[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 176 (Thursday, November 17, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7722-H7723]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentlewoman from
Missouri (Mrs. Hartzler) for 5 minutes.
Mrs. HARTZLER. Washington has a problem. It spends more than it
brings in, and it has been doing that for a long time. That's why we
are over $15 trillion in debt. That's over $46,000 of debt for every
American man, woman, and child. Washington is currently borrowing 36
cents out of every dollar it spends, and under President Obama, our
national debt has increased 34 percent. That's the fastest increase in
the debt under any U.S. President in history.
Our government is digging a hole it might never get out of. We don't
have the money, yet Big Government hasn't been able to restrain itself
and keeps putting more and more of its spending on a credit card--our
children's credit card.
Our national debt-to-GDP ratio rivals that of countries like Ireland,
Portugal, and Greece, which are facing sovereign debt crises. Soon our
Nation's Federal debt will equal our GDP. It is a losing proposition.
It's like
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someone's total credit card debt equalling the total amount of income
that they bring in each year.
And so what do people do? If they do that at home, unfortunately a
lot of people go and get another credit card and they borrow money from
that to pay the minimum on the first credit card. But then they have to
go and get another credit card to pay the minimum on that one to pay
the minimum on that one. It doesn't work. It spirals down and down
until finally it ends in bankruptcy. It's unsustainable.
Most American families understand that. They live within their means.
Washington should, too.
I grew up watching my mom and my dad wrestle with balancing the
budget on our family farm. They would sit down around the kitchen table
at the start of the year and develop a cash flow projection for the
upcoming year listing the expenses that would be necessary to put in
the crops and projecting the anticipated yields and prices to see how
we were going to fare and to ensure that we didn't go over budget.
Then my parents would monitor it throughout the year to see how it
was doing. My mother would spend hours with her pencil erasing and
adjusting the budget as conditions changed either up or down. They used
to make my sister and me sit down and participate in the process with
them. And I can tell you, as a child, we weren't that thrilled with
this tedious task because sometimes it would take hours. But now I'm
thankful that they did, and they had the foresight to teach us the
importance of balancing a budget.
I conveyed that importance to my students when I used to teach
personal family finance as a home economics teacher. I told the
students that when you budget, the expenses shouldn't be more than the
income. They got it. Washington should, too.
Now we have the opportunity this week to bring the common sense and
the business sense of American families and American small businesses
to Washington to force it to live within its means by passing the
balanced budget amendment. I firmly believe that this constitutional
amendment is the best way to restrain the out-of-control Federal
spending of Big Government. Forty-nine States have some form of a
balanced budget requirement, and it works for them. I know it works for
Missouri, and I believe it will work in our Nation's capital, too.
When I was a Missouri State representative, we budgeted according to
the revenue projection given us and designed our budget to match the
income. If we didn't have the money, we didn't spend it. Because of
that, Missouri is on sound financial footing. Clearly, Washington is
not because it has failed to balance its budget.
Passing the balanced budget amendment will force Washington to cut up
these credit cards and to start living within its means. Families are
tightening their belts at home to make ends meet. Our Federal
Government needs to do likewise.
President Ronald Reagan understood the importance of the balanced
budget amendment. He said, ``Only a constitutional amendment will do
the job. We've tried the carrot, and it failed. With the stick of a
balanced budget amendment, we can stop government squandering,
overtaxing ways, and save our economy.''
{time} 1050
That's why I am excited about this historic vote that we're going to
take tomorrow, and I urge all of my colleagues, Republicans and
Democrats, to get behind this commonsense provision that will set us
back on the path to a strong financial footing. Now is the time to stop
the reckless course that we are on and get things right. I look forward
to applying the cash-flow knowledge I learned around the kitchen table
as a child to our Federal budget. It worked at home. It's time to make
it work in Washington.
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