Washington, DC, Wall Street, and central bankers around the world
rejoiced this week as Congress came to an agreement to end the
government shutdown and lift the debt ceiling. The latest
spending-and-debt deal was negotiated by Congressional leaders behind
closed doors, and was rushed through Congress before most members had
time to read it. Now that the bill is passed, we can see that it is a
victory for the political class and special interests, but a defeat for
the American people.
The debt ceiling deal increases spending above the levels set by the
“sequester.” The sequester cuts were minuscule, and in many cases used
the old DC trick of calling reductions in planned spending increases a
cut. But even minuscule and phony cuts are unacceptable to the
bipartisan welfare-warfare spending collation. The bill also does
nothing to protect the American people from the Obamacare disaster.
As is common in bills drafted in secret and rushed into law, this
bill contains special deals for certain powerful politicians. The bill
even has a provision authorizing continued military aid to opponents of
the Ugandan “Lord’s Resistance Army,” which was the subject of the
widely-viewed “Kony 2012” YouTube videos.
Most of these unrelated
provisions did not come to public attention until after the bill was
passed and signed into law.
Members of Congress and the public were told the debt ceiling
increase was necessary to prevent a government default and an economic
crisis. This manufactured fear supposedly justified voting on
legislation without allowing members time to even read it, much less to
remove the special deals or even debate the wisdom of intervening in
overseas military conflicts because of a YouTube video.
Congress should have ignored the hysterics. A failure to increase
government’s borrowing authority would not lead to a default any more
that an individual's failure to get a credit card limit increase in
would mean they would have to declare bankruptcy. Instead, the failure
of either an individual or a government to obtain new borrowing
authority would force the individual or the government to live within
their means, and may even force them to finally reduce their spending.
Most people would say it is irresponsible to give a spendthrift,
debit-ridden individual a credit increase. Why then is it responsible to
give an irresponsible spendthrift government an increase in borrowing
authority?
Congress surrendered more power to the president in this bill.
Instead of setting a new debt ceiling, it simply “suspended” the debt
ceiling until February. This gives the administration a blank check to
run up as much debt as it pleases from now until February 7th. Congress
can “disapprove” the debt ceiling suspension, but only if it passes a
resolution of disapproval by a two-thirds majority. How long before
Congress totally abdicates its constitutional authority over spending by
allowing the Treasury permanent and unlimited authority to borrow money
without seeking Congressional approval?
Instead of seriously addressing the spending crisis, most in Congress
would rather engage in last-minute brinksmanship and backroom deals
instead of taking the necessary action to reign in spending. Congress
will only take serious steps to reduce spending when either a critical
mass of Americans pressures it to cut spending, or when investors and
foreign countries stop buying US government debt. Hopefully, those of us
who understand sound economics can convince enough of our fellow
citizens to pressure Congress to make serious spending cuts before
Congress’s reckless actions cause a total economic collapse.