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DelMarVa Survival Trainings
Daily Features |
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October 24, 2007
Bush
is the biggest spender since LBJ
WASHINGTON — George W. Bush, despite
all his recent bravado about being
an apostle of small government and
budget-slashing, is the biggest
spending president since Lyndon B.
Johnson. In fact, he's arguably an
even bigger spender than LBJ.
“He’s a big government guy,” said
Stephen Slivinski, the director of
budget studies at Cato Institute, a
libertarian research group.
The numbers are clear, credible and
conclusive, added David Keating, the
executive director of the Club for
Growth, a budget-watchdog group.
“He’s a big spender,” Keating said.
“No question about it.”
Take almost any yardstick and Bush
generally exceeds the spending of
his predecessors.
When adjusted for inflation,
discretionary spending — or budget
items that Congress and the
president can control, including
defense and domestic programs, but
not entitlements such as Social
Security and Medicare — shot up at
an average annual rate of 5.3
percent during Bush’s first six
years, Slivinski calculates.
That tops the 4.6 percent annual
rate Johnson logged during his
1963-69 presidency. By these
standards, Ronald Reagan was a
tightwad; discretionary spending
grew by only 1.9 percent a year on
his watch.
Discretionary spending went up in
Bush's first term by 48.5 percent,
not adjusted for inflation, more
than twice as much as Bill Clinton
did (21.6 percent) in two full
terms, Slivinski reports.
Defense spending is the big driver —
but hardly the only one.
Under Bush it's grown on average by
5.7 percent a year. Under LBJ — who
had a war to fund, too — it rose by
4.9 percent a year. Both numbers are
adjusted for inflation.
Including costs for fighting in Iraq
and Afghanistan, defense spending
under Bush has gone up 86 percent
since 2001, according to Chris
Hellman of the Center for Arms
Control and Non-Proliferation.
Current annual defense spending —
not counting war costs — is 25
percent above the height of the
Reagan-era buildup, Hellman said.
Homeland security spending also has
soared, to about $31 billion last
year, triple the pre-9/11 number.
But Bush's super-spending is about
far more than defense and homeland
security.
Brian Riedl, a budget analyst at the
Heritage Foundation, a conservative
research group, points to education
spending. Adjusted for inflation,
it's up 18 percent annually since
2001, thanks largely to Bush’s No
Child Left Behind act.
The 2002 farm bill, he said, caused
agriculture spending to double its
1990s levels.
Then there was the 2003 Medicare
prescription drug benefit — the
biggest single expansion in the
program’s history — whose 10-year
costs are estimated at more than
$700 billion.
And the 2005 highway bill, which
included thousands of “earmarks,” or
special local projects stuck into
the legislation by individual
lawmakers without review, cost $295
billion.
“He has presided over massive
increases in almost every category …
a dramatic change of pace from most
previous presidents,” said Slivinski.
The White House counters by noting
that Bush took office as the country
was heading into a recession, then
reeled from the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks. “This president
had to overcome some things that
required additional spending,” said
Sean Kevelighan, a White House
budget office spokesman. Bush does
have other backers.
Diana Furchtgott-Roth, a senior
fellow at the Hudson Institute, a
conservative research group, blamed
a ravenous Congress that was eager
to show constituents how generous it
could be. (Republicans ran that
Congress until January. Bush never
vetoed a single GOP spending bill.)
The White House points out that,
nearly four years ago, Bush vowed to
cut the deficit in half by 2009, and
he's well on his way to achieving
that goal. The fiscal 2004 deficit
was a record $412.7 billion; the
2007 figure plunged to $163 billion.
But the deficit drop may be
fleeting, experts say, since
lawmakers are likely to extend many
of Bush’s tax cuts, which expire by
the end of 2010, and the imminent
retirement of the baby boom
generation will send Medicare and
Social Security costs soaring in the
years ahead. Now, near the end of
the seventh year of his presidency,
Bush is positioning himself as a
tough fiscal conservative.
He says Congress is proposing to
spend $22 billion more in fiscal
2008 than the $933 billion he
requested for discretionary programs
— and that the $22 billion extra
would swell over five years to $205
billion. Eventually, Bush said,
“they’re going to have to raise
taxes to pay for it.” And so, the
president told an Arkansas audience
earlier this month, people should
brace for “what they call a fiscal
showdown in Washington.
“The Congress gets to propose and,
if it doesn’t meet needs as far as
I’m concerned, I get to veto,” he
said. “And that’s precisely what I
intend to do.” Bush is getting tough
on fiscal policy — after running up
a record as the most profligate
spender in at least 40 years.
“The spending did happen,” said
Keating, “and a lot of it shouldn’t
have happened.”
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