Build Back Better—Wasting Trillions

Build Back Better—Wasting Trillions
President Joe Biden arrives for a virtual meeting in Washington on Aug. 11, 2021. (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)
Star Parker
11/17/2021
Updated:
11/21/2021
Commentary

As Democrats regroup to try to pass their $2 trillion Build Back Better Act, pressure grows to shine the light of fiscal responsibility on all this.

Given President Joe Biden’s crashing approval ratings, there’s some hint that the American people smell a rat. One sign of the smell of the rat is the alarming escalation of the rate of inflation to where it hasn’t been in over 30 years.

Let’s start with the announcement from the Treasury Department a week ago that the revenue measures built in to finance the $2 trillion in spending won’t add to the nation’s existing fiscal deficit but will reduce it.

The headline from the Treasury department reads “Preliminary Estimates Show Build Back Better Legislation Will Reduce Deficits.” The document shows an estimate of $2.151 trillion in revenue-raising measures against $2 trillion in spending.

However, the University of Pennsylvania Wharton School of Business has its own model, overseen by a professor with extensive experience in the Congressional Budget Office and the Treasury Department. According to the Wharton model, Build Back Better will add $500 billion to the federal deficit.

Treasury says the Build Back Better cuts the deficit by $151 billion. Wharton says it increases it by $500 billion. Not exactly a trivial difference.

Who do we believe?

It isn’t about one place having better economists than the other. The problem is that it’s impossible to make meaningful forecasts with such huge amounts of funds, all of which are highly politicized.

Anyone who has ever run a business knows what I am talking about.

I run a small business with revenues of a few million dollars per year. Even at a few million dollars per year, it’s a great challenge to do accurate projections.

If it’s hard at a few million, how about at $6.5 trillion, which is where the federal budget stands this year?

The corporation with the largest revenue in the country is Walmart. It’s about $560 billion, or about 10 percent of the federal budget.

I’m sure if you ask any analyst in Walmart’s budgeting department, they'll tell you how hard it is to project. But aside from the amounts we’re talking about, there’s another huge difference between what is going on in any private business, at Walmart, and at the federal government.

In private business, we’re spending our own funds. In a big corporation such as Walmart, they’re spending their shareholders’ funds. Every single individual spending and investing these funds is held personally responsible. If they’re irresponsible, they get fired.

But where is the personal responsibility for the trillions being spent by the federal government?

The 100 Democratic progressives who are pushing so hard for this $2 trillion in spending have zero personal responsibility to assure that these funds are spent in an effective and responsible way. It’s all politics. They dream up programs that sound so beautiful, but the realities of these programs submit to no responsible individual scrutiny.

Americans work too hard for their income on which they’re paying taxes to have these funds expropriated by those who have political power but no personal responsibility.

In addition, inflation is also a tax. When the government doesn’t explicitly take the funds through taxes and prints the money to meet obligations, this shows up as inflation, which then hits every working American.

In 1900, federal government non-defense spending amounted to 1.8 percent of our economy; in 1950, it was 10.4 percent; in 2000, it was 14.8 percent; and in 2021, it was 28.5 percent.

Far too much of your money and mine is being taken by politicians to wastefully spend.

Hopefully the $2 trillion won’t make it into law.

Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
Star Parker is the founder and president of the Center for Urban Renewal and Education (CURE) and host of the new weekly news talk show “Cure America with Star Parker.”
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