The Spending Scam
by
Ron Paul
Recently
by Ron Paul: The
Fed’s Funny Money
This evening
Congress is asked to vote for a bill that claims to reduce spending
in the future, thereby accepting the fiction that legislation passed
today somehow can control Congress in the future. The fate of legislation
like Gramm-Rudman-Hollings in 1985 and the 1997 Balanced Budget
Act prove the fallacy that laws passed today somehow will restrain
congressional spending in the future.
More recently,
I would remind my colleagues that the legislation creating the Medicare
Part D prescription drug plan contained language requesting congressional
action to control Medicare costs when program expenditures reached
a certain trigger. When this trigger was reached, Congress
simply passed legislation delaying the date at which Congress would
have to implement the cost controls supposedly mandated by the original
bill.
The claim that
spending cuts in this bill equal the amount by which it increases
the debt ceiling also is mistaken. First, as explained above, it
is highly unlikely that Congress will abide by these caps in the
future. Second, an immediate $1 trillion increase in borrowing authority
does not equal a $1 trillion cut if that cut is phased in over ten
years. To pretend otherwise totally ignores the time value of money,
not to mention the inevitable erosion of the purchasing power of
the U.S. dollar as the Federal Reserve continues desperately to
try to breathe life into the stagnating economy via QE 3,4,5,6,
etc.
Mr. Speaker,
even if Congress adheres to all the spending caps of this bill,
spending still will not be reduced. This is because the draconian
cuts contained in this bill are not really reductions in spending
at allinstead the bill merely reduces future spending increases
already baked into the Congressional Budget Offices
baseline budget forecasts!
Perhaps the
most disturbing aspect of this bill is that it disenfranchises the
majority of Congress by denying them the chance for meaningful participation
in the crucial areas of entitlement and tax reform. It proposes
to cede power to draft legislation to a special commission, hand-picked
by the House and Senate leadership. We can stand assured that such
leaders will pick members to serve on the commission who promote
the same goals as the congressional leaders themselves!
The legislation
produced by this commission will be considered via a fast-track
procedure, where Members will not have the opportunity to offer
any amendments. Approval of the recommendations of the Super
Congress is tied to yet another debt ceiling increase. This
guarantees that Members will face tremendous pressure to vote for
whatever comes out of this commission-- even if it includes tax
increases.
Of
course, Mr. Speaker, this commission's mandate does not allow it
to suggest cutting one penny of the trillions spent on internventionist
wars and overseas adventurism.
Mr. Speaker,
to those who say Congress is behaving irresponsibly if it fails
to raise the debt limit, I must strongly disagree. Raising the debt
limit may protect the credit rating applied to our Treasury debt
in the short term, but in the long term it sends a terrible message
to bond markets. It signals those markets that Washington intends
to continue borrowing and spending as usual, and it is precisely
this lack of serious austerity planning that will drive interest
rates higher. Unless we act now to control spending, potential purchasers
of our bond debt will soon demand a much higher premium to offset
the very obvious risk that they will be repaid in highly depreciated
dollars.
It is time
to tear up the federal credit card and implement large spending
cuts now, starting with overseas expenditures and unconstitutional
bureaucracies. This will not only lead us to a balanced budget,
but more importantly it will restore freedom and prosperity to the
American people.
See
the Ron Paul File
July
28, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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