Mattea Kramer
Tom Dispatch / Op-Ed
Published: Monday 1 October 2012
“Think of these as five hard truths that will determine the future of this country.”

Tough Talk for America

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Five big things will decide what this country looks like next year and in the 20 years to follow, but here’s a guarantee for you: you’re not going to hear about them in the upcoming presidential debates. Yes, there will be questions and answers focused on deficits, taxes, Medicare, the Pentagon, and education, to which you already more or less know the responses each candidate will offer.  What you won’t get from either Mitt Romney or Barack Obama is a little genuine tough talk about the actual state of reality in these United States of ours.  And yet, on those five subjects, a little reality would go a long way, while too little reality (as in the debates to come) is a surefire recipe for American decline.

So here’s a brief guide to what you won’t hear this Wednesday or in the other presidential and vice-presidential debates later in the month.  Think of these as five hard truths that will determine the future of this country.

1. Immediate deficit reduction will wipe out any hope of economic recovery: These days, it’s fashionable for any candidate to talk about how quickly he’ll reduce the federal budget deficit, which will total around $1.2 trillion in fiscal 2012.  And you’re going to hear talk about the Simpson-Bowles deficit reduction plan and more like it on Wednesday.  But the hard truth of the matter is that deep deficit reduction anytime soon will be a genuine disaster.  Think of it this way: If you woke up tomorrow and learned that Washington had solved the deficit crisis and you’d lost your job, would you celebrate? Of course not. And yet, any move to immediately reduce the deficit does increase the likelihood that you will lose your job.

When the government cuts spending, it lays off workers and cancels orders for all sorts of goods and services that would generate income for companies in the private sector. Those companies, in turn, lay off workers, and the negative effects ripple through the economy. This isn’t atomic science.  It’s pretty basic stuff, even if it’s evidently not suitable material for a presidential debate.  The nonpartisan Congressional Research Service predicted in a September report, for example, that any significant spending cuts in the near-term would contribute to an economic contraction. In other words, slashing deficits right now will send us ever deeper into the Great Recession from which, at best, we’ve scarcely emerged.

Champions of immediate deficit reduction are likely to point out that unsustainable deficits aren’t good for the economy. And that’s true -- in the long run. Washington must indeed plan for smaller deficits in the future. That will, however, be a lot easier to accomplish when the economy is healthier, since government spending declines when fewer people qualify for assistance, and tax revenues expand when the jobless go back to work. So it makes sense to fix the economy first. The necessity for near-term recovery spending paired with long-term deficit reduction gets drowned out when candidates pack punchy slogans into flashes of primetime TV.

2.  Taxes are at their lowest point in more than half a century, preventing investment in and the maintenance of America’s most basic resources: Hard to believe?  It’s nonetheless a fact.By now, it’s a tradition for candidates to compete on just how much further they’d lower taxes and whether they’ll lower them for everyone or just everyone but the richest of the rich. That’s a super debate to listen to, if you’re into fairy tales.  It’s not as thrilling if you consider that Americans now enjoy the lightest tax burden in more than five decades, and it happens to come with a hefty price tag on an item labeled “the future.”  There is no way the U.S. can maintain a world-class infrastructure -- we’re talking levees, highways, bridges, you name it -- and a public education system that used to be the envy of the world, plus many other key domestic priorities, on the taxes we’re now paying.

Anti-tax advocates insist that we should cut taxes even more to boost a flagging economy -- an argument that hits the news cycle nearly every hour and that will shape the coming TV “debate.” As the New York Times recently noted, however, tax cuts might have been effective in giving the economy a lift decades ago when tax rates were above 70%.  (And no, that’s not a typo, that’s what your parents and grandparents paid without much grumbling.)  With effective tax rates around 14% for Mitt Romney and many others, further cuts won’t hasten job creation, just the hollowing out of public investment in everything from infrastructure to education. Right now, the negative effects of tax increases on the most well-off would be small -- read: not a disaster for “job creators” -- and those higher rates would bring in desperately-needed revenue. Tax increases for middle-class Americans should arrive when the economy is stronger.

Right now, the situation is clear: we’re simply not paying enough to fund the basic ingredients of prosperity from highways and higher education to medical research and food safety. Without those funds, this country’s future won’t be pretty.

3.  Neither the status quo nor a voucher system will protect Medicare (or any other kind of health care) in the long run: When it comes to Medicare,Mitt Romney has proposed a premium-support program that would allow seniors the option of buying private insurance. President Obama wants to keep Medicare more or less as it is for retirees. Meanwhile, the ceaseless rise in health-care costs is eating up the wages of regular Americans and the federal budget.  Health care now accounts for a staggering 24% of all federal spending, up from 7% less than 40 years ago. Governor Romney’s plan would shift more of those costs onto retirees, according to David Cutler, a health economist at Harvard, while President Obama says the federal government will continue to pick up the tab. Neither of them addresses the underlying problem.

Here’s reality: Medicare could be significantly protected by cutting out waste. Our health system is riddled with unnecessary tests and procedures, as well as poorly coordinated care for complex health problems. This country spent $2.6 trillion on health care in 2010, and some estimates suggest that a staggering 30% of that is wasted. Right now, our health system rewards quantity, not quality, but it doesn’t have to be that way. Instead of paying for each test and procedure, Medicare could pay for performance and give medical professionals a strong incentive to provide more efficient and coordinated care. President Obama’s health law actually pilot tests such an initiative. But that’s another taboo topic this election season, so he scarcely mentions it. Introducing such change into Medicare and the rest of our health system would save the federal government tens of billions of dollars annually.  It would truly preserve Medicare for future generations, and it would improve the affordability of health coverage for everyone under 65 as well.  Too bad it’s not even up for discussion.

4.  The U.S. military is outrageously expensive and yet poorly tailored to the actual threats to U.S. national security: Candidates from both parties pledge to protect the Pentagon from cuts, or even, in the case of the Romney team, to increase the already staggering military budget. But in a country desperate for infrastructure, education, and other funding, funneling endless resources to the Pentagon actually weakens “national security.” Defense spending is already mind-numbingly large: if all U.S. military and security spending were its own country, it would have the 19th largest economy in the world, ahead of Saudi Arabia, Taiwan, and Switzerland. Whether you’re counting aircraft carriers, weapons systems, or total destructive power, it’s absurdly overmatched against the armed forces of the rest of the world, individually or in combination. A couple of years ago, then-Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates gave a speech in which he detailed that overmatch. A highlight: “The U.S. operates 11 large carriers, all nuclear powered. In terms of size and striking power, no other country has even one comparable ship.” China recently acquired one carrier that won’t be fully functional for some time, if ever -- while many elected officials in this country would gladly build a twelfth.

But you’ll hear none of this in the presidential debates. Perhaps the candidates will mention that obsolete, ineffective, and wildly expensive weapons systems could be cut, but that’s a no-brainer. The problem is: it wouldn’t put a real dent in national defense spending.  Currently almost one-fifth of every dollar spent by the federal government goes to the military.  On average, Americans, when polled, say that they would like to see military funding cut by 18%.

Instead, most elected officials vow to pour limitless resources into more weapons systems of questionable efficacy, and of which the U.S. already owns more than the rest of the world combined.  Count on one thing: military spending will not go down as long as the U.S. is building up a massive force in the Persian Gulf, sending Marines to Darwin, Australia, and special ops units to Africa and the Middle East, running drones out of the Seychelles Islands, and “pivoting” to Asia.  If the U.S. global mission doesn’t downsize, neither will the Pentagon budget -- and that’s a hit on America’s future that no debate will take up this month.

5.  The U.S. education system is what made this country prosperous in the twentieth century -- but no longer: Perhaps no issue is more urgent than this, yet for all the talk of teacher’s unions and testing, real education programs, ideas that will matter, are nonexistent this election season. During the last century, the best education system in the world allowed this country to grow briskly and lift standards of living. Now, from kindergarten to college, public education is chronically underfunded. Scarcely 2% of the federal budget goes to education, and dwindling public investment means students pay higher tuitions and fall ever deeper into debt. Total student debt surpassed $1 trillion this year and it’s growing by the month, with the average debt burden for a college graduate over $24,000. That will leave many of those graduates on a treadmill of loan repayment for most or all of their adult lives.

Renewed public investment in education -- from pre-kindergarten touniversity -- would pay handsome dividends for generations.  But you aren’t going to hear either candidate or their vice-presidential running mates proposing the equivalent of a GI Bill for the rest of us or even significant new investment in education.  And yet that’s a recipe for and a guarantee of American decline. 

Ironically, those in Washington arguing for urgent deficit reduction claim that we’ve got to do it “for the kids,” that we must stop saddling our grandchildren with mountains of federal debt. But if your child turns 18 and finds her government running a balanced budget in an America that's hollowed out, an America where she has no chance of paying for a college education, will she celebrate? You don’t need an economist to answer that one.

See Tom Engelhardt's response here.



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ABOUT Mattea Kramer

Mattea Kramer is a research analyst at the National Priorities Project. She co-wrote the soon-to-be-published book A People’s Guide to the Federal Budget, and co-hosts weekly two-minute Budget Brief videos on YouTube.

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15 comments on "Tough Talk for America "

rjdonley

October 04, 2012 8:10pm

I am a depression baby born in 1925. That depression did not end until WW Two started. After Pearl Harbor we spent money like a drunken sailor and taxes increased to nearly 100% for those in the top bracket. We spent money not only for the war effort but for the GI bill which which gave all GIs a chance for a good education, to purchase a home etc. We got service bonuses which help us with education, helped me obtain a Model A Ford ($200.00) for personal transportation. Also President Truman started the Marshal Plan whhich aided our Allies to rebuild their war dammaged countries. Paying taxes to pay for all this was almost considered a patriotic duty. The USA emerged from all this as the greatest ever. What happened to our patriotism. Ask not what my country can do for me; ask what I can do for my country attitude would go a long way in putting our country back on track. Where is our leadership? President Truman left the Presidency with very little money; President Obama will leave as a multimillionare.

Clay C

October 02, 2012 2:41pm

To Mark Pickens

Neither of the presidential candidates “actually represents” all of my views, which is probably the case for all of the people reading this article, and I doubt that any minor party candidate does either. It is folly to think that any party or candidate will. Your advice would apply to alternative parties as well, since a single vote will never decide a nationwide election or even add significantly to a third party‘s corner of the vote total. So, essentially we should not vote, according to your philosophy. It is one that is being advocated now by some religious leaders who are telling their followers to stay home on election day. The individual act may have little impact but combined can be a potent force, which is the most important principle of democracy. There is no irresistible force driving Obama to another term, nothing that predestines him to win the election, and if political tides change, and enough people decide not to vote or to vote for an untenable third party candidate we might find Romney as president on election day. Especially if enough people follow your advice. Everyone has to weigh the possibilities and act accordingly, but saying we shouldn’t consider voting for Obama in order to prevent Romney from winning is advising us to abandon the logic of the political process and the role we play in it.

I will have to say, Mark, that you have a very simplistic view of government and its function and relation to society. You characterize private industry as more efficient, but administrative costs for the large government programs such as medicare are less than those for the private sector which spends massive amounts on advertising, lobbying and executive pay. The private security forces that the US contracts in the middle east cost much more than our own military forces and come without the government control needed for their tasks. Much of the government income ultimately flows back out as projects that do require contracts based on competitive bidding. But the most important thing to recognize is that government is the only effective counterbalance against a capitalist system that will inflict severe damage on a society and a country if left unrestrained. Ayn Rand might have mouthed some platitudes about equal rights, but she was basically an advocate for the law of the jungle; that greed does and should drive us, and the powerful have the right to take what they want. It is a philosophy for the wealthy, and it has produced disastrous results both in the financial health of America and in the coarsening of society. Government has failed in its role of protecting against the excesses of private industry but can rebound. It should be reinforced and strengthened rather than cut back for it has a truly important function in curbing the inequalities that are dragging the country down, inequalities that the richest and most powerful have a vital interest in maintaining and increasing.

Autarch

October 02, 2012 8:24pm

Clay C:

The purpose of government should be to insure people honor contracts and don't otherwise violate individual rights. If you see that as oversimplification, I guess we'll never agree.

If the U.S. military was pulled back to behind our own borders (and drastically scaled back), there would be no purpose in taxpayer-funded "private security forces."

With enough creative bookkeeping, it's easy to make administrative costs of any large government program look efficient. Start by assigning costs elsewhere that properly belong to it.

I was a U.S. Army Sergeant who served from 1966 to 1969. Every unit I was assigned to was drastically overstaffed. I also worked for a government contractor for a year and found the same to be true.

A friend of mine made what he considered to be a reasonable bid for a government contract, and then proceeded to lose his shirt. He thought he was bidding on a normal job, not realizing the bureaucratic hurdles he should have factored into that bid.

He told me that if he ever bid on a government contract again, it would be at a far higher than normal rate.

As taxpayers, we pay those disguised extra costs, which I suspect exceed costs of "lobbying, advertising, and executive pay."

Who expects efficiency when "customers" are forced to pay for the service?

Anyone familiar with Rand's work, realizes she did far more than "mouth platitudes" about equal rights. How does advocating voluntary exchange amount to "law of the jungle?"

How is my greed a problem for you if I choose to satisfy that greed by offering value for value? The people we should be concerned about are those who exchange no-value for value. In other words, thieves, the very people Rand abhorred.

The people who control government do not see it having a role of "protecting against the excesses of private industry." Government uses power to suppress competition, doing so at the behest of the wealthy class. Wealthy people will always have motivation and means (lobbying and campaign contributions) to bend government to its will. The inevitable result is transfer of wealth from us to them.

The solution is to reduce power of government. The less power it has, the less valuable the favors it can bestow.

Giving more power to the State, as you advocate, will give the wealthy more tools to enrich themselves at our expense. I think it delusional to believe you can seize control of that power from the wealthy. They see you coming.

You don't force the water of corruption out of the swimming pool of government by blasting it with a high-pressure fire hose. (Hey. I'm open to a better analogy.)

Your use of the term "capitalism" is a textbook example of why I've stopped using it. I prefer "depoliticized market," meaning one in which decisions are made on an economic, rather than political, basis.

Mark Read Pickens

yellowdogdemo

October 01, 2012 9:42pm

A vote for anyone but Obama is a vote for Romney. If you don't vote, that's a vote for Romney, too.

Autarch

October 02, 2012 5:43am

YellowDogDemo:

If your individual vote decided the election, I would concede your point, but you know it won't. The result of the election will be exactly the same, whether or not you vote, and regardless of how you vote.

If you disagree with Obama's policies, yet vote for him because you think Romney is worse, your vote is wasted unless your vote decides the election.

Instead, you could vote for a minor party candidate who actually represents your views (vote your conscience). If your purpose is to steer government toward different policies, and you don't have money for lobbyists, an inexpensive way to support what you actually believe in is to vote for a candidate who wants what you want.

Mark Read Pickens

Boris Badenov's picture
Boris Badenov

October 01, 2012 9:17pm

But ... Government isn't a business, as the Ayn Rand believers want us to believe?

Autarch

October 02, 2012 5:42am

Boris Badenov:

Ayn Rand believed in equality of rights; governments believe in inequality of rights. (People controlling government have rights not possessed by those controlled by government.)

Mark Read Pickens

Autarch

October 01, 2012 2:53pm

Mattea Kramer has fallen victim to a rather unsophisticated fallacy. Almost two centuries ago, Claude Frederic Bastiat popularized an elementary concept which all competent economists realize: One must consider not only what is seen; one must consider the unseen, as well.

She sees jobs supported by government spending, yet is blind to jobs that don't exist because of government spending.

How is it possible to tax people without simultaneously reducing their spending power? How is it possible to create new money without bidding prices higher and simultaneously reducing consumer spending power? How is it possible to repay borrowed money without simultaneously reducing taxpayers' or consumers' spending power?

Government spending necessarily transfers capital from people who have to compete (taxpayers and consumers) to those who don't have to compete (those funded by government spending), meaning from relatively more efficient hands to relatively less efficient ones.

What incentive to people not facing competition have to be efficient? How does less efficiency not translate into fewer employment opportunities?

It is a legitimate point that an abrupt reduction in government spending would require a more severe adjustment; it is not a legitimate point that government spending increases employment in the long run.

This isn't atomic science. Thinking we can get something for nothing is childish.

Mark Read Pickens

True Progressive

October 01, 2012 4:51pm

Are you from Romney's campaign? You sound like it, parroting his "47%" viewpoints, although you dress it up a bit from "makers" and "takers" to "those who compete vs. those who don't." Same bullshit nevertheless. Man, you've got some nerve stating that the author is "unsophisticated." Instead of focusing on quacks like "Claude Frederic Bastiat," go back and read basic history. Both employment and prosperity follow from government spending, and both contract when that spending is withdrawn. Historical fact.

Autarch

October 02, 2012 5:43am

True Progressive:

You want government to get credit for jobs created by the money they spend, yet shirk blame for jobs lost from where they take that money.

If "stimulus" spending actually worked, why be chintzy? Wouldn't ten times as much spending create ten times as much employment?

For the record, I find Mitt Romney to be as loathsome as Barack Obama. I'm voting for Gary Johnson.

Mark Read Pickens

Curtis Smay

October 01, 2012 12:57pm

There is nothing wrong with our economy , only our leaders are the problem .But an even bigger problem is the nominees on the ballot are not qualified either. Between a rock and a hard spot.

Autarch

October 01, 2012 3:00pm

You might consider not wasting a vote for either of the major party candidates, since neither will change policy. Personally, I'm voting for Gary Johnson, the Libertarian Party candidate. The more votes he gets, the more incentive the major parties have to adopt those ideas, in order to lure those votes back.

It worked in the thirties. Social Security, Welfare, and Unemployment Insurance were introduced into the political debate by the Socialist Party. Once Socialists got enough votes, Democrats and Republicans co-opted their ideas and made them part of mainstream political thinking.

Mark Read Pickens

Ron in NM

October 01, 2012 7:57pm

So, you think voting for either of the major candidates, one of whom will GET ELECTED is a waste, but voting for a candidate who has no chance, is not a waste? You have curious standards to judge waste by.

The more votes Gary Johnson gets, the more votes will be wasted. Look, Gary Johnson was our governor (in NM), so I know about him. The only thing I agreed with him on was the tragic waste of the War on Drugs.

For Johnson votes to have any chance of influencing the policies of the two major parties, there would have to be LOTS of them, and you know that's not going to happen. Hence, a vote for Johnson is a wasted vote. It won't protect Social Security or Medicare or women's rights, or any of the social programs enacted by the Democratic party. A vote for Johnson will just be a "statement."

With SS and Medicare being threatened, and Global Warming producing more extreme weather conditions every year, and with billions of dollars trying to buy the election for the Republicans, 2 years after the Citizens United decision, you want to "take time out" and make a statement with your vote, and hope that someday, somehow, your vote for this largely unknown minority candidate is going to make a change for the better?

Gee, and I thought this was a critical election this year, more critical than any I've seen in my life, and I'm retired, after a lifetime of working (and voting). But according to you, nothing is more important than making a statement. Holy cow, I guess it takes a brain like you to enlighten us.

Autarch

October 02, 2012 5:44am

Ron in NM:

Can you name any major election decided by one vote? The result of this election will be exactly the same, regardless of how or if you vote.

The only way to change policy is to convince the people who actually win elections that votes hinge on policy decisions. The best way to do that is for minor parties to get enough votes to get major party attention.

The Socialist Party never won any election that mattered, yet the programs they introduced and pushed -- Social Security, Welfare, and Unemployment Insurance -- became entrenched in mainstream politics. (I believe those are all terrible ideas, but do admire Socialists for keeping true to their vision, twisted though it is from my perspective.)

Whether or not Gary Johnson gets "lots of votes" largely hinges on how close the election is. If seen as a squeaker, he will get relatively few votes. If the election is seen as a blowout, his vote total will soar.

In 1978, Ed Clark got 5.7% of the vote for Governor of California, an astounding figure. This happened because Jerry Brown had an overwhelming lead over Evelle Younger. (As I recall, the Field Poll put Brown about 20% ahead of Younger one week prior to the election.)

In other words, since people considered the election already decided, they felt free to vote for someone who could not win.

Mark Read Pickens

jeltez42

October 01, 2012 11:09am

God forbid an investor lose even a penny. It is time to put risk back into investing and stop insuring that everyone with a buck in the game wins 5 bucks.

Allowing the US system to be a for-profit system begs for waste, fraud, and ultra low quality. Health care and all of its related goods and services are a commodity that is bought and sold under Wal-mart retailing principles if only the prices consumers of health care could be Wal-mart-like. There is a disconnect somewhere.

Will this year be the year when Americans stand up and shout We CAN handle the truth by voting every incumbent out of office and putting true independents in? Recovery is not going to be all peaches and cream. There is going to be pain, job cuts, but if we all stand shoulder to shoulder we will get through this, and we will end up with a military that can do its job of defending our country, kids who will be the smartest in the world, and everyone will have access to quality affordable health care that actually cures rather than strings them along only to kill them financially.

It is all in our hands. The choice is ours. Keep the status quo, or vote for reality.