The Budget Sequester Is a Success
By STEPHEN MOORE
August 11, 2013, 6:18 p.m. ET
Consider the numbers: According to the Congressional Budget Office, annual outlays peaked at $3.598 trillion in fiscal 2011. After President Obama's first two years in office, many in Washington expected that number to hit $4 trillion by 2014. Instead, spending fell to $3.537 trillion in fiscal 2012, and is on pace to fall below $3.45 trillion by the end of this fiscal year (Sept. 30). The $150 billion budget decline of 4% is the first time federal expenditures have fallen for two consecutive years since the end of the Korean War.
Already the deficit has fallen from its Mount Everest peak of 10.2% of gross domestic product in 2009, to about 4% this year. That's a bullish six percentage points less of the GDP of new federal debt each year.
Discretionary spending soared to $1.347 billion in fiscal 2011, according to the CBO, but was then cut by $62 billion in 2012 and another $72 billion this year. That's an impressive 10% shrinkage.
Sunday, August 11, 2013
THIS SHOULD STIFLE THE RADIO GASBAGS WHO WHINE ABOUT THE DEFICIT
but it probably won't because they know their high-entropy listeners don't read the WSJ:
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1 comment:
http://nader.org/2013/08/09/the-dilemma-of-senator-rand-paul/
Here's one you'll like.
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