On the Super Committee
by
Ron Paul
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This week marks
the deadline for the so-called congressional Super Committee to
meet its goal of cutting a laughably small amount of federal spending
over the next decade. In fact the Committee merely needs to cut
about $120 billion annually from the federal budget over the next
10 years to meet its modest goals, but even this paltry amount has
produced hand-wringing and hysteria on Capitol Hill. This is only
cutting proposed increases. It has nothing to do with actually cutting
anything. This shows how unserious politicians are about our very
serious debt problems.
To be fair,
however, in one sense members of the Super Committee face an impossible
task. They must, in effect, cut government spending without first
addressing the role of government in our society. They must continue
to insist the federal government can provide Social Security, Medicare,
and Medicaid benefits in the future as promised, while maintaining
our wildly interventionist foreign policy. Yet everyone knows this
is a lie.
Keep in mind
that the 2011 federal deficit alone was about $1.3 trillion, which
means the Super Committee needs to cut that much PER YEAR rather
than over a 10 year period. If Congress ever hopes to address its
debt problem, it must first stop accumulating any new debt immediately,
in 2012.
Federal revenue
likely will be about $2.3 trillion in fiscal 2012. The 2004 federal
budget was about $2.3 trillion. So Congress simply needs to adopt
the 2004 budget next year and the federal government will balance
outlays and revenue. Thats all it would take to produce a
balanced budget right now. Was the federal government really too
small just 7 years ago, in 2004? Of course not. Only Washington
hysteria would have us believe otherwise.
Yet
our Republican and Democrat friends on the Super Committee want
to take 10 years, or even 30 years, to produce a balanced budget.
Government
spending isn't just wasteful; it is often actively harmful to stated
goals. The Super Committee could simply apply 2004 spending levels
across the board and a tremendous victory for fiscal sanity would
be accomplished.
What seems
more likely, however, is a rearrangement of the tax code in an attempt
to bring in more revenue. Deductions and credits will be taken away,
and the Bush tax cuts will be allowed to expire. As a result, less
money will remain in the private sector to create jobs and produce
economic growth. The Super Committee has an opportunity to take
a small baby step in the right direction. Instead, they no doubt
will take this opportunity to raise taxes and make everything worse.
But increasing taxes will only diminish freedom and deepen the recession.
Instead of looking for ways to hike taxes under the guise of raising
revenue, the Super Committee should put forth a plan of real
spending cuts to put America back on the path to liberty and prosperity.
See
the Ron Paul File

November
22, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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