Does Paul Ryan Know What’s in His Budget?
If the news media had to work for a living, this is what they would all be asking right now. The reason is simple. The projections the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) made for Representative Ryan's budget imply that he literally wants to shut down the federal government.
His budget implies that after three decades the federal government will have no money to spend on health research, education, highways, airports, and other infrastructure, the Food and Drug Administration and most other activities that we associate with the federal government. His budget has money for Social Security, Medicare and other health programs and the Defense Department. That's it.This is not a vicious anti-Ryan attack coming from hyper-partisan Democrats. This is what the analysis of his budget by the non-partisan CBO shows. It's right there in the fifth row of Table 2.The table shows that in 2040, Representative Ryan would allot an amount equal to 4.75 percent of GDP to all these other areas of government including defense spending. By 2050, Ryan's allocation for these areas, including defense, falls to 3.75 percent of GDP.
The defense budget is currently a bit over 4.0 percent of GDP. Ryan has indicated that he would like to maintain or even increase this level of spending. The arithmetic is then straightforward. In 2040, Ryan would leave less than 0.75 percent of GDP for areas of spending that currently require more than five times this amount. In 2050, all these areas of spending would literally have to be zeroed out as defense spending will take up every cent and more that Ryan has left in his budget.
It is important to understand that CBO tried to accurately present the implications of the budget that Representative Ryan gave them. CBO works for Congress. These are career civil servants. They cannot be easily fired, but if CBO's staff deliberately misrepresented a budget proposal from a powerful member of Congress like Paul Ryan, that is the sort of thing that could get them put out on the street.
The way CBO would typically analyze a proposal is that they would sit down with Representative Ryan and his staff and determine as closely as possible the outlines of the budget he is proposing. They would then produce projections which would be shown to Ryan and his staff to ensure that they had accurately represented his proposed budget. CBO would only publish a document with these projections after Representative Ryan and his staff had a chance to review them and agreed that they had accurately represented his proposal.
This means that there can be no accident here. CBO did not blindside Representative Ryan with a half-baked analysis they did in the middle of the night. We can safely assume that the projections from CBO do in fact represent the budget proposal as presented to them by Representative Ryan and his staff.
This leaves the obvious question. Is he serious? Does Representative Ryan really think it is a good idea to end the federal government's role in building and maintaining infrastructure, in financing education, in funding basic research in health care and other areas, in maintaining our national parks, federal courts, the FBI? His budget says that this is what he thinks, since these services will not be provided for free (FBI agents expect to get paid), but it is difficult to believe that a politician running for national office would really want to eliminate most of the government.
Anyhow, this is the most basic question that reporters should be asking Representative Ryan now that Governor Romney has selected him as his vice presidential candidate. We know that they all have to run stories about his high school friends and his college courses, but the public has a right to know where he stands on the policy issues that he has put at the center of his political agenda.
If reporters do their job, they have a simple question to put to Mr. Ryan. "Your budget would put an end to everything the government does, except for Social Security, health care and defense. Is this really what you want to do?"
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5 comments on "Does Paul Ryan Know What’s in His Budget?"
August 20, 2012 5:23pm
I am all for Government, that is EFFECTIVE government. With the taxes we pay we can expect the government to take care of infrastructure, health care, education, social programs, sustainable national policies that help the American people, (that is the 99%). What we have is INEFFECTIVE government ruled by two parties that cannot find solutions, and a military establishment that is using much needed capital, and spending our treasure, our young warriors.
We need to participate in politics and vote these people out. Then promote campaign reform, make voting mandatory, and have campaign reform to stop this nonsense. Campaigns should last only last three months, in which each candidate is given the same amount of money by the government, that way those who want to serve can do their job instead of raising money all the time.
Oh and one more thing, we should set limits on how long politicians serve.
Let's bring a diverse group of people that represents the American population. What we have now is a hijacked democracy, mostly by led by lawyers who write laws that are cumbersome, that protect mostly the rich and corporate America, leaving the rest of us waiting and wondering how long is this going to take.
August 21, 2012 2:08pm
I pretty much agree with your comments, PATRICIA.
If we could only shut down K Street and get the money out of Washington.
I wish I had some solutions to offer, but I don't. I think many of us here know what we need to get an honest government, but just don't know to go about doing it. To quote a cliche, the "devil is in the details."
We need a free spirit like Bernie Sanders, who seems beholden to no fat cats, but there aren't enough of him in Washington, and it's doubtful he could get the money to compete in an American capitalist-style election such as we have here.
(And we really dare to consider ourselves Champions and Exporters of Democracy, when we can't even practice it at home?)
Speaking of Effective Government, was W's sloppy non-response to Katrina the result of incompetence, or was it part of a strategy to make more Americans doubters of government efficiency, and by extension, Haters of Big Government?
Perhaps the major need of government today is to stand between us and the 1%. You might say it's so now, but so far it's to protect them, not us.
August 20, 2012 4:37pm
It makes me wonder if he actually wrote it.
August 20, 2012 2:02pm
Please stop calling it the Ryan Budget. It is the Ryan Manifesto. It is the fundamental document in the establishment of a government that is against women, the poor, working class Americans, Blacks, Hispanics, immigrants, students, teachers, nurses, firemen, policemen, the young, the old, the newborn, the handicapped, truck drivers, construction workers, small business owners, and everyone else who is not part of the wealthy elite or a large corporation.
It is the blueprint for neofeudal society composed of masters and serfs. The serfs beholden to corporations for the meager wages they will be allowed to earn for menial tasks that are not worth or impossible to ship overseas. A feudal system in which the wealthy elite 1% are analogous to the kings of the Middle Ages and Corporate CEOS fulfill the slots of Manorial Lords.
We are well on our way to this feudalism. Many young people finding no other employment available have pledged themselves as Knights in the Service of the corportions just as the knights of William the Conqueror, Richard the Lioinhearted, and John I did.
A first step in ending and preventing a further slide into serfdom is to begin calling the Ryan Document what it really is. An open declaration of cutural war.
August 20, 2012 12:30pm
If Paul Ryan wants to know what's in his budget, then he'll ask the billionaire Kochroaches.