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Low budget: feeling blue and seeing red over a free-spending administration. (Rant).


IF MITCH DANIELS, recently departed director of the Office of Management and Budget The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), formerly the Bureau of the Budget, is an agency of the federal government that evaluates, formulates, and coordinates management procedures and program objectives within and among departments and agencies of the Executive Branch.  and the putative fiscal conservative on President Bush's economic team, succeeds in his ambition to become governor of Indiana, grateful Hoosiers might want to send thanks to the people who made it all possible--the taxpayers of New Jersey.

No, New Jerseyans haven't been canvassing Muncie on Daniels' behalf. They've shown their support with Yankee greenbacks. If not for the Garden State's winning combination of generous giving to and modest expectations from Washington, D.C., Daniels couldn't have enjoyed his brief, troubled tenure in the nation's capital.

New Jersey, as fans of the Tax Foundation's annual report "Federal Tax Burdens and Expenditures by State" know, is the nation's most charitable donor. The report details federal taxes paid by each individual state, weighing that against the amount of money each state gets back--in procurements, salaries, services, and walking around money--from Washington. For every buck. New Jersey throws into Uncle Sam's hat, it gets back a mere 67 cents. If that makes the Garden State a loser in the tax-and-spend sweepstakes, it's good news for New Mexico, which takes in $2.08 for every dollar it pays, making it the overall winner. Of course, in an empire, all roads lead to Rome: The District of Columbia District of Columbia, federal district (2000 pop. 572,059, a 5.7% decrease in population since the 1990 census), 69 sq mi (179 sq km), on the east bank of the Potomac River, coextensive with the city of Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States).  outdoes all the states, paying itself a whopping $5.73 on the dollar.

How does Daniels figure in? By helping to up federal spending more than 30 percent in the first two years of the Bush administration. The war on terrorism Terrorist acts and the threat of Terrorism have occupied the various law enforcement agencies in the U.S. government for many years. The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, as amended by the usa patriot act  had something to do with this increase, but it doesn't account for all of it. According to the Heritage Foundation, Bush's first two budgets took nondefense discretionary spending from $320 billion to $421 billion--$22 billion of that in the form of pure pork attachments to spending bills. Who can forget 2002's farm bill, which will raise and disburse dis·burse  
tr.v. dis·bursed, dis·burs·ing, dis·burs·es
To pay out, as from a fund; expend. See Synonyms at spend.



[Obsolete French desbourser, from Old French desborser
 $180 billion over 10 years?

Nor has war-related spending been fully war-related on Daniels' watch. To give just one example: $117 million from this spring's $80 billion emergency spending package for the war on Iraq went to help the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Noun 1. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration - an agency in the Department of Commerce that maps the oceans and conserves their living resources; predicts changes to the earth's environment; provides weather reports and forecasts floods and hurricanes and  build the Polar-Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System. Indiana voters might even want to grill their gubernatorial hopeful on why he didn't do more for them during his D.C. tenure. According to the Tax Foundation, the Crossroads of America "The Crossroads of America" is a nickname given to the state of Indiana as it, and, more specifically, the city of Indianapolis is the hub for several major Interstate highways that criss-cross the state, connecting Hoosiers to the rest of the United States.  doesn't break even in federal spending, getting back just 99 cents on the dollar.

It's hard not to notice how closely the Tax Foundation's map of tax-and-spend losers and winners tracks the celebrated map of "blue" and "red" America--which shows, on a county by county basis, the voting for, respectively, candidates Gore and Bush in 2000. I am not claiming President Bush is rewarding his own voters (an implausible claim, since the patterns of federal receipts and largess lar·gess also lar·gesse  
n.
1.
a. Liberality in bestowing gifts, especially in a lofty or condescending manner.

b. Money or gifts bestowed.

2. Generosity of spirit or attitude.
 have been established for decades). If anything, the preponderance of blue in coastal areas, along the Mississippi, and on stretches of the Ohio River leads me to suspect the real division in America is that Bush voters don't like water. Nor am I a supporter of the Democratic Party; in fact, I'd gladly make Bush President-for-Life in gratitude for that $300 check he sent me a few years back. But I am a life-long blue stater stat·er 1  
n.
A resident of a particular state or type of state. Often used in combination: Lone Star staters; farm staters; the struggle between slave staters and free staters.

Noun 1.
 (and a born-and-bred New Jerseyan), and I can't help fuming fuming /fum·ing/ (fum´ing) emitting a visible vapor.

fum·ing
adj.
Producing or emitting smoke or vapor, as for certain concentrated nitric, sulfuric, and hydrochloric acids.
 that heartland Americans-everywhere praised for their rural commonsense, strong work ethic, and skepticism of big government-are picking my pocket.

Having compared states, parties, and regions, let me now compare decades. The 1990s saw a vast creation of wealth in the United States This article is about the economic concept of wealth. For a discussion of affluence, see Affluence in the United States.
Wealth in the United States is commonly measured in terms of net worth which is the sum of all assets, including home equity minus all
, some of it chimerical chi·mer·i·cal   also chi·mer·ic
adj.
1. Created by or as if by a wildly fanciful imagination; highly improbable.

2. Given to unrealistic fantasies; fanciful.

3.
, but most of it real, and almost all of it centered in urban areas. What we're seeing in the '00s is a garden-variety spending spree. But it's also a Mugabe-esque redistribution of wealth, from hard-working achievers to underperforming layabouts. And this time, it's coming to you courtesy of the party of fiscal responsibility.

Tim Cavanaugh (tcavanaugh@reason.com) is reason's Web editor.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Cavanaugh, Tim
Publication:Reason
Date:Jul 1, 2003
Words:671
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