Abstract : Federal spending is on an unsustainable path
that risks disaster for America. Runaway spending has increased annual federal
budget deficits to unprecedented levels, adding $2.7 trillion to the national
debt in the past two years alone. Each year’s huge federal deficit increases
the mountain of national debt borrowed from future generations of Americans.
Congress needs to cut federal spending sharply and quickly. This paper sets
forth $343 billion in available spending cuts.
Over the past two years, Congress
has added $2.7 trillion to the national debt, including a record $1.4 trillion
deficit for fiscal year (FY) 2009 and a $1.3 trillion deficit for FY 2010.[1]
If Congress does nothing and simply continues existing taxing and spending
policies, federal deficits will grow, reaching a projected $2 trillion deficit in just
10 years—and even that assumes a return to peace and prosperity.[2]
America cannot live with such
deficits interminably. Deficits mortgage the livelihoods of future generations
of Americans and ultimately put U.S. economic growth, stability, and
reliability at risk.
Soaring spending drives these
dangerous deficits. By 2020, federal spending is set to soar to 26 percent of
the gross domestic product (GDP), after having averaged 20 percent after World
War II. Revenues will likely return to their post–World War II average of 18
percent of GDP by 2020, even if the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts are made permanent.[3]
Thus, given current spending and taxing policies, spending is clearly the
variable that drives up the deficits.[4]
To reduce deficits, Congress must cut spending.
The costs of federal entitlement
programs—Social Security, Medicare, and
Medicaid—and interest on the national debt will drive future deficits, and
Congress must promptly and carefully decide how best to reduce those costs.
However, entitlement reforms will take time, and spending cuts cannot wait.
Congress needs to start cutting spending now.
Table 1 sets forth $343 billion in
available spending cuts for the new Congress to consider when it takes up the
federal budget for FY 2012. Many of the cuts fall into six areas:
- Empowering state and local governments. Congress should focus the federal government on performing a few duties well and allow the state and local governments, which are closer to the people, to creatively address local needs in areas such as transportation, justice, job training, and economic development.
- Consolidating duplicative programs. Past Congresses have repeatedly piled duplicative programs on top of preexisting programs, increasing administrative costs and creating a bureaucratic maze that confuses people seeking assistance.
- Privatization. Many current government functions could be performed more efficiently by the private sector.
- Targeting programs more precisely. Corporate welfare programs benefit those who do not need assistance in the American free enterprise system. Other programs often fail to enforce their own eligibility requirements.
- Eliminating outdated and ineffective programs. Congress often allows the federal government to run the same programs for decades, despite many studies showing their ineffectiveness.
- Eliminating waste, fraud, and abuse. Taxpayers will never trust the federal government to reform major entitlements if they believe that the savings will go toward “bridges to nowhere,” vacant government buildings, and Grateful Dead archives.[5]
Table
1: Spending Cuts for FY 2012
(in
millions of dollars)
Agriculture
|
||
$15,000
|
Replace farm subsidies with Farmer
Savings Accounts and improved crop insurance.
|
|
$2,033
|
Eliminate the Foreign Agriculture
Service.
|
|
$1,500
|
Merge all four agriculture
outreach and research agencies and cut their budget in half.
|
|
$1,000
|
Fund the Food Safety and
Inspection Service with user fees.
|
|
Commerce
|
||
$500
|
Eliminate business subsidies from
the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
|
|
Community Development
|
||
$6,000
|
Eliminate the Community
Development Block Grant program.
|
|
$598
|
Eliminate the Rural Utilities
Service.
|
|
$523
|
Eliminate the Economic Development
Administration.
|
|
$480
|
Eliminate NeighborWorks America
(formerly the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation).
|
|
$200
|
Consolidate the Rural Housing and
Development Programs and convert them into block grants.
|
|
$73
|
Eliminate the Appalachian Regional
Commission.
|
|
$48
|
Eliminate the Denali Commission.
|
|
$31
|
Eliminate the Minority Development
Business Agency.
|
|
$8
|
Eliminate the Delta Regional
Authority.
|
|
Education
|
||
$8,000
|
Return Pell Grants to their 2009
funding level of $24 billion, which is still double the 2007 level.
|
|
$2,000
|
Trim Head Start by $2 billion and
convert it into vouchers.
|
|
$2,000
|
Scale back the Education
Department bureaucracy.
|
|
$1,500
|
Eliminate dozens of small and
duplicative education grants.
|
|
$298
|
Eliminate state grants for Safe
and Drug-Free Schools and Communities.
|
|
Energy and the Environment
|
||
$6,500
|
Reduce energy subsidies for
commercialization and some research activities.
|
|
$600
|
Block grant and devolve
Environmental Protection Agency grant programs.
|
|
$200
|
Restructure the Power Marketing Administrations
to charge market-based rates.
|
|
$63
|
Eliminate the Science to Achieve
Results Program.
|
|
Government Reform
|
||
$44,000
|
Halve federal program payment
errors by 2012, especially by reducing Medicare errors and earned income tax
credit errors.
Tighten oversight by spending $5 billion on new resources, such as updated computer systems, and then recover $49 billion in payment errors. |
|
$20,000
|
Rescind unobligated balances after
36 months.
|
|
$12,500
|
Halve the $25 billion spent to
maintain vacant federal properties.
|
|
$10,000
|
Cut the federal employee travel
budget to $4 billion (half of FY 2000 spending).
|
|
$3,000
|
Freeze federal pay until it can be
reformed.
|
|
$1,000
|
Suspend acquisition of federal
office space.
|
|
$600
|
Trim the federal vehicle fleet by
20 percent (a reduction of 100,000 vehicles).
|
|
$300
|
Cut the House and Senate budgets
back to the 2008 level of $2.2 billion.
|
|
$215
|
Eliminate the Presidential
Election Campaign Fund.
|
|
$100
|
Tighten controls on federal
employee credit cards and cut down on delinquencies.
|
|
$70
|
Require federal employees to fly
coach on domestic flights.
|
|
Health Care
|
||
$6,200
|
Reform Medigap.
|
|
$5,000
|
Repeal Obamacare (larger savings
in later years).
|
|
$3,700
|
Require Medicare home health
co-payments.
|
|
$673
|
Eliminate the Maternal and Child
Health Block Grant.
|
|
$414
|
Eliminate Health Professions
grants.
|
|
$327
|
Eliminate Title X Family Planning.
|
|
$150
|
Eliminate the National Health
Service Corps.
|
|
$98
|
Repeal Rural Health Outreach and
Flexibility grants.
|
|
Homeland Security
|
||
$2,700
|
Eliminate most homeland security
grants to states and allow states to finance their own programs.
|
|
Income Security
|
||
$500
|
Better enforce eligibility
requirements for food stamps.
|
|
Interior
|
||
$1,500
|
Open the coastal plain of the
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to leasing.
(The savings are leasing revenues, which are classified as negative spending in the federal budget.) |
|
$200
|
Suspend federal land purchases.
|
|
International
|
||
$2,636
|
Eliminate the Development
Assistance Program.
|
|
$625
|
Eliminate the State Department’s
education and cultural exchange programs.
|
|
$321
|
Eliminate the International Trade
Administration’s trade promotion activities or charge the beneficiaries.
|
|
$183
|
Eliminate the Democracy Fund.
|
|
$68
|
Eliminate the International Trade
Commission and transfer oversight of intellectual property rights to the
Treasury Department.
|
|
$56
|
Eliminate the Trade and
Development Agency.
|
|
$29
|
Eliminate the Overseas Private
Investment Corporation.
|
|
$19
|
Eliminate the East–West Center.
|
|
$17
|
Eliminate the United States
Institute of Peace.
|
|
$2
|
Eliminate the Japan–United States
Friendship Commission.
|
|
Justice
|
||
$7,334
|
Eliminate all Justice Department
grants except those from the Bureau of Justice Statistics and the National
Institute of Justice,
thereby empowering states to finance their own justice programs. |
|
$398
|
Eliminate the Legal Services
Corporation.
|
|
$32
|
Eliminate the Justice Department’s
Community Relations Service.
|
|
$30
|
Eliminate the duplicative Office
of National Drug Control Policy.
|
|
$26
|
Reduce funding for the Justice
Department’s Civil Rights Division by 20 percent
because of its policy against race-neutral enforcement of the law. |
|
$4
|
Eliminate the State Justice
Institute.
|
|
Labor
|
||
$4,300
|
Eliminate failed federal job
training programs.
|
|
$2,000
|
Eliminate the ineffective Job
Corps.
|
|
$576
|
Eliminate the Senior Community
Service Employment Program.
|
|
National Science Foundation
|
||
$1,700
|
Reduce National Science Foundation
funding to 2008 levels.
|
|
$86
|
Eliminate National Science
Foundation spending on elementary and secondary education.
|
|
Transportation
|
||
$45,000
|
Devolve the federal highway
program and most transit spending to the states.
|
|
$1,900
|
Privatize Amtrak.
|
|
$1,009
|
Eliminate grants to large and
medium-sized hub airports.
|
|
$554
|
Eliminate the Maritime Administration.
|
|
$125
|
Eliminate the Essential Air
Service Program.
|
|
Treasury
|
||
$26,646
|
Eliminate the additional child
refundable credit.
|
|
$103
|
Eliminate the Community
Development Financial Institutions Fund.
|
|
Veterans
|
||
$2,500
|
Cap increases in Department of Veterans
Affairs health care spending.
|
|
$1,930
|
Reduce Veterans’ Disability
Compensation to account for Social Security Disability Insurance payments.
|
|
Cross-Agency and Other
|
||
$60,000
|
Repeal unspent stimulus spending.
|
|
$8,000
|
Switch to using the “Superlative
CPI” in funding calculations.
|
|
$6,000
|
Repeal the Davis–Bacon Act.
|
|
$2,250
|
Eliminate Federal Communications
Commission funding for school Internet service.
|
|
$2,000
|
Ban project labor agreements on
all federally funded construction projects.
|
|
$1,000
|
Eliminate the Small Business
Administration, which unnecessarily intervenes in free markets.
|
|
$736
|
Eliminate the National Community
Service programs, such as AmeriCorps.
|
|
$253
|
Eliminate the Institute of Museum
Services and Library Services.
|
|
$140
|
Eliminate the National Endowment
for the Humanities.
|
|
$133
|
Eliminate the National Endowment
for the Arts.
|
|
$61
|
Eliminate Army Corps of Engineers
funding for beach replenishment projects.
|
|
$10
|
Eliminate the Commission of Fine
Arts.
|
|
$8
|
Eliminate the National Capital
Planning Commission.
|
|
$5
|
Eliminate the Advisory Council on
Historic Preservation.
|
|
Total
|
||
$343,207 million
|
Implementing the $343 billion in
recommended cuts listed in Table 1 would reduce the deficit by somewhat less
than $343 billion because some recommendations would also reduce tax revenues.
For example, devolving the federal highway program to states would also mean
devolving the gas tax, and repealing the Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act (Obamacare)[6]
would repeal its tax increases.
Conclusion
Almost all of the proposed cuts in
federal spending will provoke strong objections from constituencies that
benefit from having Members of Congress give them taxpayer money taken from
someone else. Yet the difficulties caused by each of these cuts should be
measured against the status quo option of doubling the national debt over the
next decade, risking an economic crisis, and drowning future generations in
taxes.
Governing involves difficult
choices, and Congress simply cannot continue to court long-term disaster for
all merely to avoid short-term difficulties for some.
—Brian M. Riedl is Grover M. Hermann
Research Fellow in Federal Budgetary Affairs in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for
Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
Source:http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2010/10/How-to-Cut-343-Billion-from-the-Federal-Budget
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