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Yep, I guess there really is no way to balance the budget without raising taxes.
you COULD cut
$898B - Health care (medicare, medicaid)$788B - Pensions (Social Security, government employee pensions, etc.)
Heh, ok, I guess if you keep SS/Medicare taxes but don't actually pay bennies, but that takes us deep into fantasy land. If you eliminated the programs you'd lose the tax revenue (which currently is more than they pay out).
I don't see how you can consider military spending an investment in the future. I see it as the opposite: it makes the future worse.
seriously though if u look at what jobs are lost cutting social security/pension u only hurt the old, they have great political clout but i doubt their loss of income would be as traumatic to the economy as say cutting defense
That is a pretty reality-challenged assertion to make.
The old are largely highly dependent on their health benefits and pensions. Cutting their social security is literally stealing their savings since everyone has had to put ~10% of their incomes into the program since 1984 and 6-7% since 1971.
Social security has built up a $2.6T fund of excess FICA contributions, not paying that back as benefits would be the greatest theft in history.
The old are also dependent on their health care. Not many people on medicare can afford current health care prices, so medicare is both improving the health of the elderly and also supporting health service incomes (and profits).
You pull the $900B/yr spending from health care and the US health system would utterly collapse.
i bet it would just slow/stop growth in that sector.
I don't think you understand that well how economies operate.
People who don't have money to buy something do not buy it. Producers can lower the prices if they have a producer surplus (and health providers certainly do) but this lower price results in lower profits, with secondary effects therefrom -- like less money health providers spend back into the economy via their consumption.
So that $900B/yr in health care expenditures has a much greater footprint in our economy than just the millions of health industry jobs supported by it.
Defense, too, supports millions of jobs, both within the DOD, its private contractors, and the communities servicemen, contractors, and private employees spend their money into.
Cutting any expenditure is going to be very very painful to any local economy thereby affected.
i see the DoD more of a jobs program then anything here
yes, it is, but the problem is that the DOD's output is not real-world wealth (something that satisfies human needs and wants) nor is much of it even wealth-preserving (like health care, which restores health to people).
Just having a "jobs program" does not give one a stable economy. We could be paying people to dig holes in the ground but that in the end is not sustainable either. What we need is an economy that can pay its way in the world -- producing the wealth that we trade for the wealth that we consume -- and our $500B/yr trade deficit is indicative that we do not have such a thing now.
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The current budget is broken down roughly as follows:
$929B - Defense
$898B - Health care (medicare, medicaid)
$788B - Pensions (Social Security, government employee pensions, etc.)
$464B - "Welfare" (mostly unemployment, also remainder of ARRA)
$250B - Interest on the debt
$151B - Research, grants, parks
$141B - Education
$104B - Transportation
$57B - Public safety, courts, etc.
$29B - Miscellaneous stuff ("Bureaucracy")
Premise: You can not raise taxes, and the budget needs to be balanced.
Total cuts needed to balance the budget: $1.4 T (current CBO estimate)
My solution:
- End military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan by June. This will save $380B.
- Cut weapon purchases by 75%, maintain weapon research money. This saves $100B.
- Terminate remaining funds in ARRA - $232B
- End medicare payments for any treatment related to an uncurable terminal illness - $300B
- End social security payments to anyone with over $100,000 in assets or with over $50,000 a year income - $100B.
Total savings: $1.11 T
Ah, shit, even with draconian cuts I can't do it.