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If a deficit falls forest ...


THE only thing more depressing than the fiscal news from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) is responsible for economic forecasting and fiscal policy analysis, scorekeeeping, cost projections, and an Annual Report on the Federal Budget. The office also underdakes special budget-related studies at the request of Congress.  is that its report will produce no political earthquake.

First, the White House itself admits the deficit this year will reach $427 billion, a new record--or, I should say, another new record, coming on the heels of last year's record $412 billion. We'll hit this new mark thanks to a fresh $80 billion in cash for Iraq, which pushes the three-year total for this war toward $300 billion. That's more than the inflation-adjusted cost America incurred to fight World War I, and it's closing in on the cost of the Korean War Korean War, conflict between Communist and non-Communist forces in Korea from June 25, 1950, to July 27, 1953. At the end of World War II, Korea was divided at the 38th parallel into Soviet (North Korean) and U.S. (South Korean) zones of occupation. .

But the CBO's long-term forecast of $855 billion in deficits over the next decade dramatically understates the red ink red ink Health administration A popular term for financial losses. Cf in the Black.  poised to flow. That's because arcane rules require the CBO CBO

See: Collateralized Bond Obligation.
 to assume that (1) no additional money will be spent in Iraq or Afghanistan, that (2) President Bush's tax cuts will soon expire (though he's pushing the GOP-controlled Congress to make them permanent), and that (3) the increasing bite of the alternative minimum tax will not be addressed (though both parties vow to act).

Add up these and a few less shocking but still impressive shenanigans shenanigans
Noun, pl

Informal

1. mischief or nonsense

2. trickery or deception [origin unknown]
 and you end up with deficits that top $5 trillion in the next l0 years. If Bush proposes to borrow the cash to transition part of Social Security into private accounts, add another $200 billion or so in extra deficits each year.

But how could a path so obviously irresponsible not be broadly understood and inspire public demands to end the madness? Here are my theories:

* Media "objectivity." You know the drill. Bush says, as he did at last week's press conference, that he's on track to cut the deficit in half. Democrats say, no, he's actually on track to bankrupt the country. By stenographically reporting both sides (with any edifying ed·i·fy  
tr.v. ed·i·fied, ed·i·fy·ing, ed·i·fies
To instruct especially so as to encourage intellectual, moral, or spiritual improvement.
 context buried only where wonks will find it), the press makes people think the truth must lie somewhere in the middle.

* Democratic fear. Democrats are afraid to utter this truth, which is why Republicans have them in a box. Democrats are probably even too scared to do their duty and insist that Bush pay for the next $80 billion for Iraq by repealing tax cuts for the best-off. After all, they saw how well that worked for the hapless John Kerry Editing of this page by unregistered or newly registered users is currently disabled due to vandalism. , who tightly voted for his plan to pay lot our own wars today and against Bush's plan to slip last year's $87 billion bill to our kids.

* Republican brazenness. The power of the GOP's "strategic irresponsibility" is underappreciated. Aping Richard Nixon, who told aides he didn't mind if the North Vietnamese and the Russians worried about whether he was perhaps a madman, the Bushies don't mind spooking markets with record debt on the eve On the Eve (Накануне in Russian) is the third novel by famous Russian writer Ivan Turgenev, best known for his short stories and the novel Fathers and Sons.  of the boomers' retirement, or baldly putting out plans that don't come close to adding up. Reagan never paid a price for fiscal recklessness, they reckon. Neither will we.

These forces conspire con·spire  
v. con·spired, con·spir·ing, con·spires

v.intr.
1. To plan together secretly to commit an illegal or wrongful act or accomplish a legal purpose through illegal action.

2.
 to prevent the public from grasping that the White House's fiscal policy is awful and reckless. The Democratic critique is discounted as "political." And the press won't push it.

It may take a new force, a la Ross Perot, to inject much-needed sanity here. We need a massive (and creative) public education campaign by trusted figures who can teach enough of us the facts. They're not that hard to understand.

Matt Miller, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress The Center for American Progress is a progressive American political policy research and advocacy organization. Its website describes it as "...a nonpartisan research and educational institute dedicated to promoting a strong, just and free America that ensures opportunity for all. , is the author of "The Two Percent Solution: Fixing America's Problems in Ways Liberals and Conservatives Can Love."
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Title Annotation:budget policy
Comment:If a deficit falls forest ...(budget policy)
Author:Miller, Matt
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Article Type:Column
Geographic Code:1U9CA
Date:Jan 31, 2005
Words:598
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