House Judiciary Committee Hearing
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Mr. Chairman, Mr. Ranking Member, Committee Members:
Balanced budget amendments have been around a long time. They appeal to the universally recognized virtue of fiscal responsibility. Still,
First, budget deficits are sometimes beneficial. These times include not only declared wars but also economic slowdowns. Had either
Second, requiring a super-majority to raise the debt ceiling or to run a deficit is a veritable summons to political extortion by an intransigent minority. The consequences of a failure to raise the debt ceiling would be intrinsically catastrophic and could trigger a constitutional crisis. A mere two-fifths of either House could demand as ransom for its votes enactment of legislation on which it insists. This threat has no political allegiance. It could be wielded in the service of small government or large government, lower taxes or higher taxes, lower spending or higher spending.
Third, the deficit and debt ceiling provisions of
Fourth, a
Finally,
I
Balanced budget amendments are harmful because deficits are sometimes beneficial. In a democratic republic, it should not take a super-majority to do the right thing.
Successive Congresses and presidents of both parties have crafted public policies that automatically generate deficits when the economy weakens. These automatic stabilizers include all taxes, which drop when incomes fall or sales decline;
I am not saying that the automatic stabilizers are perfectly designed. To the extent that they are not, they should be revised. But they should not be turned into automatic destabilizers, which is just what a balanced budget amendment would do.
A requirement that the budget must be balanced at all times would prohibit deficits. Of course, one might avoid deficits during recessions by raising tax rates as the economy weakens or by cutting spending as the need for it increases. Had such measures been taken during the recent financial crisis that began in 2007, a painful slowdown would have been transmuted into a disastrous depression rivaling that of the 1930s. In 2011
Make no mistake: if you endorse a balanced budget amendment, you are endorsing such spending cuts during a similar future recession. If you endorse a balanced budget amendment, you are endorsing automatic destabilizers that will intensify future recessions and increase unemployment. You would be endorsing devastating cuts in national defense regardless of threats to the nation. You would be favoring cuts in assistance to the unemployed just when job opportunities were drying up. You would be endorsing such untoward effects, unless....
II
....unless, of course, three-fifths super majorities of all members (not just of those present and voting) of both Houses of
One hopes, of course, that they would do so. Even if they were willing to waive the amendment's constraints, it would take time for
Put simply, a two-fifths minority of either House could hold
III
If there is one subject on which members of both parties agree, it is that
The balanced budget amendments under discussion today are inconsistent with that bi-partisan commitment. Here is why. Both
When the OASI, DI, and HI trust funds sell securities, they do so by presenting them to the
Put simply, when
The same principles apply to reserves accumulated to pay benefits to civil service and military retirees and to reserves accumulated in any fund that holds securities not counted as being held by the public. The bulk of these reserves were accumulated by charging workers extra taxes or contributions beyond those necessary to pay for current benefits. Those extra charges were justified on the grounds that they would be available to cover future benefits. A balanced-budget amendment would betray that promise unless the rest of government operations ran surpluses sufficient to fully offset the draw-down of these reserves.
The balanced budget amendments would also threaten financial stability. As noted in a report of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the
"Here, too, the balanced budget amendment would make it unconstitutional for the
"In general, a constitutional requirement that all spending during a given year be covered by tax revenues collected in the same year would undercut ... deposit insurance, pension insurance, FHA loans, small business loans, flood insurance, and the nuclear power industry's liability insurance under the Price-Anderson Act. ... "If banks, thrift institutions, pension funds, small businesses, and mortgagers started to fail during a recession or a financial crisis, ... panicked depositors could make runs on banks, causing a chain reaction that could turn a recession into a depression."
It is important to understand that these problems do not arise because these funds hold Treasury securities. They would arise even if they held assets other than Treasury securities. The simple fact is that spending that exceeds current revenues would be barred regardless of the size of accumulated reserves. The only way that
IV
Some people embrace balanced budget amendment proposals because they hope that the amendments will curb what they regard as harmful tendency of legislators to fiscal irresponsibility. I believe that the fiscal record of this nation does not support this fear, but supporters of balanced budget amendments clearly believe otherwise. I have argued so far that efforts to curb this alleged tendency are likely to produce seriously adverse economic effects. I have also argued that they would give minorities a dangerous and unpredictable power during crises to force majorities to accept policies that most people oppose. But balanced budget amendments suffer from a different and equally serious problem: they can be gamed and circumvented in ways that would render them ineffective in achieving their stated objective and would simultaneously degrade governmental efficiency, which is not something that any of us would wish.
The problem is that one can achieve a given impact on the private economy in any number of different ways that are recorded quite differently in budget accounts. Suppose a Congressional majority wishes to expand support for people with low earnings.
1) It can provide a direct wage subsidy financed by new taxes.
2) It can provide an earned income tax credit equal to a portion of earnings (as it has actually done). This credit can be counted as a reduction in revenues, as an expenditure, or as part one and part the other, with the decision entirely contingent on a Congressional rule, which is what
3) It could mandate that state governments provide such subsidies, with or without incentives that relieve states of some or all of the cost of the mandate.
4) It could mandate that employers supplement earnings, according to a stated formula backed by tax incentives to defray some or all of the added costs.
One can achieve pretty much the same results by any of these devices. Yet the impact on the budget is quite different. Method 1) raises both spending and taxes. It could run afoul of the limit in
The key point is that if members of
In plain English, members of
V
It took just three years for the chairman of this committee to decide that the cap on the share of 'economic output' that the federal government can spend that he proposed to write into the Constitution was too low. I presume that this increase reflects his considered judgment that 20 percent is reasonable and that 18 percent was too strict. If so, it is worth noting that a 2 percentage point increase--about
In thinking about this matter, looking at history is helpful.
History also reveals that spending can fall below 18 percent of GDP. It did so during the last three years of the presidency of
This experience should teach two important lessons. The first is that when members of both parties work together, they can limit spending, drastically reduce deficits, and even achieve balanced budgets. The second is that if sound fiscal policy is what one wants, one doesn't need a balanced budget amendment to get it.
n1
n2 In April, 2014, the total federal government debt subject to the debt ceiling was
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Read this original document at: http://judiciary.house.gov/?a=Files.Serve&File_id=D4411F5F-FF95-49DC-A8E3-B005617C0195
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