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Five Year Balanced Budget

Patrick Ruffini thinks one way out of our national fiscal nightmare is to adopt, like 49 of the 50 states, a balanced budget amendment. Recognizing that this has had the perverse effect of profligate spending in flush years and irresponsible cuts in lean years, he suggests a five year cycle:

In bad times, states could deficit spend — by no more than the surpluses of the previous four years. In good times, states would be forced to bank surpluses — particularly if the past few years were economically tough.

Given that legislators are mostly elected on two-year cycles, the most likely effect of this would be to exacerbate the problem.  They’d still spend like drunken sailers when the money’s available, deficit spend when allowed, and then have draconian cuts if necessary in the fifth year.  Or come up with cute budgetary tricks to create a budget that’s “balanced” on paper by shifting the spending to January 1 of the next year or somesuch.

About the Author: James Joyner is the publisher of Outside the Beltway and the managing editor of the Atlantic Council. He's a former Army officer, Desert Storm vet, and college professor with a PhD in political science from The University of Alabama. He lives just outside the Beltway in Alexandria, Virginia with his wife and infant daughter.

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Comments
 

Is this the first Five Year Plan?

Posted by Dave Schuler | February 22, 2009 | 11:08 am | Permalink
 

Yeah, the Communist allusion occurred to me as well. Then again, we're nationizing everything and redistributing on the basis of "to each according to his needs..." so why not.

Posted by James Joyner | February 22, 2009 | 11:19 am | Permalink
 

I thought it was amusing. And showed how much time had passed.

Posted by Dave Schuler | February 22, 2009 | 11:24 am | Permalink
 

Perhaps a running 5 year average. This would allow deficit spending and force saving depending on where the current cycle is compared to the average.

If I was handed the pen to draft an amendment, I would look more towards capping the percentage of Americans who could receive government assistance to 25% and that 75% have to pay taxes. This would help keep the 'bread and circuses' to a minimum.

Or as an alternative, change how we elect senators again, but this time make it based on federal tax dollars paid (with a minimum of 1 for everyone). The would have brought a screeching halt to the stimulus bill.

Posted by yetanotherjohn | February 22, 2009 | 02:32 pm | Permalink
 

I associate this sort of economic non-thinking with the 80's, and especially with Phil Gramm. It's too late to inject this into the thread below, but I've never understood why he has any reputation at all on budgetary and economic matters, since his advice and prognstications have always been so wrong.

From the idiocy of the Gramm-Rudman attempts to rein in the deficit by abandoning Congress's role in actually making decisions on what to spend on and which proved easy to get around (as anyone else would have predicted), to his frequent declarations that Clinton's 1993 budget was going to kill the economy, to his repeal of Glass-Steagel, he has been consistently wrong, and his failures have been consistently ignored by the so-called liberal media. If McCain had won last fall, this is the record of accomplishment we would have had with our new Treasury Secretary, with a free hand under a President who admitted to knowing nothing about economics. Bleah!

Posted by Dantheman | February 22, 2009 | 04:01 pm | Permalink
 

We'll see who is serious about fiscal responsibility when we see who endorses the new Obama deficit plan.

It looks centrist, and practical, to me.

(I'd say "pragmatic" but I remember that is a bad word at OTB)

Posted by odograph | February 23, 2009 | 07:55 am | Permalink
 

Yeah, the Communist allusion occurred to me as well. Then again, we're nationalizing everything and redistributing on the basis of "to each according to his needs..." so why not.

well I for one need a a crap load of money, I've never even made enough money to screw up a big car loan let alone a house mortgage, hell when will it be my turn, were is the fairness, I do have a little practice with a couple hundred dollar credit cards I managed to turn into 4,000$ Worth of dept with the aid of late charges, shit I new paying them back and going through credit counseling was a mistake, so wtf hook a brother up? I need!!!!!

Posted by G.A.Phillips | February 23, 2009 | 09:20 am | Permalink
 

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