[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 86 (Wednesday, June 15, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S3788-S3791]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BUDGET REFORM
Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, these past few weeks I have been coming to
the floor to talk about the size and scope of our Nation's fiscal
problems. It has been said often that this is the most predictable
crisis we have ever faced, and I believe that is true.
I have talked about how the tremendous growth of government has
limited the ability of small businesses to create jobs. I have noted
the severe and dramatic cuts Medicare and Medicaid and Social Security
will face if we do not act now to reform those programs. I have also
pointed out how the Draconian cuts would need to be paired with
painful, job-crushing tax hikes.
Simultaneously, the interest we pay on that debt will take up an
ever-increasing share of our revenue. In fact, it has already been
noted that in a few short years the interest on the debt alone would
exceed the amount we spend on national security. In other words, we
would spend more paying for the amount of money we borrow in the form
of interest than we spend defending the country. At some point,
bondholders are going to recognize that we don't have an ability to pay
out these bonds, and they will demand increasingly higher interest
rates. This in turn sends our interest rates even higher in a vicious
spiral.
However, what I would like to focus on today is to talk about how
none of this is necessary. So how do we prevent this from happening? I
believe the solutions we need fall into three broad categories: We need
reforms to our budget processes, and that includes, one, a balanced
budget amendment to the Constitution; we need caps on overall and
discretionary spending; and we need entitlement reform.
[[Page S3789]]
In the 1990s, the Senate was within just one vote of passing a
balanced budget amendment to the Constitution. I can't help but think
just how different our country's fiscal situation would be if that
amendment had been approved.
We now have two different balanced budget amendment proposals put
forward this year. I cosponsored both of them. I had the opportunity to
lead a working group of my fellow Republican Senators to discuss these
proposals and to help find the best parts of each. From those
discussions and others, we were able to come together with the Hatch-
Lee balanced budget amendment, of which every single member of the
Republican conference is a cosponsor. This important amendment requires
the budget to be balanced every year, except for when there is a
declared war. A supermajority would be required to waive this
provision. This amendment puts the emphasis on controlling spending,
which is the real cause of our debt and deficits. It requires
supermajorities to raise taxes, and it prevents spending from exceeding
18 percent of our GDP, 18 percent of our entire national output, which
has been the historical level of taxation for our country.
Not only do we need to balance our budget but we need to ensure that
every dollar is being spent in the most efficient way possible. We need
to be honest about the cost of this spending and to create processes
that will prevent wasteful, unnecessary, and excessive spending. In
order to do this, we need a number of budget reforms in addition to the
balanced budget amendment.
I have introduced the Deficit Reduction and Budget Reform Act, which
has a number of reforms to the budget process we use today.
The bill reforms the pay-go rules to prevent the double-counting
gimmicks that get used around here all too frequently, and it makes the
Federal budget a binding joint resolution signed into law by the
President--something that doesn't happen today with our budget.
It moves us into a biennial budget timeline, which leaves more time
for oversight. As everybody knows, we are supposed to do a budget at
least every year. We haven't done one now for 777 days. So the notion
that we do a budget every year may be somewhat an antiquated one, but
we are supposed to do a budget every single year. Because of that, we
spend an awful lot of time going through the budget process, doing all
the appropriations bills, and it doesn't allow very much time for
oversight, which is a function that I think we have a responsibility to
do. So if we went to a biennial budget--in other words, if we did a
budget every other year--if we did the spending, the budget, and the
appropriations bills in the odd-numbered years, then in the even-
numbered years when people have to go home to run for reelection, we
could actually focus on oversight. We could look for ways not to spend
money but to save money.
I have been a big advocate of biennial budgeting--doing a budget
every other year, 2-year budgeting--for some time. A number of States
do it that way. I think it is important we make that reform so we have
the appropriate time to do the level of oversight that is required and
is so desperately missing around here today, which is why we end up
having so many government agencies with so much duplication, so much
redundancy, and so much overlap that leads to wasteful spending on
behalf of the American taxpayers.
My budget reform would also create a legislative line-item veto. My
Governor in South Dakota has that, and I believe the President should
too. In fact, I think most Governors across this country have some sort
of mechanism that allows them to veto extraneous spending measures. I
believe the President ought to have that power, and it needs to be done
in a way, of course, that is consistent with the Constitution, and a
legislative line-item veto would meet that test. It prevents the abuse
of emergency spending designations which have been used to pass
hundreds of billions of dollars in deficit spending since the last time
we passed a budget resolution.
It creates a new CLASS Act trigger to make sure that program is
solvent over the 75-year timeframe.
I think most of my colleagues know that the CLASS Act is a new long-
term care entitlement program that was enacted as part of the health
care reform bill last year. It, similar to so many other government
programs, relies upon premiums that will be paid in the early years,
which actually show revenues coming into the Treasury which are then
counted and used to pay for other things--in this case, the health care
bill. But at some point in the future, when the demands come for those
benefits that people have subscribed for, it becomes a liability
because the funds, the revenues that have come into that program in the
early years have already been spent. Again, it leads to more and more
borrowing. That is what the Congressional Budget Office has said would
happen with the CLASS Act.
To make sure that program is going to stay on the books--and, by the
way, I have a piece of legislation to repeal it because I think it is
very bad policy and I think it is going to put our country into an even
deeper fiscal hole. But that being said, if it is going to stay on the
books, we ought to have a mechanism to ensure the program is solvent
over the 75-year timeframe. My legislation would do that.
Likewise, it modifies the Medicare cost containment trigger to have
honest accounting with respect to revenues and savings in the new
health care bill, and it updates the Credit Reform Act to score the
purchases of debt, stock, equity, and capital using a discount rate
that incorporates market risk. Whenever the Government gets into the
business of acquiring debt, stock equity, those sorts of things--and
that hasn't happened, as you know, in the last few years--it needs to
be accounted for honestly by using real discount rates that make market
risk part of that calculation. Today, that is not necessarily the case
when those calculations are made.
It also creates a new standing joint committee of Congress for budget
deficit reduction. It might interest my colleagues to know--sometimes
we forget about this around here--we have 26 committees and
subcommittees in Congress that spend tax dollars. We do not have one
that focuses on saving tax dollars. We need a committee that is
exclusively committed to reducing the cost of spending, to saving tax
dollars as opposed to spending them. With 26 committees and
subcommittees around here that spend money, it is time we had one to
save money.
The joint committee would be responsible to produce a bill to cut the
deficit by at least 10 percent every budget cycle and to do it without
raising taxes. It would be a standing committee that would continue to
fight government spending, would even issue recommendations to cut
spending by at least 10 percent, even in years when the budget is
balanced. It has been a long time since we have seen that around here.
That probably is not going to happen in the foreseeable future. I
certainly hope it does. But in any case, my legislation would require,
even in years when the budget is balanced, that we be looking for ways
to cut spending.
Importantly, these recommendations would be assured of an up-or-down
vote in Congress. This committee would make its recommendation each
year, and my legislation would require expedited consideration on the
Senate floor; in other words, to ensure it gets an up-or-down vote and
doesn't languish somewhere similar to so many reports that come out of
various committees. This committee would actually have the authority to
put a product out on the floor of the Senate and to ensure it gets a
vote.
Finally, what my bill would do is freeze and cap spending, the third
action we need to take in order to get spending under control. This
bill would institute a 10-year spending freeze at 2008 levels adjusted
for inflation. After all, between 2008 and 2010, nondefense
discretionary spending increased by 24 percent while inflation in the
overall economy was just over 2 percent. The Federal Government, in the
last couple years, between 2008 and 2010, was spending literally over
10 times the rate of inflation. How can you go to the American taxpayer
with a straight face and explain that? We need to go back to those 2008
levels and freeze it there, cap it there, and then allow for
adjustments for inflation. But let's go back and negate this 24-percent
increase we have seen just in the last couple years.
[[Page S3790]]
The recent continuing resolution that was passed by Congress started
to put downward pressure on these accounts, but more needs to be done.
My colleagues, Senators Corker and McCaskill, have introduced what they
call the CAP Act, which would put our spending on a downward glidepath
so we do not spend more than our historical average of 20.6 percent of
GDP. For the last 40 years, spending on the Federal Government has
averaged 10.6 percent of our total economy. That represents all Federal
spending. It doesn't represent State and local government spending, but
Federal spending, percentagewise, on average, for the past 40 years has
equaled 20.6 percent of our entire economic output.
This year we are in the 24- to 25-percent range. Now we have gone
from spending one-fifth of our entire economy on the Federal Government
to spending about one-quarter of our entire economy on the Government.
That, to me, is something that needs to be reined in. There has been a
huge ramp-up of spending in terms of our economy.
What that means is, the private economy, as a percentage of our
entire economy, is getting smaller and the government component of that
is getting larger. We need to get that back on a more historical and
what should be a realistic course.
There are at least three different possible proposals to cap
spending: the 18 percent included in the constitutional amendment, the
CAP Act, which I just mentioned, and my own proposal to cap
discretionary spending. These caps are necessary to signal to the
markets we are serious about cutting spending.
Finally, we need entitlement reform. The CAP Act and the 18-percent
cap would both force us to deal with entitlements. I am heartened by
the budget working group that is being led by Vice President Biden, in
that they are considering some entitlement reforms. I hope they can
produce a product that actually will tackle entitlements. We need, at
the end of the day, to have the President leading. As I said, I hope
this group that has been put together will produce a result that will
take us down a path toward tackling runaway entitlement programs.
At the end of the day, for any of this to be signed or get enacted,
we have to have the President stepping in and providing leadership. So
far we have not seen that. The President, in his budget he submitted to
Congress and a subsequent budget speech he made, has done little, if
anything, to deal with the issue of entitlement reform.
Frankly, you cannot deal with the fiscal problems this country faces,
the challenges we face or the deep hole we are in when it comes to
getting on a more sustainable course for the future without taking on
entitlement reform. The President needs to be explaining to Americans
the need for entitlement reform and showing us what his plan is to save
Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, not simply getting out and
demagoguing Chairman Ryan's budget and kicking the can further down the
road.
We know these entitlements already represent $61.6 trillion in
unfunded liabilities. There is no more road. We have kicked the can as
far as possible. It is now time for us to face the reality that we have
to deal with this and we cannot afford the luxury of waiting any
longer.
It is clear that action needs to be taken. If the President were to
step to the plate, I think we would have a real chance to enact
substantial entitlement reforms that could preserve the important role
these programs play.
Enacting these three different prongs or these three different
approaches--one dealing with budget reforms that includes a balanced
budget amendment being the first component, spending caps being the
second component on both discretionary and overall spending, and
entitlement reform--are not going to be easy to do. We have been on
autopilot around here for a long time. What that has gotten us is
deeper and deeper into the fiscal hole, to the point today we are at
$14 trillion in debt--meaning we are going to have to raise the debt
limit in the very near future--and growing by the day. The amount it
grows by the day, interestingly, is $4 billion. Between this time and
10:40 tomorrow, we will borrow another $4 billion that we will add to
the debt of our children. That represents more than we spend in my home
State of South Dakota for an entire year; $4 billion, the amount we
borrow every single day at the Federal level exceeds the amount the
State of South Dakota spends in an entire year. That is the dimension
of the problem we were dealing with.
There are three very important numbers people need to focus on to
remind ourselves how critical it is that we act. One is forty-two. That
is the cents out of every $1 we borrow. Forty-two cents out of every $1
this government spends today is borrowed. That is a staggering
statistic. The other number is 93. Ninety-three is the number now that
represents the percentage of our entire economic output that is
represented by our gross debt. In other words, our debt to GDP, our
debt to total economic output ratio is 93 percent. That is the danger
zone. Historical research has demonstrated, when you get a debt-to-GDP
ratio that exceeds 90 percent, you are losing 1 percentage point of
economic growth every single year. One percentage point of economic
growth translates into 1 million lost jobs. So every year we continue
on this path of sustaining this level of debt as a percentage of our
entire economic output, we are bleeding 1 million jobs in our economy,
costing us 1 percentage point of economic growth. That is a very real
and immediate impact from the amount of spending and the amount of debt
we have.
The final number I think is important for people to understand too, a
number I mentioned earlier, is the 777 number. That is the number of
days that have passed since Congress passed a budget. I know it is very
hard around here, particularly in the present circumstances, to find
consensus on a path forward to pass a budget. But we have a
responsibility to the American taxpayers, when we are spending
literally $3.7 to $3.8 trillion every single year, to at least let them
know how we are going to spend their money. We have not done a budget
in 777 days.
I serve on the Budget Committee. We have not had a markup. There is
no indication we will have a markup. There is no indication we are
going to do a budget. We have already blown past all the deadlines the
law requires when it comes to doing a budget. We didn't do a budget in
the last Congress. I think what that does is it makes it even more
complicated to address these issues. If you do not have an overall
framework, if you do not have a construct or understanding of what it
is going to take to get our books back in order, then it is going to be
very difficult.
Sometimes around here we do not have enough teeth in the laws we pass
when it comes to budgeting. We do not have enough enforcement
mechanisms. I am proposing provisions in the budget reforms to add
enforcement mechanisms to cure that. But even with that, you at least
have to have a plan. You at least have to have a blueprint, a path for
how you are going to spend $3.7 trillion of the American taxpayers'
money.
I urge my colleagues, the majority, to put forward a budget. At least
let's debate it. Let's talk about priorities. Let's have a debate,
debate amendments, but let's do a budget or reform the budget process
along the lines I suggested so we get a process in place that enables
us to make some headway, to make some progress toward dealing with this
runaway debt and these runaway deficits that are going to not only
crush our economy in the near term but put an unfair burden on future
generations of Americans.
Right now, the things most Americans are worried about are spending,
debt, jobs, the economy, and they are all connected. The level of
spending and debt is something that needs to be gotten under control to
get the economy growing and prospering again, so you don't have the
Federal Government out there competing with the private economy when it
comes to capital. Small businesses need capital to invest to create
jobs. When the government is crowding that out, it makes it more
difficult. There are so many adverse economic implications from the
debt levels we are sustaining today that are going to make it
increasingly difficult, the longer we stay deeper and deeper in the
red, for this economy to recover and grow. That is fundamental to all
this.
When it comes to jobs and the economy, we also have to have policies
that
[[Page S3791]]
encourage economic growth. I know the President talks a lot about jobs
and the economy. He certainly is rhetorically, at least I believe,
saying the right things out there. But you have to have actions that
are consistent with the rhetoric. If you look at the President's
record, we have not seen that. The reason we have not seen that is
because the policies are all adverse to economic growth and job
creation, whether it is regulations coming out of agencies, whether it
is the new mandates imposed by the health care reform bill, whether it
is the out-of-control spending and debt and no attempt to address the
long-term challenges we face there, particularly entitlement reform,
whether it is the new taxes that have been imposed through the
legislation that has been enacted since this President has come into
office. But if you look at the economic record, if you look at
unemployed Americans since this President took office, we have almost 2
million more unemployed Americans. The unemployment rate has gone up 17
percent. Fuel prices, which impact everybody's pocketbook in this
country, since this President took office, have gone up by over 100
percent, over a 100-percent increase in the price per gallon of
gasoline since this President took office. The debt has gone up 35
percent. The debt per person in this country has gone up $11,000 per
person. That is the amount the debt has increased since this President
took office. Food stamp recipients are up 39 percent. Health insurance
premiums--despite the promises of what health care reform would do to
lower insurance premiums--health insurance premiums have gone up 19
percent since this President took office. The only thing that has gone
down since he took office is home values. Home values are down 12
percent. That is the economic record. That is the composite record. Of
course, we can all say things, but we have to be judged by what we do.
We cannot judge people by what they say. We have to judge them by what
they do.
I hope the President will decide it is time for him and for his
administration and for his leadership to focus on policies that will be
conducive to economic growth, that will enable that, rather than make
it more expensive and more difficult to create jobs, which are the
policies that are being employed by this administration. That applies
to so many areas. It is developing domestic energy resources, so we can
get more American supply of energy and start driving that price down.
So many areas are off-limits. Even more have gone off-limits since this
President took office. It means getting trade bills enacted. We have
heard now for several years the President talk about how we need to
pass the Colombia, Panama, and South Korea Free Trade Agreements. Yet
they languish. They have not been submitted to us. We are ready to act.
We have said repeatedly these are important to our economy.
I have used this example on the floor before, but just one brief data
point for agriculture. I represent an agricultural State, so we are
always looking for opportunities to export. In wheat, corn, and
soybeans exports, we had an 81-percent share of the Colombia market in
2008. In 2010, that had dropped to 27 percent. We have literally been
locked out of that market because this free-trade agreement has
languished in Congress and, as a consequence, other countries have
stepped in to fill the void. Now you have the Canadians, the Europeans,
the Australians stepping in and picking up the slack and we continue to
lose more and more market share, which means more and more lost jobs in
the American economy. So it is about trade policies, tax policies,
energy policies, regulatory policies and spending and debt. Those are
the things, in my view, that will get this economy back on track, start
creating jobs, create a better and brighter and more prosperous future
for future generations of Americans. Unfortunately, the policies being
employed by this administration are making it worse, and at least
according to this economic record, much worse. We can do better. We
should do better by the American people, and I hope we will find the
political will to do that.
I yield the floor.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The Senator from Connecticut.
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