OPINION
PAUL
KRUGMAN
The Cowardice of the Deficit Scolds
May 8, 2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/08/opinion/deficit-republicans-debt-limit.html
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
Financial
markets are finally taking notice of the possibility that the United States may
soon default on its debts. Interest rates on short-term debt and the cost of
insuring against default have spiked, reflecting fears that U.S. debt won’t be
repaid on time.
Few things
about the looming crisis should come as a surprise. Anyone expecting a MAGAfied
Republican Party, most of whose supporters don’t believe that Joe Biden was
legitimately elected, not to weaponize the debt limit — a strange feature of
U.S. budgeting that allows Congress to pass spending bills, then refuse to pay
for them — was delusional.
Nor am I
surprised that the Biden administration hasn’t yet adopted any of the possible
strategies through which the debt ceiling might be circumvented. Many of the
economic objections to such strategies are just wrong. But there are legal and
political risks to a debt end-run that could roil markets, and I understand the
administration’s reluctance to show its hand until the last minute.
One thing
that has come as a surprise, however, is the cowardice of the self-appointed
guardians of fiscal responsibility.
I’m talking
about the various groups — business organizations like the Chamber of Commerce
and the Business Roundtable, supposedly nonpartisan think tanks like the
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget — that played a very prominent role
in the Obama years, successfully convincing much of the media and political
establishment that debt, rather than a sluggish recovery, was the biggest
economic issue facing America. The debt obsession, in turn, helped keep
unemployment much higher for much longer than necessary, in effect costing
America millions of jobs.
Now, I used
to mock these groups as the Very Serious People and deficit scolds, suggesting
that their real agenda had more to do with shrinking social programs — and
reducing tax rates! — than with genuine concerns about debt.
Still, one
might have expected even these groups to balk at the idea of fiscal policy
through extortion, which, aside from violating any notion of an orderly budget
process, could greatly worsen America’s fiscal situation by destroying our
credibility and hence raising our borrowing costs.
Indeed,
some reporting suggests that Biden administration officials expected these
groups to put pressure on Republicans to avoid debt brinkmanship. But the
actual response of the deficit scolds has if anything been to urge the
administration to give in to blackmail.
Perhaps the
most shocking behavior has come from the Committee for a Responsible Federal
Budget, an organization that usually commands some respect, even from those who
disagree with its priorities, for its technical expertise.
Given that
reputation, C.R.F.B.’s response to the debt impasse was simply astonishing. It
not only urged Biden to negotiate with hostage-takers but also declared that
“the House passed a reasonable bill” to reduce the deficit.
The
committee, which knows its numbers, has to know better than that. No, the House
didn’t pass a “reasonable” deficit reduction plan; it didn’t even really pass a
plan at all, just scribbled down some numbers with no explanation of how to
achieve them.
The bulk of
the claimed deficit reduction comes from imposing a 10-year cap on
discretionary spending; by 2033 this would mean cutting spending 24 percent
below current projections. Which programs would be cut? If some things like
veterans’ benefits were exempted, would the immense cuts required elsewhere
even be possible? Republicans won’t say.
Another big
item in the G.O.P. proposal is slashing funding for the Internal Revenue
Service. The Congressional Budget Office, like most independent analysts, says
that this would increase the deficit, by hampering the government’s ability to
go after wealthy tax evaders.
There’s
more, and it’s almost all bad. Nobody who knows anything about the federal
budget could honestly call this proposal “reasonable.”
So what’s
going on here? There are two, not mutually exclusive possibilities.
One is
cowardice. Organizations like the C.R.F.B. have built their brand around posing
as nonpartisan, which is hard when the parties are as asymmetric as they are
today — when a flawed but sane Democratic Party confronts the party of Marjorie
Taylor Greene. The easy way out is to pretend that Republicans are being
reasonable, even when they manifestly aren’t.
The other
possibility is that the pose of being nonpartisan was always a fraud. Consider
the fact that in July 2019, when Donald Trump was president but Democrats
controlled the House, the debt ceiling was suspended for two years. Do you
really think the C.R.F.B. would have described Nancy Pelosi’s position as
“reasonable” if she had threatened to cause a financial crisis unless Trump
reversed his 2017 tax cut?
In any
case, one small benefit if we get through this mess — right now my guess is
that Biden will end up invoking the argument that the debt ceiling is
unconstitutional, but who knows? — may be to discredit deficit scolds who never
deserved their past policy influence.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a distinguished
professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman
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