The problem that’s not going away.

AP Photo/ Evan Vucci

Late last year, President Trump told members of his cabinet to seek a five percent reduction in the budgets of their respective departments. Do the math on that directive and you come up with $70 billion. Good for President Trump. That’s real money.

Except that it really isn’t. Not when you’re running budget deficits in excess of $900 billion. Cutting the budget deficit by less than eight percent is not going to have any meaningful impact on the reckoning that is surely coming if America doesn’t address its rapidly expanding debt.

For eight years in this space we were quite critical of the Obama administration on this subject. You may recall that candidate Barack Obama called President George W. Bush “unpatriotic” for the rate at which Bush had expanded the debt. Said Obama:

The problem is, is [sic] that the way Bush has done it over the last eight years is to take out a credit card from the Bank of China, in the name of our children, driving up our national debt from $5 trillion – the first 42 presidents – [sic] number 43 added $4 trillion by his lonesome so that we now have over $9 trillion of debt. [snip] It’s unpatriotic.”

Well, that turned out to be mere chump change. During his tenure, Barack Obama racked up more debt than all presidents that preceded him combined – including Bush 43. Mr. Obama left office with the national debt at a staggering $20.2 trillion.

But to be entirely fair to Barack Obama, it’s necessary to extend criticism to Donald Trump. Start with the debt that he inherited from Obama and add to it the $2.5 trillion that it is now estimated that he will add by the end of 2019. Math is math and when you do it, you find that President Trump is racking up debt at a pace only slightly less than that of his predecessor.

There are two unassailable truths about all of this. First, at some time in the future, the debt is going to bite us in the you-know-what and it’s going to bite hard. Paul Volcker said as much 30-odd years ago when he was fed chairman. The fact that we remain prosperous and so far not bitten will only serve to make the biting that much harder when it happens.

And second, neither cutting department level spending nor taxing the “rich” will do squat to reduce trillion-dollar budget deficits. You could cut department level spending by half and not make a meaningful dent in the shortfalls.

Significantly changing Social Security and Medicare has to be on the table and so far, the president has shown little interest in addressing either. The day is coming when that will have to change.

It is entirely possible that absent doing so, the president’s very significant economic and policy accomplishments will be forgotten by history – to be replaced by a very harsh verdict on his dereliction in not addressing what is certainly an existential threat to our republic.

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Paul Gleiser

Paul L. Gleiser is president of ATW Media, LLC, licensee of radio stations KTBB 97.5 FM/AM600, 92.1 The TEAM FM in Tyler-Longview, Texas.

You may also like...

7 Responses

  1. Mike Gauthier says:

    All presidents in the last 40 years have shamelessly increased the national debt. It ismply cannot go on forever. It is one of the greatest problems in this country and it will eventually cause the economy to come crashing down. It is the greatest failure of modern day presidents and their administrations.

  2. Buddy Saunders says:

    Sadly, spending beyond our means will continue because we citizens–too many of us–want it that way. We no longer understand simple economics and we refuse to give up all the things so many receive from government, most of it now paid for with borrowing. It seems almost certain that the debit problem, brought to a head by galloping inflation and ending in the train going over the cliff, is the thing that will “resolve” the problem. The resolution will not then be pleasant.

  3. Holland Cooke says:

    Wanna see people trying to yawn with their mouths closed? Talk about “demographics.”

    When Social Security began people didn’t live as long; and when WW2 ended, we Baby Boomed.

    Not as fun as The Blame Game: “demographics.”

    And with the Military Industrial Complex Ike warned of drooling over the looming Venezuela fiasco the toteboard will rev up even more.

    • Buddy Saunders says:

      Do you ever have a point to make on anything? Or do you just enjoy being our village idiot?

      • Holland Cooke says:

        Both, I suppose.

        RE “point:” If the math I’ve referenced eludes you, you’ll find it increasingly difficult to rationalize debt and deficit.

        RE “village idiot:” Your manners aside: Am I taking Paul’s “You Tell Me” too literally? If where-it-SAYS “Comment,” it MEANS “Agree,” I should probably not weigh-in here.

        But Paul will continue to be welcome in my forum:
        https://youtu.be/hB8ViRvBEtc

      • L Miles says:

        Buddy, given your observation at hand, I think it is obvious that nattering nabobs of negativism find their necessary notoriety by being nasty nags that seldom have anything positive or constructive to contribute. We, on the other hand, suffer from the inability to recognize that we are just not smart enough to be impressed by their deeply obscure brilliance.

Leave a Reply to Holland Cooke Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *