroversial and bipartisan to jumpstart the fiscal stability process.

As the festive season approaches, with its twinkling lights and merry carols, the item topping my Christmas wish list is fiscal responsibility from Congress and the administration. If this sounds like an economist conflating policy with goodwill, remember this: In a world where holiday wishes usually lean toward "stuff"—gadgets, games, and glittering jewels—my wish would bring long-term prosperity, stability, and cheer far beyond the fleeting joy of unwrapping presents.
Here are two small steps Congress could take to jumpstart the fiscal stability process that are uncontroversial and bipartisan (or at least they should be).
However, before I begin, I'll remind you why we shouldn't let Congress fool us into believing fiscal responsibility is impossible. In the last four years, public debt has increased by 53 percent thanks to the massive expansion during the COVID-19 emergency. Huge gains are possible simply by eliminating temporary programs that were created.
As much as people enjoy the illusion of free money handed out by Uncle Sam, it's been unmasked by inflation. Would it be terrible to go back to where we were before the pandemic, when the economy and wages were growing, and most Americans liked that direction?
The first step involves curtailing emergency spending loopholes. Emergency spending is intended for unforeseen, urgent expenditures arising from natural disasters, economic crises, or other unexpected serious situations. It's typically exempt from ordinary budgetary constraints and processes. The idea is for governments to respond quickly without the delay of standard budgetary procedures.
Unfortunately, the emergency spending label has long been abused. Regular, predictable expenditures are often labelled as "emergencies" to bypass normal budgetary controls and scrutiny. This ability to spend without much oversight is awfully convenient for politicians and, as a result, makes emergency spending a significant driver of government debt. In a new study of the issue, Romina Bocca and Dominik Lett of the Cato Institute write: "Congress has designated $12 trillion in inflation-adjusted emergency and related cap-exempt spending over the last three decades. That's 43 percent of the current public debt without including interest costs."
There's no way this much spending is based on unforeseen emergencies. Congress can give our children, who (as always) will probably foot the bill, quite the gift by deciding now to finally take on emergency spending reform. That would involve more transparency, stricter criteria about what constitutes an emergency, and better integration of emergency spending into the overall fiscal framework to ensure that such funds are used effectively and responsibly.
The second step is to tackle the staggering issue of improper payments made by the federal government, which soared to $236 billion in 2023. A new paper by Matt Dickerson at the Economic Policy Innovation Center (EPIC) for America notes that this number represents a 5.42 percent improper rate. This adds up to more than the combined total funding of several major government departments, even surpassing the $185 billion provided for the U.S. Army in the same year.
Since 2015, improper payments have increased by $100 billion. Over the last 20 years, the federal government reported a total of at least $2.4 trillion in improper payments. Considering less than 5 percent of improper payments were underpayments, and that the federal government barely even tries to recover overpayments, stopping this trend would make a big difference in reducing budget deficits.
I think we can all agree that improper payments that grow year after year are symptomatic of the sloppiness with which the government manages taxpayers' hard-earned money. Putting an end to this particularly unacceptable spending should be a no-brainer that transcends bipartisan politics.
Over at the Heritage Foundation, Rachel Greszler rightfully notes that legislators "must verify that government payments are valid, hold bad administrators accountable, and minimize Americans' reliance on federal programs." She is correct that reducing the reliance on programs that experience the largest amounts of improper payments, either as a share of the program (Earned Income Tax Credit) or in absolute dollars (Medicaid), is essential. But also, bureaucrats themselves should be held accountable for their mistakes.
These small changes won't fix everything. Only a reform of entitlement programs would do that. And embracing fiscal responsibility might not bring the immediate thrill of unwrapping a new toy or gadget—especially for our kids. However, its benefits would endure. Changes could signal a commitment to a more stable and prosperous future not just for ourselves, but for generations to come. This Christmas, let's hang our stockings with a hope for fiscal sanity, a gift that truly would keep on giving.
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All I Want for Christmas Is for Congress To Exercise Fiscal Restraint
I really... really wish fiscal restraint was the only problem in Washington. But sure, Libertarians, our growing tyranny should be leaner and more efficient.
You're aware that the author is an economist, right?
Yes, one who appears to be in the mode of managing the decline.
I'm aware that the author pretends to be both a libertarian and an economist.
Libertarian drag show.
ha ha ha...way too late..to many folks enriching themselves with unproductive govt programs and agencies. There has never been a time the federal govt since that degenerate FDR cut govt spending by any real degree. Ike came pretty close.
There is no incremental in this...the Fed will print as much as the govt needs, inflation will be hidden by the BLS and it will all go on until the dollar starts to lose reserve status which could occur a lot faster than the morons at the Treasury think.
States allowing gold to be used as money will be the response and attacked by the bolshie media and federal govt.
What is needed is all govt agencies and programs created after 1960 to be shut down. Then all agencies created after 1932 shut down..and America will again be free.
There is no way a to do any of that with millions of free range Marxists running around. Many of them running federal and state governments, the media, corporations, etc..
That is the first problem that must be addressed. Or it just gets worse.
You do know Santa Claus is not real, right?
You can't prove that he's not real. I have this book of
nonsenseancient writings that is proof of his possible , but undefined, existence and a list of rules that goes with it.That must be an interesting book, some kind of new fangled post Christian religion.
Santa Claus is, of course, just honoring a Catholic who cared for the poor and needy, and it took American commercialism to turn him into the clownish figure he is today.
I’ve been to Nicks home town of Myra.
It will not happen until it all blows up in their face. They will never slow down, never approach the budget in a same manner, never stop printing money, never stop stealing from us.
It will take a total meltdown of the monetary system, which is what they are driving us to as fast as possible, intentionally or not. Prepare accordingly.
I have a scenario in which the can is finally kicked until we run out of road. Then it will be OMG, the sky is really falling, we have to DO SOMETHING.
At which point the heretofore prevaricating bums will be kicked out, and our new leaders will ride in on horseback to save the day.
And I'm betting you can guess what that something will be. Post Weimar national socialism comes to mind. And then there will truly be "Nazis."
I always appreciate leadership on horseback.
I suspect these will be Famine, War, Pestilence, and Death, however. The original Hell's Angels.
But I bet none of them have ever sent a mean tweet, so at least we have that.
I don't think so with the strong State system we have. More like dissolution of the union and defaulting on the debt. A Napolean will not take over America. There is no sense of one people/one nation anymore. Multiculturalism rules the day.
"All I Want for Christmas Is for Congress To Exercise Fiscal Restraint"
I never got that pony I wanted either.
But millions of illegal migrants got theirs, courtesy of that jolly old man in the White House.
If we strategically vote for democrats your wish might come true.
It's been proved many times that Democrats are better stewards of the nation and its economy than Republicans are.
Current administration aside. And the Carter administration.
And the fact the Clinton Administration had a Republican House.
And the fact the Trump Administration had a Democratic House in the 2nd half of his term.
You left out the //sarc tag.
Hi KJP. Got the afternoon off?
No, it hasn't.
Every time you morons try to say this you conveniently leave out the fact that it's only when a Democrat is in the White House and the Republican Congress keeps telling him no.
Ed Gein there is a real financial conservative. He knows how to get things down to the skin.
Kennedy started deficit spending not in a recession..Johnson sped it up...but you have a point, the GOP stopped being stewards of the dollar and minimal govt after Ike. Bushes were a total disaster for America.
The only halfway decent budgeteer since Ike was Clinton with the assistance of Newt and the Republican Congress.
Help? Clinton called it obstruction. Lol
It is proven every time EdG posts that EdG
Is.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
What alternate universe does the author live in? The economy and wages ARE growing. GDP is up. Wages are up. Unemployment is down. Workforce participation is up. Record DJIA and S&P 500 stock markets. Record oil production. Fixed income bond earnings are up.
As for inflation, there's obviously no such thing. Conservative thinking has proved that government spending generates no stimulus in the economy. That being the case, there can be no inflation caused by the government's Covid spending. No stimulus equals no inflation.
Real wages are down about 9%.
Gdp is up due to increased spending, not the economy.
Stock normalized to inflation is way down still.
Workforce participation is below 2019.
Where the fuck do you get your facts?
From November 2022 to November 2023, real average hourly earnings increased 1.4 percent, seasonally
adjusted. Source: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/realer.nr0.htm
I'm not even going to bother with your nonsensical GDP claim.
DJIA - Today: 37,243 Jan 22, 2021: 30,997
S&P 500 - Today: 4,724 Jan 22, 2021: 3,714
Workforce Participation: Today: 62.8% January 2017: 62.8%
Workforce Participation in 2019 was 3% lower than in 2009. Workforce Participation's 2019 peak was 63.3%, just 0.5% higher than today. Baby Boomers are retiring. Big surprise, huh? Nobody could've foreseen that, amirite?
So why is Robert Reich whining about tHe gAp bEtWeEn tHe rIcH aNd tHe pOoR?
Two different things, Michael.
So your numbers mean little to the majority?
???
Yes, we are all familiar with your confusion.
Look at you go from 2022 to 2023 instead of say... 2019. Lol.
Your choice of dates are all over the place. Lol.
You didn't specify a particular date except for workforce participation, and I did use 2019 data as part of that. A whopping 0.5% higher than now, all of which is accounted for by Baby Boomer retirements.
Special Ed is gonna Special Ed.
Nobody asked for your opinion, largely because it's worthless.
Project much special Ed?
Not at all. If you can prove me wrong with data from reliable sources, please do so. Otherwise, you haven't contributed anything except name-calling.
Median usual weekly real earnings of full time workers is up $3 since Biden took office (normalized in 1982-4 dollars). Less than one percent. Most players don’t spike the football when turning the ball over on downs.
-BLS, Oct 18, 2023
I'm hardly spiking the football. I didn't include real wages in my original comment. JesseAZ introduced it by claiming real wages have fallen 9%. He didn't specify a starting date, but either compared to 2019 (which Jesse cited on another statistic) or using Biden's inauguration, as you did, real wages are UP not DOWN. I'm sure you'll agree that 1% up is far different than 9% down.
My mistake. Wrong starting year. It was minus twelve dollars ($377 to $365) or negative three percent.
Why are you cherry-picking 2019 instead of say... 2020? Lol.
And why are you calculating inflation impact for Biden's numbers but not for Trump? Did you conveniently forget that inflation rose 7.8% during Trump's term and would've been even more if not for the Covid recession?
Okay, here you go since you don't have time to look up actual numbers:
Real wages grew 1.7% from Q3-2019 to Q3-2023. They DID NOT drop 9% as you falsely claimed. Source: https://home.treasury.gov/news/featured-stories/the-purchasing-power-of-american-households
You won't bother because you know that's why the GDP has grown.
So are you claiming the 7.8% inflation during Trump's term didn't affect GDP in the same way Jess uses inflation to degrade GDP during Biden's term? If you can't be honest and use the same adjustments for both, you shouldn't even bother.
US Real GDP Growth is measured as the year over year change in the Gross Domestic Product in the US as adjusted for inflation. AS ADJUSTED FOR INFLATION.
Biden reduced GDP growth due to spending each year in office. Other than in 2018, the percentage grew every year under Trump.
GDP Growth By % of GDP Per Year
=========================
Trump
-----
2017 - 20.3%
2018 - 19.9%
2019 - 20.7%
2020 - 30.7%
Biden
-----
2021 - 28.9%
2022 - 24.4%
2023 - 22.8%
GDP is irrelevant. It counts govt spending which is funded by printed money/debt and is not productive or we wouldn't be running deficits.
Compare wages and prices. If the stats show your boy is better fine..but GDP is an idiotic measurement just like "aggregate demand" which has no meaning.
I disagree that govt spending is unproductive. You may not agree with where it is spent, but spending is stimulative because it injects money into the economy that is circulated throughout. A single mother receiving SNAP puts dollars into the registers of her local grocery store and the grocery store hires employees and buys goods from suppliers.
"I disagree that govt spending is unproductive..."
We know because:
You.
Are.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
Sung to the tune of "La La La La La"...
The party has announced the chocolate ration has been increased from 5 grams to 4!
Hooray!
OMG, you weren't kidding, were you?
Go on, post your ACTBLUE or Media Matters talking points.
What is the going rate these days? I imagine it's more than 50 cents an hour, right?
With inflation, that 50 cents isn't even worth 35. EdG sounds like a Shrike sock. Pluggo pushes the same horseshit.
Eat me, punk.
Fuck off and die asshole.
I am impressed by the way you refuted my claims using facts and data from reputable sources. Kudos, Quo Vadis!!
I do not waste much time on obvious shills, especially with claims of "eat me, punk." Try harder.
I didn't say that to you, I said it to the idjit that called me a sock.
Which resident retard are you, sock?
Can he cherry pick random dates for comparison like you did? You didnt even try to hide it. Lol.
And you didn't even deduct inflation from Trump's results the same way you did for Biden. You didn't even try to hide it. Lol.
Set the date parameters and I'll run the stats. You didn't specify for any of your stats except workforce participation. But be aware that other than inflation, Biden's numbers meet or beat Trump's most years.
Wages and prices...wages and prices. that is the only thing that matters to Americans in the end. Not GDP, not "aggregate demand.
Wages are up 1.7% from Q3-2019 to Q3-2023. Not huge, but an increase nonetheless. Prices are a two-sided beast. I believe you're overlooking that. While increased prices are painful for consumers, they've been highly beneficial for producers. Profits are up and companies are enjoying pricing freedom they haven't had for many years.
“Why won’t the idiots ignore their lying eyes and listen to me?”
Imagine a scenario where the government prints money to buy stuff from producers. They can do that two ways: printing money to give to people who produced nothing so they can buy product from the producers; and printing money for the Fed to "lend" to Federal Banks so they can lend money to increase production to meet the demand generated by the increasing amount of money in peoples' hands and to increase demand through longer term loans (like home mortgages). They can also increase spending by borrowing some of the money already in circulation to spend on government programs - government employee salaries and infrastructure project grants. All of increasing money leads to increasing demand which leads to increasing prices. Inflation has one - and ONLY one - cause and that cause is putting more money into circulation than can be covered by increasing production. The increasing production - or GDP that you seem to be so fond of - can only increase without inflation if it LEADS the money supply proportionately. So you're kidding yourself, or failing miserably to kid those of us who know better.
Sunset the Department of Education, stop all non-consensual funding of public education, close all foreign military bases, stop sending payments and materiel abroad.
You forgot "execute all the Democrats".
I practice the NAP.
You are only bound by the NAP if people don't aggress against you, something Democrats have clearly violated. Though executing them may be a bit disproportionate; tarring and feathering might be better.
Just cut the DOD to the levels in real dollars as the Eisenhower admin, close down every federal agency and program created after 1960. Solve all problems.
I'll up you a ... all I want for Christmas is a USA that was defined by the US Constitution (Supreme Law of the Land) which by default will take care of the fiscal restraint as well as a plethora of other [Na]tional So[zi]alist invasion building measures.
All around me every day I say worsening signs of collapse and I'm afraid that it is accelerating. I used to be optimistic about the overall outcome, having studied the historical rises and falls and, sometimes disasters with recoveries and even improvements. But now I'm not so sure. Apparently the heat has been rising so gradually that my fellow frogs haven't tried to save themselves by jumping out of the boiling pot - and maybe it's too late already. I used to hope that an economic crisis would hit sooner rather than later while we still had some infrastructure left to rebuild with, but it may also be too late to hope for that now as well. Merry freakin' holidays, yawl!