Federal spending grew to $20,705 per household in 2004-the
highest level since World War II and an increase of $3,000 per
household over the average spending during the 1990s. After passage
of the omnibus spending bill, discretionary spending was
projected to increase 8.7 percent in 2005.
This is worrisome enough, but it pales in comparison to the
fiscal nightmare of the Medicare prescription drug benefit, which
increased the government's unfunded obligations by $8.1 trillion
over the next 75 years.
One reason for this spending growth is that the budget process
does not force lawmakers to recognize the long-term costs of
policy choices. The budget process should be changed to include a
measure of the federal government's long-term liabilities and
obligations-especially those of entitlement programs such as
Medicare and Social Security. This would force Congress to
acknowledge the fiscal threat that these obligations pose and
begin to deal with them.
Today's taxpayers are paying the cost of entitlement
obligations entered into by lawmakers many years ago. Total
"mandatory" spending now constitutes 54.3 percent of total
federal spending, most of which is devoted to entitlement programs,
which already consume 6.8 percent of gross domestic product
(GDP)-8.2 percent when net interest is included-and will require
far more resources in the future.
By 2050, spending for Social Security and Medicare is
expected to increase sharply to nearly 25 percent of federal
spending as baby boomers begin to retire, and total federal
spending could consume nearly one-third of the national
economy. According to David Walker, Comptroller General of the
United States, the debt from these and other programs translates to
a burden of $350,000 for every worker in America. As Walker
notes:
Without reform, known demographic trends, rising health care
costs, and projected growth in federal spending for Social
Security, Medicare, and Medicaid will result in massive fiscal
pressures that, if not effectively addressed, could cripple the
economy, threaten our national security, and adversely affect the
quality of life of Americans in the future.
Fixing a Dysfunctional Process
In the private sector, future obligations require regular
payments or are at least disclosed on a company's annual balance
sheet, but because the federal budget process excludes any measure
of entitlement obligations and does not require that money be set
aside to finance them, lawmakers continue to ignore the harsh
fiscal reality that entitlements impose.
In fact, under the current budget process, Members of
Congress and the President have every incentive to increase future
commitments for these programs and no incentive to provide for
their payment. The recent Medicare drug bill is an excellent
example of this dysfunctional process. The amount budgeted for the
Medicare prescription drug benefit over the next 10 years was
only the tip of the iceberg. Its real cost is an $8.1 trillion
increase in unfunded entitlement obligations.
The private sector, by contrast, has a regimented process that
requires a business to record and report its obligations on its
financial statements each year as they are incurred, even if these
obligations are to be paid in the future. This gives key
decision makers such as shareholders, investors, and oversight
entities a more complete and accurate assessment of a
business's financial condition.
Amending the federal budget process to include this principle of
planning for future obligations would:
-
Impose responsible fiscal management on the budget
process. Significant policy undertakings such as the
Medicare drug benefit should contain a sound financial plan and
make an annual allocation toward any liability or obligation.
-
Require recognition of future liabilities and obligations
in annual budget planning. The budget is now written on a cash
basis and does not plan for the huge liabilities and obligations
that will come due in the future. This would provide Congress with
a long-term budgetary context for proposals to fix entitlement
programs within which new costs would be evaluated
against future savings.
-
Force lawmakers to recognize the true cost of proposed
future entitlements in the annual federal budget. This would
require Congress to begin to rein in the federal government's
commitments that will come due in the future and discourage
lawmakers from voting for new benefits and passing on the cost to
future Congresses.
Conclusion
Congress should include a formal measure of liabilities and
obligations in the budget process to present a realistic assessment
of the huge fiscal challenges confronting the nation. While this
action alone would not be a panacea for fiscal responsibility,
entitlement reform, or the preservation of pro-growth tax
policies, Congress needs a strong warning mechanism as it makes
budget and policy decisions.
The ultimate success of such a change will depend on other steps
taken to control the federal budget and whether Congress reacts in
a wise way. One thing is clear, however: The United States cannot
afford to ignore the real threat to its fiscal health. A budget
process that would force Congress to take action on
entitlements now is vital to protecting future generations from
inheriting a debt that they cannot afford.
Alison Acosta
Fraser is Director of the Thomas A. Roe Institute for
Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.