[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 45 (Thursday, March 31, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2009-S2010]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THE BUDGET
Mr. ISAKSON. First, I wish to commend the Senator from Colorado and
try to ratify what I heard him say. I came in after the first part of
his speech, but I know his focus was on the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act and No Child Left Behind. He is exactly right. There are
reforms that do need to take place. We have gone 3 years without a
reauthorization, and reauthorization, hopefully, can happen this year.
When it does, we can improve the plight of our children, and we can
reform the way we do some of the things we do in SEA to open new
opportunities for our kids. But accepting the status quo, he is right,
is not good enough. We need to make those reforms, and we need to make
them now. I look forward to working with the Senator from Colorado in
the Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee when that issue
comes up, to reform ESEA, get it reauthorized, to reempower our
teachers, our students, our parents, and raise the level of education
for all Americans.
I congratulate him for his great contribution to the State of
Colorado and, further, to the Senate.
I wish to steal a line he just gave us 1 minute ago. When I walked
in, he was saying there are some things Congress cannot do. He is
right. Education does take place at the local level. There are some
things we can fix in Washington, but it is primarily done at the local
level.
But there is one thing Congress can fix; that is, our spending, our
debt, and our deficit. For just 1 second, I wish to speak not in the
tone of a politician, not as somebody who is a part of the institution,
trying to talk about what he thinks, I wish to talk about what I think
the people of Georgia think. The people of Georgia do not understand
why we cannot do in Washington what they have had to do during the last
3 years. During the economic travails of the last 3 years, every
American family has had to sit around their kitchen table,
reprioritizing how they spend their money to deal with lower returns on
their investments, the consequences of unemployment or underemployment.
They have had to adapt to difficult economic times. Yet when they turn
on the television and they look at C-SPAN, they do not see us adapting
to the economic times we find ourselves in as a country. I was in the
real estate business for 33 years and I do not understand a lot of
things, but I understand leverage.
Leverage is a marvelous thing in capitalism. If you have proper
leverage in real estate or proper leverage in business, it can make a
lot of things happen. Leverage is good, but too much leverage is a
death sentence and we are at a precipice in this country. We are at a
precipice where we are about to fall off. If we all fall off, there is
no recovery because continued deficit spending and continued increasing
debts results in two things: inflating the dollar in future years to
pay that debt off with cheaper dollars, which devalues every asset of
every American family, and increasing the interest rates to
unsustainable and unpayable amounts.
I lived through that one in the post-Carter years in 1980, 1981, and
1983 when we dealt with the Misery Index in America--double-digit
inflation, double-digit unemployment, and double-digit interest rates.
In my home State of Georgia today we have double-digit unemployment,
10.4 percent. Interest rates are low, but it is arbitrary, and they are
getting ready to go up. The yield spread curve between 2-year Federal
debt and 10-year U.S. debt is triple, which indicates the markets that
are buying our debt are already looking out in the future and saying
interest rates are going higher, three times what they are now, maybe
more.
If you look at inflation, inflation is arbitrarily low right now. But
with what is happening to food and prices, contributed by gasoline and
petroleum, what we see happening in the world marketplaces, it is an
inevitable factor, unless we get our arms around our debt and our
deficit.
We owe about $14 trillion in debt. The deficit this year is over $1.5
trillion. Those are unsustainable numbers. We do not have to pay the
debt off today. We do not have to reduce the deficit to zero. But we
have to get ourselves on a glidepath to reducing our deficit and, in
turn, reducing our debt over time. It means we have to sit down at our
kitchen tables, the floor of the Senate and the floor of the House,
prioritize what we are doing, and get to the business the American
people expect us to get to.
We are playing some political games right now with short-term CRs,
when the big votes, the big debates, and the big decisions loom ahead--
first, the debt ceiling, later the fiscal year 2012 appropriations.
There are three things I hope we will do: No. 1 is recognize our
system is broken and is not working. I did a little research. Most of
my years in Congress, more dollars have been appropriated through
omnibus appropriations than through legitimate debate and budget units
on the Senate floor. We did not do any last year. The reason we are
doing a CR this year on last year is because it was an omnibus
appropriation.
We are not spending our money like the American people have to spend
theirs. We are not prioritizing. We are not looking at cost-benefit
analysis. We have to change our system. I am pleased to have joined
with former Governor Shaheen of New Hampshire, a Democratic colleague,
to introduce the Biennial Budget and Appropriations Act for the
Congress, an act which mimics what 20 of our States, 40 percent of the
country, already does: appropriate on a 2-year cycle rather than on a
1-year cycle; appropriate in odd-numbered years so that in even-
numbered years, which also happen to be election years, we do not do
appropriating, we do oversight. We spend a year not making political
promises of what bacon we are going to bring home, but we spend a year
looking for savings and redundancy and duplication and waste in Federal
spending.
If we do not spend a minute looking back, we can never spend a minute
looking forward. Right now we do not spend any time looking back and
seeing where money is being spent and where it might be saved. We do
not reprioritize what was introduced and established years ago. The
Biennial Budget and Appropriations Act requires the President of the
United States to submit a biennial budget, requires Congress to act on
the independent budget units in a 2-year fashion, in the odd-numbered
years, and requires the oversight in even-numbered years of every
function of the Federal Government.
We do not do oversight anymore, and we are paying a terrible price
for it. That is the first thing we need to do. Second, we need to
understand that we need to appropriate our money the way the American
people appropriate their money. They measure the benefit compared to
the cost, and if the benefit to their family is not equal to or greater
than the cost, they do not spend the money. But in the Congress, we do
not measure cost-benefit analysis. We measure how much more we can
spend in continuation than what we appropriated in a previous year.
That is a broken system, and it is a broken cycle.
I commend Senator Corker on his introduction of the CAP Act, which is
the second part of what we need to do; that is, put ourselves on some
type of fiscal constraint through a balanced budget amendment and
through a spending cap.
A little known secret is 2 years ago the Nation of Israel confronted
problems such as the ones we have today--burgeoning debt, a bigger
deficit, and spending problems. Prime Minister Netanyahu and their
Finance Minister sat down at their kitchen table in Tel Aviv and
established a biennial budget process, 2-year appropriations rather
than 1, of even-numbered year election oversight and odd-numbered
appropriating.
[[Page S2010]]
Then they did a second thing. They put a cap on their debt, and they
put a cap on spending. Do you know what happened in 2 years' time?
Israel's GDP has grown by 7.9 percent. The International Monetary Fund
and the World Bank have told the EU and some of the struggling
countries in the EU such as Portugal and Spain that they should adopt a
biennial spending process and the oversight process of a biennial
budget and an appropriations act.
Well, I would say this: If 20 of our States are doing it, and they
are 20 of our most fiscally sound States, beginning with New Hampshire
and Nebraska and Oregon and States like that, and if Israel has done it
and demonstrated, in difficult world economic times, they can grow
their GDP by 7.9 percent and reduce their debt and cap their spending,
and if the World Bank and International Monetary Fund are telling the
European Union, which is in most difficult straits today, that it is
part of the answer as to how they spend their money and getting an arm
around their spending, then I think we should take a look at it, and it
should be on the floor of the Senate being debated.
We have a window of opportunity. We have the chance to reform our
spending process, to set ourselves on a glidepath to reducing our debt
and reducing our deficit over time and sending a signal to the world
market that the strong America they have known and invested in is going
to be even stronger in the future.
But if we continue to dilly-dally around, trying to make political
headway out of economic events, and push ourselves out in time on debt
and deficit, we are going to have higher inflation, higher interest
rates. We are going to devalue the assets of the American people and,
worst of all, we are going to lose our place in the world.
I do not want to be a part of that. The President does not want to be
a part of that. I do not think any Member of the Senate wants to be a
part of that. So my encouragement to the leadership, Democratic and
Republican alike, is, let's let the best ideas flow. Let's let them
come to the floor of the Senate. Let's debate them. Let's invite the
President to come and sit down with us and do the same thing.
Instead of taking entitlements off the table, they ought to be part
of the discussion. Instead of saying there are some things we are not
going to do and some things we will, we ought to be open and say we
will look at everything, and then we will prioritize based on cost
versus benefits. If we do that, we will do what the people of Georgia
expect me to do, and I think what the people of the United States
expect all of us to do.
We have a great country made great by a great people who made
difficult decisions in difficult times. This is the difficult decision
facing our time. I want to be one of the people who is a part of the
solution, not a footnote in history at the beginning of the decline of
the United States of America.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
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