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The Sequester is a Good Thing!

26 Feb
Do NOT listen to the lies from the left and their liberal media. I say call their bluff and let the Sequester slap Obama in the face, as it was initially his idea! His games need to stop, and would it be such a novel idea if he actually took on the job he was hired to do (even if by illegal votes) and act like a President! The cuts in this so-called sequester are VERY MINIMAL. They should actually be bigger to help cut some of this $16Trillion deficit this man and his admin have racked up.

It is not difficult to do a little research and find the facts. Why do so many Americans choose to “drink the kool-aid of the left” and believe everything they tell them? They do not want the Conservatives to be proven correct about this; that is why they are blasting their scare tactics out there. Wake up people!

The Sequester Should Be Embraced, not Feared

February 9, 2013 by Dan Mitchell

The looters and moochers in Washington are increasingly agitated by the prospect of sequestration.

Automatic budget cuts, we are told, will indiscriminately slash vital programs and undermine economic growth by reducing government spending.

This is utter bunk. I would like to “slash vital programs,” but the chart I prepared earlier this week shows that the federal budget will expand by $2.4 trillion if a sequester occurs.

So the net effect of sequestration, as I explain in this Larry Kudlow segment on CNBC, is that the federal budget won’t expand by $2.5 trillion.

I did this interview from London, by the way, where is was past midnight, so I hope you’ll forgive me for looking a bit groggy at the very beginning.

But I think I did a decent job once the juices started flowing, though it’s hard to have an argument with someone who still believes in the snake-oil of Keynesian economics.

It’s sort of like having a debate about sailing with someone who thinks the earth if flat. Just like Krugman, Bernstein seems to reflexively think that it’s always a good idea to have a higher burden of government spending. So a sequester is a bad idea if you have this mindset, just like it would be a bad idea to sail off the edge of the earth.

The Wall Street Journal recently opined on this issue and was appropriately dismissive of the hysterical anti-sequester rhetoric coming from Washington.

Washington is in a fit of collective terror over the “sequester,” aka the impending across-the-board spending cuts. …Mr. Obama warned about “the threat of massive automatic cuts that have already started to affect business decisions.” He proposed tax increases and “smaller” spending cuts to replace the sequester… listening to his cries of “massive” cuts is like watching “Scary Movie” for the 10th time. You know it’s a joke.

Indeed, I suspect that many Democrats realize it is a joke. But they see the federal budget as a mechanism for buying votes with other people’s money.

Many GOPers see the budget from the same perspective, but fortunately they are constrained by their no-tax-hike pledges, so they Republicans at least are pretending to be on the right side of this fight.

WSJ Spending TableRepublicans have rightly concluded after two years of being sucker-punched that the sequester is the main negotiating leverage they have and may be the only way to restrain spending. So now Democrats and a gaggle of interest groups are denouncing Mr. Obama’s fiscal brainchild because the programs they cherish—from job training to education, to the EPA and energy subsidies, to money for Planned Parenthood—are about to get chopped too. Fear not. As always in Washington when there is talk of cutting spending, most of the hysteria is baseless. The nearby table from the House Budget Committee shows that programs are hardly starved for money. In Mr. Obama’s first two years, while private businesses and households were spending less and deleveraging, federal domestic discretionary spending soared by 84% with some agencies doubling and tripling their budgets.

The WSJ shares my disdain for the Keynesian argument, and they explain that the last period of strong growth took place during the late 1990s, when Bill Clinton and the GOP Congress substantially reduced the burden of federal spending.

The most disingenuous White House claim is that the sequester will hurt the economy. Reality check: The cuts amount to about 0.5% of GDP. The theory that any and all government spending is “stimulus” has been put to the test over the last five years, and the result has been the weakest recovery in 75 years and trillion-dollar annual deficits. The sequester will help the economy by leaving more capital for private investment. From 1992-2000 Democrat Bill Clinton and (after 1994) a Republican Congress oversaw budgets that cut federal outlays to 18.2% from 22.1% of GDP. These were years of rapid growth in production and incomes. The sequester will surely require worker furloughs and cutbacks in certain nonpriority services. But most of those layoffs will happen in the Washington, D.C. area, the recession-free region that has boomed during the Obama era.

I can’t resist augmenting the final point is this excerpt. It’s not just that Washington, DC, has become a “recession-free region.”

The federal metropolis now has the biggest concentration of America’s richest counties. The lobbyists, politicians, interest groups, and overpaid bureaucrats are living very nice lives at our expense.

So let’s not just have a sequester. Let’s joyfully embrace it.

P.S. In the Kudlow debate, Jared was right about CBO’s position. This, of course, is one of the reasons why the GOP should de-fund this ideologically biased bureaucracy.

P.P.S. Just as the U.S. enjoyed strong growth when spending was restrained in the 1990s, other nations had very positive results when they capped or froze government spending.

P.P.P.S. By contrast, here are the nations that enjoyed good results with Keynesian policy.

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4 Comments

Posted by on February 26, 2013 in Know the Facts

 

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4 Responses to The Sequester is a Good Thing!

  1. granonine

    February 27, 2013 at 9:53 am

    Yesterday, I heard Sean Hannity saying that the reason people want to believe Obama is because he plays the emotion card. For example, “We’ll have to make a decision: Do we help the poor child or the disabled child? Who wants to make a decision like that?” Instead of addressing real issues, like his non-budget history, he takes us to fear and horror about not helping children. So far, it’s working for him.

     
    • Anna

      February 27, 2013 at 9:39 pm

      Yes, that is true. I believe people fall for the emotion cards Obama throws out there because they do not stay informed about the facts. Too many have become complacent and lazy. Before I become emotional about something, I first like to check the facts and make sure it is true. Most of his propaganda is just that, propaganda. All we can do is stay informed ourselves and do our best to spread truth instead of scare tactics based on lies from a charismatic used car salesman.

       
  2. Barbara

    February 26, 2013 at 11:55 am

    I fear you live on a different planet? It’s already had an impact, and not only on federal workers… but tourism, etc. It’s already being felt, because it’s unknown… losing 20% of your pay is very, very real.

     
    • Anna

      February 26, 2013 at 12:30 pm

      I would question who is actually on a different planet with her head in the sand. What is already being felt, the 20% of our pay is the tax hike that Obama promised would not happen. Payroll taxes were indeed raised to help him pay for his spending addiction. This tax hike, the first of more to come, has nothing to do with the sequester. I, for the life of me, cannot understand why so many choose to “just believe” what is told them in the lamestream media instead of seeking the truth for themselves. It is out there, and if I can find it, so can you.

       

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