President Bushs budget director, Mitchell E.
Daniels Jr., has now admitted what most people have been
expecting that the era of federal budget deficits
has returned for the foreseeable future. In the current
fiscal year, the deficit will most probably be greater
than $200 billion and will very likely be more than $300
billion in the next fiscal year. Daniels also forecast
that there would be no end to federal budget deficits for
the next 10 years.
But Daniels added that there should be little concern
about how much the amount of federal spending exceeds the
tax revenues taken in by the U.S. government. After all,
the deficits will represent only about
23 percent of a U.S. Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
of around $10 trillion. Nor should anyone worry that
government borrowing will push up interest rates in the
financial markets because, according to Daniels, in an
increasingly global market lenders from around the world
will easily supply the lendable funds needed to cover
these deficits, resulting in a relatively negligible rise
in U.S. interest rates.
The impression that the Bush administration is trying to
create is clearly that these deficits will not matter.
The planned increases in spending on domestic and defense
programs impose no necessary noticeable burden upon the
American public. The deficits will be a drop in the
bucket in terms of the overall size of the national
economy, and they will have minimal impact on the costs
of private-sector borrowing for either investment or
consumer purchases.
In spite of the administrations rhetoric and
rationales, however, everything has its cost, and this is
as true for budget deficits as for anything else. More
than 150 years ago, the French economist
Frédéric Bastiat wrote an essay entitled
What Is Seen and What Is Not Seen in which he
pointed out that when government taxes or borrows, we all
see what the spending produces: new government buildings,
increased subsidies for selected groups of farmers,
additional government expenditures on health care, or
expanded arsenals of the weapons of war.
But what is not seen are all the things that would have
been produced, purchased, and used by the multitudes of
private individuals in the society if the government had
not taxed away a portion of their income or had not
siphoned off a portion of the available private savings
to cover the budget deficits. But because of the
governments taxing and spending policies, these are
might-have-beens, and people find it more
difficult to fully appreciate what it is the
governments spending their money forces them to do
without.
One way of thinking about the costs of the
governments fiscal policy is to consider what these deficits
are equal to in terms of private-sector spending today.
According to the preliminary (GDP) figures for 2002, a
federal budget deficit between $200 and $300 billion is
equal or almost equal to all purchases by the American
consuming public on furniture and household items ($319.2
billion), clothing and shoes ($321 billion), or
recreation ($285.9 billion). It is also equal to all
spending on single-family residential housing in the
United States ($245.3 billion).
In other words, these are the kinds of things that
Americans will have less of when their dollar equivalents
are borrowed away by the federal government to cover the
expected budget deficits. The scarce resources, labor
services, and capital equipment of society will be
redirected to produce and supply those things for which
the government spends the $200$300 billion, rather
than what private consumers and businessmen would have
used it to manufacture.
Daniels and others in the Bush administration might try
to fool us into thinking that the coming budget deficits
are not much different than a free lunch, but
each of us will end up partly paying the bill by having
to do without many things that we could have been able to
have instead.
Richard Ebeling is the Ludwig von Mises Professor of Economics at Hillsdale College in Michigan and serves as vice president of academic affairs at The Future of Freedom Foundation in Fairfax, Va.
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