Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29547 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
Chairman Bill's Big Blue Book
7
8
When President Clinton's
9
budget for fiscal year 1999 came out on Feb. 2, we were all engrossed in
10
l'affaire Lewinsky and the spin the White House was putting on
11
it--right-wing conspiracy, executive privilege, Talmudic definitions of
12
adultery, and so on. Perhaps interest in that subject has now abated
13
sufficiently to allow us to turn our attention to the budget. I propose here to
14
comment not on the policy it contains but on the rhetoric with which it is
15
presented--on the spin the Clinton administration puts on its policy.
16
17
What is
18
most striking to a person who has been reading budgets for a long time is how
19
far the cult of presidential personality has progressed. In the past the budget
20
(I refer here to the main book titled Budget and not the other five
21
volumes that come with it) typically had two parts. One was the budget message
22
of the president, written in the first person and signed by the president.
23
Readers knew there was going to be a fair measure of boasting and self-serving
24
in that section. But most of the book consisted of chapters about the functions
25
of government, with such prosaic titles as "National Defense" or "Agriculture."
26
These were written in the third person, had lots of probably boring facts, and
27
one could learn a lot from them. Of course, they reflected the point of view of
28
the administration, but the reader didn't have the feeling that he was
29
constantly being urged to buy the Brooklyn Bridge. The president was scarcely
30
mentioned.
31
32
The budget still has the president's message and a section
33
organized according to the functions of government. But now, inserted between
34
these two parts is a long section--this year it's 132 pages--still pretending
35
to explain the whole thing but explaining it as having sprung full-blown from
36
the brow of the president. The section has inspirational chapter heads such as
37
"Preparing the Nation for a New American Century" and "Creating a Bright
38
American Future."
39
40
Each
41
chapter and subchapter in this section starts with a quotation from previous
42
utterances of President Clinton, set in italics and enclosed in a box. These
43
quotations are of a banality that is hard to believe. For example, we have
44
this:
45
46
47
Americans want the best
48
for our children. We want them to live out their dreams, empowered with the
49
tools they need to make the most of their lives and to build a future where
50
America remains the world's beacon of hope and freedom and opportunity. To do
51
this, we must all make improving the quality of education in America one of our
52
highest priorities.
53
54
55
There is
56
an irresistible reminder here of Chairman Mao's little red book, except Mao's
57
dicta were more pointed.
58
59
60
In these 132 pages there are, by my count, 113
61
uses of the word "president." (I include nine cases of the word "his" used in
62
close proximity to and referring to the president.) And what is the president
63
doing on these occasions? Of course, he is working and proposing and having
64
visions and making commitments. But he is not only working, he is, in some
65
instances, working "hard"--to expand health care coverage and improve the
66
nation's health, to improve education and the lives of working families, to
67
eliminate fraud in Medicare and Medicaid, and to crack down on violent youth
68
gangs.
69
70
The
71
president also has "initiatives":
72
73
The Brownfields
74
Initiative
75
76
The Water Quality
77
Initiative
78
79
The Presidential Initiative
80
to Increase Seat Belt Use Nation-wide
81
82
The President's Initiative
83
on Drugs, Driving and Youth
84
85
The President's Education
86
Technology Initiative
87
88
The President's 1997
89
Antiterrorism/Counterterrorism/Security Initiative
90
91
The President's America
92
Reads Initiative
93
94
The
95
President's Initiative on Landmines
96
97
This is
98
truly a president whose eye is on the sparrow.
99
100
Depending on your mood, this is either irritating or
101
laughable. But I cannot believe that it is helpful to the president. The
102
incredibility infects and pollutes everything else in the budget.
103
104
These
105
pages are filled to overflowing with the names of programs to be created or
106
increased. Each of these has to have a name with Capital Letters, and every
107
capital letter has to be part of an acronym. (My favorite is NEXTEA. Anyone who
108
knows what that is should win money on Ben Stein's quiz show. Actually, it
109
stands for National Economic Crossroads Transportation Efficiency Act.) The
110
mind reels reading about all these good things that are being done for us.
111
112
113
What one would like to see is some listing of
114
programs that are being reduced or not being introduced. After all, to govern
115
is to choose, and to budget is especially to choose. We cannot appreciate the
116
reason for the things that are to be done unless we can compare them with
117
things that are not to be done. Why do we have a Seat Belt Initiative and not a
118
Smoke Detector Initiative? (Maybe there is a Smoke Detector Initiative, and I
119
missed it.) True, there are some cuts in expenditures and personnel. They are
120
all the result of what we used to call minimizing waste, fraud, and abuse and
121
what is now called the Vice President's Reinventing Government Program. There
122
are no identifiable places where anyone is asked to give up anything.
123
124
Well,
125
there are two exceptions to that. The American people, especially young people,
126
are asked to give up smoking--but to go on paying hefty taxes on cigarettes. By
127
accounting maneuvers not worth describing here, this abstinence will enable the
128
federal government to increase spending on a variety of programs, through an
129
instrument modestly called the Fund for America.
130
131
The second exception is that we are to forgo using the
132
prospective budget surplus for tax cuts or expenditure increases (other than
133
those proposed by the president) "until we have a solution to the long-term
134
financing challenge facing Social Security." It is here that we have the
135
greatest need for more explanation.
136
137
The
138
formulation offered gives rise to the ridiculous table showing, for years
139
beginning in 1999, an excess of receipts over outlays, exactly balanced by an
140
item called Reserve Pending Social Security Reform, and a resulting
141
surplus/deficit that is exactly zero. By that logic we had a zero deficit every
142
year for the past 30 years, except that the "reserve" was negative.
143
144
145
Moreover, the little word "until" contains a
146
number of ambiguities. Some have interpreted it as meaning that the surplus
147
would be used to solve the financial problems of Social Security. That
148
has now been denied by the Office of Management and Budget. Which leaves open
149
the question of the president's intention for the use of the surplus after some
150
other solution, such as cutting Social Security benefits or raising payroll
151
taxes, has been found. Would we then be free to spend whatever surplus there is
152
in the unified budget? Or would we still want to apply some of that surplus to
153
reducing the federal debt accumulated during the 30 years of deficits? Could we
154
start spending it even if the discovered solution for Social Security's
155
long-run problem didn't start to have a financial impact for another 20 years?
156
In other words, is the "reserved" surplus to be part of any long-term fiscal
157
program or only a carrot to be used to induce a solution to Social Security,
158
after which the carrot can be eaten?
159
160
I raise these questions not
161
to disagree with what may be the president's program but to illustrate the
162
inadequacy of the budget as an explanation of it.
163
164
When I told a friend of my
165
problems with the budget as an explanatory document, he replied, "But you're
166
the only person who reads it." That may be true. But 15,000 copies were
167
printed.
168
169
170
171
172
173