Although the federal government has run budget deficits every
year for nearly three decades, recent government estimates indicate
that revenues will exceed spending by 2001. Indeed, both President
Bill Clinton and congressional leaders have stated their intention
to balance the budget as early as 1999. Even if lawmakers do
nothing more than control future spending to the limited degree
called for in last year's budget deal-admittedly, a bold
assumption-the projected budget surplus will climb to more than
$100 billion by 2006. This emerging surplus has created a three-way
battle in Washington, D.C. Some policymakers would like to spend
the surplus money on new government programs. Others recommend
using it to reduce the national debt. A third group, meanwhile,
prefers returning the money to U.S. taxpayers.
If policymakers wish to increase economic growth and improve
living standards, they should dedicate the surplus revenues to the
option that will generate the highest returns. In simpler terms,
they should ask themselves how the surplus money could get the
"most bang for the buck." Economic research continues to show that
tax cuts, particularly reducing marginal tax rates on work,
savings, and investment, would generate large returns. Debt
reduction also would have positive returns, but the benefit would
be modest because the government's inflation-adjusted borrowing
costs are relatively low. Increasing spending, by contrast, would
be the least desirable way to dispose of surplus revenues. Indeed,
most government programs have negative returns, meaning that the
economy's overall performance falls as government spending
increases.
The analysis by the country's lawmakers should not take place in
a vacuum, however. In the real world of politics, interest groups
actively lobby to increase spending on their favored programs. And
because politicians can curry favor with constituents and
supporters by boosting spending, it will be almost impossible to
achieve the debt reduction option. As such, the only pro-growth way
to deal with excess tax revenues is to cut taxes. More
specifically, policymakers could bring about significant increases
in the country's wealth if they used the surplus to facilitate
either tax reform or Social Security reform.
Why the Size of Government Is the Real Issue
Two decades of budget battles in Washington, D.C., have
created a bipartisan myth that balancing the budget is the most
important goal of fiscal policy. This is a deeply flawed
assumption. Budget deficits are neither good nor bad. They simply
measure the extent to which government is financed through
borrowing instead of taxes. To be sure, there are some good reasons
to avoid large and persistent deficits, such as a moral concern
about imposing costs on future generations and a political concern
about whether taxpayers recognize the true cost of government.
Nonetheless, a myopic obsession with balancing the budget distracts
policymakers from more important issues-such as the size of
government and the burden of the tax system.
In reality, the battle over the surplus is a battle over the
size of government. Advocates of bigger government want the tax
burden to remain high so that excess tax revenues can be used to
create new programs and expand existing ones. The Clinton
Administration, for example, has proposed expanding the Medicare
program and creating new federal childcare programs. In fact, the
Administration's budget proposals include $100 billion in
additional taxes over five years in order to finance addiional
increases in the size of government. Some policymakers, by
contrast, want the tax burden to remain high in order to keep
government on its current growth path while balancing the budget
faster and/or paying off some of the national debt.
Why Cutting Taxes Is the Better Option. Advocates
of tax reduction believe that surplus tax revenues should be
returned to those who earned the money in the first place-the
taxpayers. This view also holds that a tax cut should be equal, at
the very least, to any projected surplus, thus precluding
politicians from spending the money. In this scenario, tax cuts
would keep government from growing any larger. Many tax cut
proponents today hope to go beyond such a point, however, and urge
tax reductions that exceed the estimated surplus. The benefit of
this approach is that lawmakers would be under pressure to reduce
federal spending in order to limit or preclude increases in
government borrowing.

In addition to constraining the growth of government, tax cuts
are desirable because lower tax rates increase incentives to work,
save, and invest. The degree to which the economy benefits,
however, will depend on how the tax cut is structured. In order to
maximize the increase in family income and improvement in standards
of living, tax reductions should be designed to move the tax code
toward a single rate consumption-based tax, such as the flat tax.
Alternatively, tax cuts could help facilitate the transition to a
private Social Security system that would boost retirement income,
increase national savings, and reduce the unfunded liabilities of
the current system. Furthermore, cutting taxes has a more
beneficial impact on the economy, dollar for dollar, than reducing
the debt. Although scholars have failed to find any significant
relationship between government borrowing and growth, the academic
literature is rife with studies that illustrate the ways in which
high tax rates reduce incentives to engage in productive economic
behavior.1
Finally, the tax burden should be reduced because Americans are
overtaxed. Despite the tiny tax cut approved last year, federal
taxes are expected to consume 19.9 percent of economic output in
1998, a peacetime record.2 To put this
issue in perspective, taxes totaled 19.7 percent of gross domestic
product (GDP) in 1981, the year Ronald Reagan took office in part
because of a nationwide tax revolt.
Not only are taxes at record highs today, the trend is in the
wrong direction. Since Bill Clinton took office in 1993, the tax
burden as a percent of GDP has climbed by 2.1 percentage points.
This may not sound like a large amount, but 2.1 percent of an
$8.461 trillion economy is $177.7 billion. Just reducing taxes to
their level when Clinton took office would mean that the average
family of four would receive more than $2,500 in annual tax
relief.
HOW TO CUT TAXES The burden of government in the
United States is smaller than in many other countries. U.S. labor
markets are much more flexible, and the country has comparatively
small amounts of economic regulation. Inflation is at very low
levels, and Americans enjoy the benefits of expanded international
trade. These factors help to explain why the United States is
prosperous, with reasonable growth and low unemployment.
Nevertheless, several reforms could accelerate the economy's
performance. Two of these reforms involve taxes, and in both cases
the reforms almost certainly would require a reduction in the
country's tax burden.
First, the income tax system suffers from serious moral
and economic shortcomings. With respect to the moral question, the
current income tax code fails a simple test of justice and fairness
because it does not treat everyone equally. In terms of the
economic shortcomings, the present system undermines the economy's
performance by levying punitive tax rates, imposing double taxation
on savings and investment, and burdening taxpayers with more than
$150 billion of compliance costs. The best solution to the tax
code's myriad problems is the flat tax. In order to minimize
political opposition to a flat tax, however, the tax rate under a
flat tax should be set at a sufficiently low level so that a
substantial majority of taxpayers would receive a tax cut. The
upcoming budget surplus makes such a tax cut more feasible.
Second, the Social Security system is a financial
disaster. Not only is it actuarially bankrupt, with trillions of
dollars of unfunded liabilities, it also is a bad deal for workers,
offering them meager retirement benefits in exchange for the huge
amount of taxes they pay into the system.
3 The only way to solve both problems
is to reduce payroll taxes substantially and then require workers
to place that money in private retirement accounts. Workers who
chose this option would have no problem foregoing their promised
Social Security benefits, because their private retirement
investments would generate a nest egg that would give them much
more income in retirement than would be possible in the
government's system. Surplus tax revenues could help facilitate the
transition to a private system while ensuring the benefits payments
to current retirees would continue
Regardless of whether fundamental reform of either Social
Security or the internal revenue code is politically practical in
the near future, incremental changes could move the United States
closer to a tax code that treats all citizens equally or to a
Social Security system that provides workers with more retirement
security.
In the case of Social Security, lawmakers could begin the
process of reform by allowing workers to divert a portion of the
existing payroll tax into private pension accounts. This option
would reduce the government's long-term debt problem because
workers who choose this option would agree to forego a portion of
the future benefits they currently are promised. Workers would be
better off under this option because private pension accounts earn
better returns, thus accruing more income for retirement. Future
taxpayers would be better off as well, because even partial
privatization would reduce the huge unfunded liability of the
system.
Using surplus tax revenues to begin moving to a flat tax is
somewhat more complicated, but only because there are many problems
with the current tax code. Its high tax rates, pervasive double
taxation of savings and investment, and mind-numbing complexity cry
out for attention. Policymakers need to be sure, however, that
their incremental changes to the tax code are consistent with their
efforts to move to a fair and simple flat tax. In other words, any
revisions should move the country closer to a system that taxes all
income, but only taxes it one time and at one low rate.
Among the reforms that would satisfy these objectives are:
-
The repeal of the marriage
penalty. The current tax system penalizes marriage. A married
two-earner couple will pay more in taxes than an otherwise
identical couple of two income earners who choose to live together.
For the 21 million couples affected, this marriage penalty averages
about $1,400 annually. Because there is no marriage penalty under
the flat tax, repeal of the marriage penalty would be an important
step toward fundamental reform.
-
The repeal of the death tax. A
core principle of tax reform is that the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS) should get only one bite of the apple. Once taxpayers pay tax
on their earned income, the government should not be allowed to
impose an additional layer of tax on parents who choose to save
that after-tax money to leave a nest egg for their children.
Repealing the death tax would be a major step toward establishing a
tax code that treats all income and all taxpayers the same.
-
An end to double taxation of
savings. The current tax code does not wait until a taxpayer's
death before imposing double taxation on his or her income. With
some exceptions, such as individual retirement accounts (IRAs), the
current system imposes a second layer of tax on income that is
saved by taxing the interest earned. Because there is no second
layer of tax on income that is consumed, this creates a bias
against saving. The ideal way to end that bias would be to extend
IRA treatment to all savings.4 To the
extent that comprehensive IRA expansion is not feasible, lawmakers
could move in this direction by eliminating the double taxation on
certain kinds of savings, such as money set aside for purposes of
higher education.
THE WEAK CASE FOR DEBT REDUCTION
Many lawmakers believe that surplus tax revenues should be used
to pay down the national debt. They believe that this approach is
morally proper because it would reduce the burden on future
generations. At the very least, reductions in the national debt
would lower the amount of interest future taxpayers would have to
pay to service the debt. In addition, those who favor debt
reduction hope that budget surpluses would increase national
savings and bring down interest rates, thereby generating positive
impact on the economy.
All these arguments have merit. Reducing the national debt would
generate benefits for taxpayers and the economy. The real question,
however, is whether the benefits are greater than or less than the
benefits that would accrue from using surplus revenues to cut
taxes. Properly answering this question requires a comparison of
the cost of maintaining the current tax code and Social Security
system versus the cost of maintaining the national debt at present
levels. Both the tax code and the Social Security system impose
enormous costs on the economy, and there is substantial evidence
that fundamental reform would mean significant increases in family
well-being. Could debt reduction yield similar benefits?
An analysis shows that debt reduction would produce only minor
benefits. The cost of carrying debt is modest, which means the
benefit of reducing debt would also be very modest. According to
projections from the Congressional Budget Office,5 taxpayers currently pay 6.5 percent interest
on the government debt, and that rate is expected to fall to about
6.0 percent over the next five years. With prices rising at about
2.5 percent to 3 percent each year, this would mean that the real
(or inflation-adjusted) cost of paying interest on the national
debt in the future is only between 3 percent and 4 percent
annually. Historical numbers also verify that carrying the cost of
the government debt is relatively small.6 Inflation-adjusted interest on the
national debt over the past 30 years has averaged only 1.57
percent.

With a national debt of nearly $3.8 trillion, expenses add up even
when interest rates are low. Interest payments are expected to cost
about $244 billion this year. Paying down the national debt,
however, will not change that annual interest cost significantly. A
$100 billion reduction in the national debt next year, for example,
would reduce interest payments by less than $6.6 billion. Although
$6.6 billion in lower interest payments is desirable (as is the
return of $100 billion to private capital markets), consider the
alternative: That same $100 billion of surplus tax revenues would
be more than enough money to abolish the capital gains taxes, the
death tax, and the alternative minimum tax completely, and have
enough left over to cut income tax rates across the board.
Just as it would be in the case of debt reduction, tax cuts
would return $100 billion to the productive sector of the economy,
but the elimination of these three taxes (capital gains taxes,
death taxes, and alternative minimum taxes) would have a huge
impact on economic growth. Different scholars have produced varying
estimates,7 but it is safe to say that
increased incentives to save and invest would yield benefits that
dwarf the $6.6 billion interest savings from debt reduction. The
reduction in compliance costs alone from eliminating the three
taxes almost certainly would exceed the benefits generated by debt
reduction.8
Social Security reform provides another example. With $100 billion
of surplus, lawmakers could reduce the Social Security payroll tax
by about 3 percentage points, and require taxpayers to place that
money in private retirement accounts. Although this percentage may
sound modest, it initially would represent a huge step toward
privatizing the system. Australia's private retirement system is
based on a 9 percent savings requirement, for example, while the
Chilean system mandates 10 percent savings. It is difficult,
however, to measure precisely the economic benefits that would
accrue from new savings and lower tax rates on labor. Nonetheless,
using $100 billion of the surplus revenues as the first step toward
privatization clearly would produce economic benefits that are
several times in excess of the $6.6 billion in interest savings
resulting from paying off some of the debt.
9

Interest savings from reducing the national debt are modest, but
what about broader macroeconomic benefits? Advocates of debt
reduction argue, for example, that budget surpluses will lower
interest rates, and that this will spur additional investment.
These assertions probably are true, but the evidence indicates that
the positive effects are very small. There is not a significant
relationship between interest rates and budget deficits and/or
debt.10 Simply stated, in world
capital markets comprising trillions of dollars, even large shifts
in U.S. government borrowing would be relatively minor, and any
potential small impact on interest rates can be swamped by other
factors, such as monetary policy and changes in the demand for
credit. It is also not true that interest rates are a primary
determinant of investment choices.11
Investors primarily seek to maximize after-tax return when they put
their money at risk. Although interest rates can be part of that
calculation, tax policy and expected profits play much bigger roles
in the investment decision.
A simple analogy may help explain the reason that debt reduction
is not necessarily the wisest financial choice. Consider the case
of a family that reaps an unexpected financial windfall. Assuming
its members do not want to spend the money right away, they have
two choices for the ways in which to use it: They can pay off a
portion of their mortgage or they can save for retirement by
investing the money in a mutual fund. Because Americans over the
years have been told that debt is bad, the family might be tempted
to pay off a portion of its mortgage. Choosing this option
certainly would have a beneficial impact. One again should compare
the alternatives, however. Assume that the mortgage carried a 7.5
percent interest rate. Once inflation is factored into the
equation, the real cost of the mortgage is 5 percent or lower. This
calculation is verified by historical data from the February 1997
Economic Report of the President, which reveals that real home
mortgage interest rates over the past 30 years have averaged just 4
percent. And because mortgage interest is tax-deductible for almost
30 percent of the population, the actual cost could be even lower.
By contrast, consider the impact on the family's fortunes if it
took the money and invested it in stocks. Long-term returns average
10 percent, with inflation-adjusted returns averaging 7 percent. In
other words, the family would be sacrificing long-term wealth by
choosing to reduce the size of its mortgage.12
Some may respond that economic growth should not be the sole
criterion when deciding the ways in which to dispose of surplus
revenues. This is a legitimate point. Perhaps it is worth
sacrificing potential improvements in standards of living in
exchange for the moral satisfaction of reducing the amount of debt
on future generations. This approach assumes, however, that
politicians would be able to resist pressure or the temptation to
use the surplus revenues for new spending. President Clinton
already has proposed some $40 billion to $50 billion of new and
expanded government programs. Many Republicans in Congress appear
equally profligate in proposing to increase spending on everything
from highways to science. In the final analysis, it is probable
that the only way to limit the growth of government is to return
the money to taxpayers.
WHY INCREASING FEDERAL SPENDING IS THE WORST OPTION
Government spending this year is expected to consume $1.67
trillion. Nonetheless, there are those who argue that more spending
is the best way to use the surplus tax revenues. More specifially,
they argue that certain types of government spending may have a
positive rate of return. New highways, for example, will facilitate
commerce. More education outlays will boost human capital, creating
a more productive work force. Government-sponsored scientific
research will expand knowledge, spinning off commercial benefits.
Virtually every interest group promoting new spending makes claims
that their programs have a positive effect on the economy.
Although it is theoretically possible that certain types of
government spending can promote growth, real world evidence shows
that the federal government does a very poor job of correctly
identifying those theoretical possibilities.13 Transportation infrastructure is desirable,
for example, but there is every reason to believe that better
returns would come from choices made at the state and local levels.
Similarly, education has a positive effect, but the federal
government has been notoriously poor at judging how best to
allocate those resources. Instead, states and localities should be
encouraged to de-monopolize their school systems. Likewise,
scientific research produces some economic benefits, but most
observers agree that Silicon Valley is much more likely to make
successful breakthroughs than the federal government.
In other words, although particular types of government spending
may generate some benefits, the question is how much of a return
taxpayers are getting for their money. If $1.00 of new highway
spending produces $0.50 of economic benefit, taxpayers and the
economy still suffer. Even if a new highway produced $1.05 in
economic benefits, the spending still would be counterproductive
because private-sector investment generates average yields of about
10 percent.14
Advocates for various programs will continue to argue that their
spending proposals would yield very large returns. Examining the
veracity of each individual claim is beyond the scope of this
paper. At the very least, however, government should not be allowed
to grow faster than current projections. Advocates for new spending
should be forced to compete against other constituencies when
seeking funding for their programs, within the context of the
excessively generous spending levels agreed to in last year's
budget agreement.
CONCLUSION
The government is collecting near-record amounts of tax revenue.
This windfall, combined with rather modest levels of fiscal
restraint, could generate a budget surplus. The potential existence
of a surplus, however, is not nearly as important as the questions
of whether government already is too big or the U.S. tax code is
too destructive. Thorough analysis of these questions strongly
suggests that the tax burden should be reduced, preferably by
reforming the tax code and/or privatizing the Social Security
system.
ARE DEFICITS AND
DEBT ALWAYS BAD?
Many Americans recognize that politicians have used government
borrowing to finance useless and counterproductive programs. This
has created a well-justified suspicion of debt and deficits. It is
important to realize, however, that government borrowing is
sometimes preferable to the other options. Consider the following
examples:
-
World War II: Defeating Nazi
Germany and Imperial Japan may have been impossible if the
government did not have access to private credit markets. Yes, the
government did incur a huge amount of debt, pushing the debt-to-GDP
ratio to more than 100 percent, but the benefits of maintaining
freedom certainly were worth the cost. Moreover, because subsequent
generations also enjoyed the benefits of freedom, using debt to
spread the cost of victory over several generations was a
reasonable approach.
-
Winning the Cold War and Saving the
Economy: As the 1980s began, the economy was wracked by
stagflation, and the United States was in retreat around the world.
President Ronald Reagan undertook several steps to improve the
country's stability. Two of these steps, restoring the military and
combating inflation, caused long-run increases in the deficit. And
although the tax-rate reductions eventually did pay for themselves
(total revenues increased by 99.44 percent over the decade),
short-term revenue losses during the early part of the decade added
to a growing national debt. Just as was the case in World War II,
however, the benefits of Reagan's policies clearly exceeded the
modest cost of additional debt. The defense buildup was an integral
part of the collapse of communism, and the dramatic economic
reforms of the 1980s largely are responsible for the economy's
remarkable performance over the past 15 years.
Compare these examples to what happened during the Great
Depression of the 1930s. Driven in part by concerns about debt,
President Herbert Hoover raised tax rates from 25 percent to 63
percent in 1930. President Franklin D. Roosevelt went further,
increasing the top tax rate to 77 percent in 1936.* Notwithstanding-or perhaps
because of-these huge rate increases, tax collections were
stagnant, and the economy remained moribund throughout the
decade.
The analysis also has direct applications to the private sector.
Most individuals and businesses incur debt as part of financial
strategies to improve standards of living and profitability. Most
households go into debt to buy a house, and many use debt for other
large purchases such as automobiles. Consumers often take these
steps because they expect the benefits of home ownership and car
purchases will exceed the costs of the debt. Likewise, businesses
borrow when they feel they have investments that will generate
enough income to cover their costs.
To be sure, the fact that debt and deficits have positive uses,
particularly in the productive sector of the economy, does not mean
that politicians should have an unlimited ability to borrow (for
that matter, individuals and businesses sometimes get into debt
trouble as well). In short, debt and deficits are justified only if
the long-run benefits of a policy exceed the long-run costs.
Because elected officials oftentimes respond to political
pressures, however, it is reasonable to remain constantly vigilant
to ensure that lawmakers do not abuse the privilege of taking on
debt.
* The Tax Foundation, Facts &
Figures on Government Finance (Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1988, 1989).
Daniel
J. Mitchell, Ph.D., is the McKenna Senior
Fellow in Political Economy at The Heritage Foundation.
Endnotes
1. Roger H. Gordon and Dale Jorgenson,
"The Investment Tax Credit and Countercyclical Policy," Harvard
Institute of Economic Research Discussion Paper No. 373, Cambridge,
Mass., June 1974; James M. Poterba and Lawrence Summers, "Dividend
Taxes, Corporate Investment, and `Q'," National Bureau of Economic
Research Working Paper No. 829, December 1981; Martin Feldstein,
"Inflation, Tax Rules, and the Accumulation of Residential and
Non-Residential Capital," Institute for International Economic
Studies Seminar Paper No. 186, University of Stockholm,
Sweden, November 1981; Dale Jorgenson, "Taxation and Technical
Change" in Ralph Landau and N. Bruce Hannay, eds., Taxation,
Technology, and the U.S. Economy (New York: Pergamon Press,
1981); Robert E. Hall and Dale Jorgenson, "Tax Policy and
Investment Behavior," American Economic Review, Vol. 58, No.
3, pp. 391-414; Charles W. Bischoff, "The Effect of Alternative Lag
Distributions," in Gary Fromm, ed., Tax Incentives and Capital
Spending (Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, 1971);
Keith Marsden, "Links Between Taxes and Economic Growth: Some
Empirical Evidence," World Bank Staff Working Paper No. 605,
Washington, D.C., 1983.
2. U.S. Government Printing Office,
Historical Tables, Budget of the United States Government,
FY1999, February 1998.
3. William W. Beach and Gareth G. Davis,
"Social Security's Rate of Return," A Report of the Heritage
Center for Data Analysis, No. CDA98-01, The Heritage
Foundation, January 15, 1998.
4. This can be achieved through
traditional IRAs, which allow a deduction when the income is first
earned, but then impose the one layer of tax on withdrawals, or
back-ended (or Roth) IRAs, which impose the one layer of tax when
income is first earned, but then do not impose a second layer of
tax on subsequent withdrawals.
5. Congressional Budget Office, The
Economic and Budget Outlook, Fiscal Years 1999-2008,
Washington, D.C., January 1998.
6. U.S. Government Printing Office,
Economic Report of the President, February 1997.
7. See William W. Beach, "The Case for
Repealing the Estate Tax," Heritage Foundation Backgrounder
No. 1091, August 21, 1996, and "Balanced Budget Talking Points #8:
How a Capital Gains Tax Cut Would Boost State Revenues," Heritage
Foundation F.Y.I. No. 82, December 29, 1995.
8. Arthur P. Hall, "The Compliance Costs
and Regulatory Burden Imposed by the Federal Tax Laws," Tax
Foundation Special Brief, January 1995.
9. Martin Feldstein, "The Missing Piece
in Policy Analysis: Social Security Reform," American Economic
Review, Vol. 86, No. 2 (May 1996).
10. U.S. Department of the Treasury,
"Government Deficit Spending and Its Effects on Prices of Financial
Assets," Washington, D.C., May 1983.
11. Aldona Robins, Gary Robins, and
Paul Craig Roberts, "The Relative Impact of Taxation and Interest
Rates on the Cost of Capital," in Dale Jorgenson and Ralph Landau,
eds., Technology and Economic Policy (Cambridge, Mass.:
Bellinger Press, 1986).
12. By contrast, if the family had
large credit card debts that were being carried at a high interest
rate, say 18 percent, then the family's economic well-being would
be best served by using any financial windfall to reduce that
debt.
13. The evidence also is abundant that
the overall size of government imposes costs on the economy. See,
for instance, James R. Barth and Michael D. Bradley, "The Impact of
Government Spending on Economic Activity," The National Chamber
Foundation, Washington, D.C., 1988; Robert J. Barro, "A
Cross-Country Study of Growth, Saving, and Government," National
Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 2855, February 1989;
Robert J. Barro, "Economic Growth in a Cross-Section of Countries,"
Quarterly Journal of Economics 56 (1991), pp. 407-443;
Daniel Landau, "Government Expenditures and Economic Growth: A
Cross-Country Study," Southern Economic Journal 49 (1983),
pp. 783-792; Kevin B. Grier and Gordon Tullock, "An Empirical
Analysis of Cross-National Economic Growth, 1951-1980," Journal
of Monetary Economics 24 (1989), pp. 259-276; R.C. Kormendi and
P.G. Mequire, "Macroeconomic Determinants of Growth: Cross-Country
Evidence," Journal of Monetary Economics 16 (1985), pp.
141-163; Michael Marlow, "Private Sector Shrinkage and the Growth
of Industrialized Economies," Public Choice 49 (1986), pp.
143-154; John McCallum and Andre Blais, "Government Special
Interest Groups and Economic Growth," Public Choice 54
(1987), pp. 3-18.
14. For specific evidence on the
negative net impact of government spending, particularly on
infrastructure programs, see Lawrence H. Thompson,
"Anti-Recessionary Job Creation: Lessons From the Emergency Jobs
Act of 1983," Testimony of, U.S. General Accounting Office,
GAO/T-HRD-92-13, February 6, 1992; James Bovard, "JTPA: Another
Federal Training Fraud," Policy Analysis, No. 131, The Cato
Institute, Washington, D.C., March 27, 1990.