A Bipartisan Tax Hike Won't Fix This Deficit
The government needs to cut back on spending—and on the promises to special interests that fuel the spending.

The Republican chairman of the House Budget Committee made news recently by announcing that if his party is serious about changing the fiscal path we are on, they'll have to consider raising taxes. Politics is about compromise, so the chairman is right. Every side must give a little. However, "putting taxes on the table" is not as simple a fix to our debt problems as some think.
Looking at recent Congressional Budget Office reports, one can have no doubts about the fiscal mess. Annual deficits of $2 trillion will soon be the norm. Interest payments on the debt will exceed both defense and Medicare spending this year and become the government's largest budget item. With no extra revenue available, the Treasury will have to borrow money to cover these expenses. Meanwhile, we're speeding toward a Social-Security-and-Medicare fiscal cliff that we've known of for decades, and we'll reach it in only a few years.
Talking about the need for a fiscal commission to address Washington's mountain of debt, the committee chair, Rep. Jodey Arrington (R–Texas), told Semafor, "The last time there was a fix to Social Security that addressed the solvency for 75 years, it was Ronald Reagan and Tip O'Neill, and it was bipartisan. It had revenue measures and it had program reforms. That's just the reality." He made these comments after some people warned that a fiscal commission is a gateway only to raising taxes.
I understand the worry. That's what the most recent deficit reduction commission tried to do. And while I don't believe this is what Arrington is planning, I offer a warning to the chair and to the future commission: If the goal is truly to improve our fiscal situation, as defined by reducing the ratio of debt to gross domestic product (GDP) or reducing projected gaps between revenue and spending, increasing tax revenue should be limited to the minimum politically possible.
For one thing, our deficits are the result of excessive promises made to special interests—mostly seniors in the form of entitlement spending—without any real plans to pay. The problem is constantly growing spending, not the lack of revenue and taxes. The common talking point from the left that rich people don't pay their fair share of taxes is a distraction. Not only is our tax system remarkably progressive, but there are not enough rich people to fleece to significantly reduce our future deficits.
Furthermore, the work of the late Harvard economist Alberto Alesina has established that the best way to successfully reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio is to implement a fiscal-adjustment package based mostly on spending reforms. A reform mostly geared toward tax increases will backfire as the move will slow the economy in the short and longer terms, causing it to ultimately fail to raise enough revenue to reduce the debt relative to GDP. Legislators, unfortunately, have made this mistake many times without learning any lesson—at least until the deal that was cut in 1997.
As a 2011 New York Times column by Catherine Rampell reminded us, until then, all deficit-reduction deals were very tax-heavy. What the article didn't mention is that they failed to reduce the deficit. What distinguishes the 1997 deal is that it cut both spending and taxes. The result was the first budget surplus in decades helped by a fast-growing economy. Now, this lesson doesn't mean that a fiscal commission must cut taxes, but it does caution against attempting to reduce the debt largely by raising taxes.
Another risk looms in the idea of a tax-and-spending compromise; that the tax increases will be implemented while the spending cuts won't. We have many examples of this pattern, but I'll recount just one: In 1982, President Ronald Reagan made a deal with Congress (the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act) which would have raised $1 in revenue for every $3 in spending cuts.
There were tax hikes, indeed. But instead of spending cuts, Reagan got lots of spending increases. Remembering the story years later in Commentary magazine, Steven Hayward wrote, "By one calculation, the 1982 budget deal actually resulted in $1.14 of new spending for each extra tax dollar."
The moral of this story is that putting revenue on the table to reduce the debt has a bad track record. As such, the chairman, who I believe is serious about putting the U.S. on a better fiscal path, will have to be careful about whatever deal is made.
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The deficit spending will not be stopped or reduced. We are headed full speed towards the cliff. There are no brakes. All we can do now is make preparations to rebuild after the crash.
The first bill after the crash will be to increase spending and taxes.
Can't try austerity now, look what just happened.
The first thing they will do after the crash is declare all private property, bank accounts, retirement accounts, gold, bitcoin, etc. as public assets and attempt to seize them all.
I hope they get lead instead.
The problem with lead is that it needs to be donated consistently and often. Not enough people willing to donate lead.
Too true,
I’m willing to donate lead to th government consistently. And at high velocity.
They won't need to seize your money. It won't be worth anything.
Good luck with the US surviving the crash. Before it could recover, it would be carved up by the looters whose allegiance has already been purchased by foreign governments. We saw the Marxist jackbooted thugs in action on a micro-scale during 2020. A US default is their bat-signal to trigger chaos.
Even if we can suppress the revolution, the disparity in world population means that a world war ends in either mutual annihilation or with the nationalization of all US foreign assets. It would be hilarious to see Mexico finally building a wall - to keep Americans out of their factories.
The only way US maintains sovereignty is to identify and eliminate the Marxists in the government, enforce fiscal responsibility federally and among the states, and to reform academia so that the cycle doesn't just start over.
Put me in the "cynical outlook" column. I think the Soviets won the long game - we allowed them to infiltrate and corrupt.
Slaughter the Marxists. That should be step one.
We can't even cut the increase in funding.
But it's not special interests, ultimately it's the voters. Old people won't ever vote to cut their "entitlements"
They paid for them
I wouldn't call it 'paying', as what happened was someone stuck a gun in my ear and took off with 10 to 15 percent of my wages.
(depending on the year)
Why would old people want to cut their "entitlements" after paying for them for 50 years?
It is nice to be the first person in on the ponzi scheme
Since SS isn’t really an investment account per se, they can get out exactly what they put in.
Fuck. The. Ponzi. Scheme.
Lump sum?
Deal.
Congress should absolutely raise taxes. On people other than me.
Why not eliminate taxes entirely?
Apparently there isn’t any limit to the amount of money we can print anyway.
I support taxing everyone who works for the government 100% on capital gains. Including any stocks purchased or sold during the period of time they held office. Public officials should not be allowed to profit off of thier positions.
Biden set to announce that the US is going to build a deep water port in Gaza. No mention yet on how the fuck we're going to pay for it or why the fuck we should pay for it or who the fuck will own it or operate it. Literally no limits on government spending whatsoever.
Even the goddamn Roman’s eventually had to pay for things,
Not according to Tony. At least that’s what he was babbling about before his fatal rectum rupture.
I’m okay with taxes, as long as they’re fair.
And the fairest tax would take all government spending, divide it by the number of adult citizens, and send them their fair (equal) share of the bill.
Spend 6 trillion, with 200 million adult citizens? 30K each please, payable in cash on April 15th each year.
I think support for new spending would drop radically with such a tax plan.
My favorite scheme is for Congress to pass budgets for every bureaucrat they had to confirm. That sets the income tax owed etc. Then when people file their returns, they allocate that total amount to all those individual departments as they see fit. All to national parks? Military? St Louis trolleys? Go for it.
But any allocation over the Congressional budget is returned to all taxpayers, and I don't care if that's proportional to what they paid or split evenly, as long as it is returned.
And the departments which didn't get enough to match their Congressional budgets? Start firing employees and selling assets, cuz you ain't getting any more. Or, say, all those employees could be noble and so proud of their work that they all cut their pay to fit their new budget.
I still support my proposal - 100% tax on anyone who has publicly supported socialism. Fuck the salt deduction, they can owe more money than they make.
“True socialism has never been tried.”
Blah, blah.
If achieving 50% socialism only kills half the population, and achieving 100% pure true socialism means killing 100% of the population - then it has never been tried.
There should be no such thing as a rich socialist.
Start with AOC's blood. I'd like to see how long it can grease the wheels.
Any congress person able to sell themselves or their spouses as prostitutes to raise funds for the government should be forced to. It happened in Rome, so they should be proud to embrace tradition.
Seriously it's increasingly comical to propose a cure for the federal debt. We are way past the point of redemption. MMT is our financial system if not by declaration at least by default. Empires throughout history have gone down this road. They no longer exist.
The resources do not exist in all the world to service the national debt. Default is inevitable, either by outright repudiation or by inflating the dollar into worthlessness. The world is already digging into defensive positions.
The debt is a mere 34 trillion. When a sandwich costs a few million dollars, paying off 34 trillion will be a lot easier. And then the USA can elect its own Milei-style candidate, who isn't orange.
The income tax is pure evil. get rid of it entirely.
Get ready for the wealth tax.
A consumption tax makes more sense. Then the government doesn’t need to know how much I earn.
Preach, lady.
Tax revenues have continued to grow after the Trump tax cuts, as usual.
Spending has spiraled out of control, even by the standards of Congress (which doesn't have any). Spending increased by 50% from 2018 to 2023, in just 5 years. If spending had been held steady at 2018 levels, the budget would be balanced already.
Another Democrat claims another election was rigged:
https://thehill.com/homenews/campaign/4515806-katie-porter-calls-california-senate-race-rigged-billionaires/
Fortunately for her, the recent Supreme Court decision stops states from disqualifying her for federal office over her insurrectiony statements.
But why do all of the “rising stars” in the Democrat Party keep losing?
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/06/us/katie-porter-california-senate-primary.html
Katie Porter, a Rising Star in Congress, Finds Herself Without Another Seat
The California representative harnessed social media and her committee perch to build a following. But it wasn’t enough to survive a brutal Senate contest, and she has nowhere to go this election season.
Or maybe the terrorist sympathizer vote isn’t as numerous as she thought.
The best part about the California primary for US Senate was Dem front-runner Adam Schiff buying ads calling Republican Steve Garvey (the former Dodgers baseball star) “too conservative for California,” helpfully explaining that Garvey thought we were safer and better off under Trump (even though Garvey is not a Trump fan).
The goal of the ads was actually to HELP Garvey finish in second place in the non-partisan “top two” California primary, so Schiff wouldn’t have to face another Democrat in November, thereby assuring his victory.
But the ad sure played as a direct shot at Biden, since any fool could tell that what Garvey liked about Trump was completely true.
I doubt it will happen, but it will be funny if this backfires and Californians are fed up enough to vote against Schiff. It will be even funnier if Schiff gets strangled to death by an irate toddler at a campaign event.
The reality is that the Republicans will lose the House, and likely won’t retake the Senate if they allow taxes to be raised right now. The Republican/Trump base has no tolerance for tax increases right now. The problem is not that taxes are to low, but that spending has exploded. Mention is made of the Social Security/Medicare deficit. But those are preexisting obligations. What is driving the problem is the immense amount of money flushed down the toilet on nonsense, from a $Trillion$ spent on Green nonsense, to the forever war in Ukraine, to bailing out Deep Blue states from their prolifigate spending, to COVID-19 “relief”, to debit cards for the incoming illegals, etc. the commonality of all this spending is that it makes Dem constituencies stronger and richer. Raising taxes would just reward the Democrats for their insane level of prolific spending.
The reason that the Republican Party will suffer with a tax increase is that their base trusted their politicians to hold the line against the Dems and their spending and taxing. They have shown themselves incapable of the former. Failing on the latter would give them a good reason to sit home this November.
Note to Government.
You can’t STEAL what hasn’t been produced.
MORE THEFT isn’t going to grow the economy.
The USA is literally knocking at the door of a dog-eat-dog finale.
Because [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] thought government ‘Guns’ would magically create sh*t (magical money-tree delusions).
The only way out is to honor the US Constitution. No MORE UN-Constitutional THEFT by gov-gangsters. Having the Liberty to *actually* produce resources, hire-help, trade w/o 50%+ getting stolen & etc. Or summarized: end the Nazi-Empire in D.C. and bring back the USA.
The article doesn’t mention one of the biggest obstacles – we haven’t had a real budget in many years. Congress keeps kicking the can down the road with these endless continuous resolutions.
"Politics is about compromise, so the chairman is right."
Why do people who claim to be libertarians nevertheless continue to concede their principles to the statists unnecessarily? Politics is NOT about compromise - never has been and never will be! If, for example, the Red team compromises with the Blue team repeatedly and aways in the same direction, the Blue team ends up getting every goal they started out with - it just takes a while longer to get there. If politics is about compromise, then I don't recommend politics - for anyone, anywhere at any time! I prefer principles. It's not really about taxes or spending or even deficit spending. It's about performing the Constitutionally mandate functions of government AND NOTHING ELSE! If you cut all of the spending for all of the government functions not mandated or permitted by the Constitution, you could also - simultaneously - cut taxes by somewhat less than you cut spending and balance the budget in one year! But they won't, because it's not about "compromise" - it's about keeping their jobs in government at any cost.
I would be just fine wiping out the Marxist scourge. Being a Marxist in America should be a life destroying thing……. for the Marxist.