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Fareed: This could happen to you
Fareed Zakaria points out, “The federal government's expenditures on children have shrunk as a share of the budget over the past 30 years.”
Keep messing with kids and one day they will be rioting to throw out the people that stole and squandered their opportunity.
Look, we need to get stability in the Middle East where the oil is. We are facing a most untimely problem now because civil strife is breaking out in the region and there is no guarantee for the outcome.
It is essential to accelerate our path from oil to a host of alternatives immediately. This is an emergency situation. What the story is about are the children and how the people with the money have put a squeeze on them. It is time for a sacrifice from the top down.
Keep taking from the bottom and the bottom and events will overtake the top.
“America's grim budget outlook
Monday, March 7, 2011
It is now well understood that one of the crucial drivers of the crises in the Middle East is the discontent of its youth. Arab countries have been unable or unwilling to provide jobs, education, opportunity and rights for their young and so, finally, they revolted. Is there any lesson in this story for the United States? Not directly; there is no analogy between Middle Eastern dictatorships and American democracy. But if the troubles of Arab youth make us shine a light on the state of America's youth, the picture that emerges is grim.
As countries get rich, you might assume that they focus greater attention on their children. Not in the United States. The federal government's expenditures on children have shrunk as a share of the budget over the past 30 years. In 1960, about 20 percent of the federal budget went to programs dedicated to the health, development and education of Americans under the age of 18. Today it's 10 percent and falling.
By contrast, spending on the elderly has skyrocketed, doubling as a percentage of the budget during that time. Spending on Social Security and Medicare alone makes up close to 40 percent of the budget. In a decade, that share will rise considerably, perhaps to as much as half the federal budget. Whatever the exact percentages are - what you define as programs for children and the elderly can vary - the conclusion is clear: The federal government spends between $4 and $5 on elderly people for every dollar it spends on children.
Why is this happening? To put it bluntly, children don't vote or make campaign contributions, and the elderly do both aggressively. Our political system is hyper-responsive to votes and money, so the natural consequence is that those who organize, vote and send in dollars are looked after. Maybe we need to let toddlers form PACs.
In fact, the contrast between what we spend on the old and the young is part of a broader problem that threatens America's economic future. Look at the economic debate in Washington: We continue to avoid dealing with the large entitlement programs and the largest domestic giveaways, such as the tax deduction for mortgage interest. No tax increases, such as a value-added tax or a gas tax, are even remotely possible. Instead, legislators make a show of cutting the budget by trumpeting the savings in the much smaller pie of discretionary spending, slashing education, infrastructure, science and other such programs.
The net effect is that the United States will continue to massively subsidize consumption and starve investment. This is exactly the opposite of what history tells us produces long-term economic growth. The American economy is already far too focused on consumption and credit. And not only will this approach have limited benefits to the budget - any fiscal discipline that does not tackle entitlement spending is a charade - but we are cutting in precisely the areas where we should increase spending. From China to South Korea to Germany, countries are making large investments for future growth at the moment we are pruning such expenditures.
Again, the reasons are clear: There is no political will to take on the subsidies and spending that are consumption-related. And yet we need to find budget cuts, so lawmakers look to the easy place to find them: on the investment side of the budget. The result, however, will be disastrous for the country's long-term health.
President Obama sounded this call for investment in his State of the Union address. Hisbudget tries to preserve and even expand spending in key areas that will contribute to future growth. But he faces a Republican Party that is fixated by a budget-cutting mentality but refuses to propose entitlement cuts and in which a sledgehammer is preferred to a scalpel. And America's business community is sitting on the sidelines, betting its future on the growth in foreign countries (which themselves are making huge investments for their growth).
America's growth and prosperity over the past few decades have been consequences of major investments made in the 1950s and 1960s. Some of those are the interstate highway system; a public education system that was the envy of the world; massive funding for science and technology that produced the semi-conductor industry, large-scale computing, the Internet and the global positioning system. When we look back in 20 years, what investments will we point to that created the next generation of growth for the next generation of Americans?”
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YankeeJim
Arlington, Virginia, United States


Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (8)
at 17:30 on March 7th, 2011
So easy to find a reason to spend even more and so easy to use that reason to counter any spending cuts. The children will suffer. Really. What do you think they are going to do saddled with a massive national debt and an ever increasing government to support. If we can not "afford" to give support to the aging who supported us and deserve some return on that investment, how is it can we "afford" to place the ownership of our debt on our children? Can we look our children in the eye and say, we're doing this for you. Not with any good conscience. Simple fact. This government is unwilling to take the steps necessary to actually protect our children's future and would rather pass the hard decisions on for a later government to deal with. Buying favor from the faithful for re-election. The campaign for election continues... there is no President.
at 03:41 on March 8th, 2011
Stop the war spending now. Cut the slop: Close the Department of Commerce. Cut the Department of Homeland Security in half. Cut the EPA. Cut the DOE. Automate administered services.
at 17:31 on March 7th, 2011
And what about expenditure on war machine to keep it running?
at 03:42 on March 8th, 2011
Cut, cut, cut
at 17:51 on March 7th, 2011
The expensive war machine is never put on the table for cuts -- and won't be. The lobbyists will see to that. Defense cuts would eliminate the cushy profits for Halliburton, Bechtel, Wackenhut, Lockheed -- and their owners, the Cheneys, the Bushes, the Clintons, and the Obamas. Big Oil and Big Military corporations have figured out how to siphon gazillions of dollars from US taxpayers and directly into their pockets, while insisting this obscenely huge defense budget is still inadequate. We need adequate defenses, yes. But what we have is overkill -- a military corporate takeover. Cut the defense budget -- and cut our taxes.
at 03:42 on March 8th, 2011
Revolting ... cut, cut
at 21:29 on March 7th, 2011
You are right,every country needs adequate defense.But US empire(of the ,by the, and only for the military-industrial complex)does insist that more than 700 bases are inadequate for offence.
at 03:45 on March 8th, 2011
Cut Germany and cut Korea...takeover Japan, I like it there. In fact, make it a state...make Mexico a state...Puerto Rico too. I forgot Canada...they have great fishing.