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Message URL: http://www.curezone.org/blogs/fm.asp?i=1531142

Good Golly Miss Molly!
(My Unusual Road of Life....)

Good Golly Miss Molly! by kerminator .....

Is anyone worried about the future of this country? Maybe we shoud stop smell the flowers before they are all gone for good... It is not going have anything to do with this Green thing!

Date:   11/27/2009 8:36:57 PM ( 15 y ago)

simplytruth.com

What in the World

 


Title: Good Golly Miss Molly!
Post by: Weknoz on 17 ,Jul 2009, 21:45*:GMT



 It appears that the Government has no responsibility to the people except to take what they have then  put it to use through some lame overly expensive plan...   a True-ism

 See what we mean in their (Govt) own words! 

 Some say "  WE WANT MORE GOVERNMENT, JUST DON'T ASK US TO PAY FOR IT? "

  Now that is a stupid statement, HUH!   Everything has to be paid for!  Debt is dumb!

  BTW: Does anyone really think that bigger government is a good idea? 
 ****

The question that President Obama & most of the Congress ought to be asking  or  that we all should be asking -- is this:  How big a government do we want? 
A new report from the Congressional Budget Office ("The Long-Term Budget Outlook") makes the out come of Big Government makes this crystal-clear, says economics columnist Robert J. Samuelson.

The easiest way to measure the size of government is to compare the federal budget with the overall economy, or gross domestic product (GDP).  The CBO's estimates are daunting, according to Samuelson:

    * For the past half century, federal spending has averaged about 20 percent of GDP, federal taxes about 18 percent of GDP, and the budget deficit 2 percent of GDP.

    * The CBO projection for 2020 -- which assumes the economy has returned to "full employment" -- puts spending at 26 percent of GDP, taxes at a bit less than 19 percent of GDP, and a deficit above 7 percent of GDP.

    * Future spending and deficit figures continue to grow after 2020.

These statistics mean that:

    * Balancing the budget in 2020 would require a tax increase of almost 50 percent from the past half century's average.

    * To get from 18 to 26 percent of GDP (spending in 2020) would require another 8 percent of GDP in taxes.

    * In today's dollars, that would be about $1.1 trillion, a 44 percent annual tax increase.

Even these figures may be optimistic, because the CBO's projections for defense and "nondefense discretionary spending" may be unrealistically low.  This last category covers everything from environmental regulation to aid to education to homeland security.

Whatever the case, the major causes of the budget blowout are well known: an aging population and rapid increases in health spending, says Samuelson:

    * In 2000, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid -- the main programs providing income and health care for the 65-and-older population -- totaled nearly 8 percent of GDP.

    * In 2020, the CBO projects that will reach almost 12 percent of GDP and continue to increase.

Source: Robert J. Samuelson, "We Want More Government, Just Don't Ask Us to Pay for It," Newsweek, July 11, 2009; and Statement of Douglas W. Elmendorf before the Committee on the Budget, United States Senate, "The Long-Term Budget Outlook," Congressional Budget Office, July 16, 2009.

For text:

http://www.newsweek.com/id/206166

For CBO report:

http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/104xx/doc10455/07-15-Long-TermOutlook_Testimony.pdf

For more on Federal Spending & Budget Issues:

http://www.ncpa.org/sub/dpd/index.php?Article_Category=25

 

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