OPINION: It’s now or never for Congress to cut spending

Discretionary spending has risen by nearly $357 billion — a 26 percent jump to $1.7 trillion — since fiscal year 2019, according to data compiled by the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB). This was in response to the COVID pandemic in 2020 and increases in transportation and defense spending.  This includes a $90 […]

Already an Subcriber? Log in

Get Instant Access to This Article

Become a Central New York Business Journal subscriber and get immediate access to all of our subscriber-only content and much more.

Discretionary spending has risen by nearly $357 billion — a 26 percent jump to $1.7 trillion — since fiscal year 2019, according to data compiled by the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB). This was in response to the COVID pandemic in 2020 and increases in transportation and defense spending. 

This includes a
$90 billion increase in defense spending (up 13 percent), a $29 billion rise in transportation (up 31 percent), a $44.5 billion increase in education spending (up 62 percent), and a $55 billion increase in health spending (up 62 percent).

That comes atop a $1 trillion increase in so-called mandatory spending to $4.1 trillion. That’s actually down from 2021, when it was $5.1 trillion, as much of the increased temporary COVID spending is coming to an end.

All told, that’s a $1.4 trillion increase in spending since 2019 to $5.8 trillion, from $4.4 trillion before the pandemic.

But believe it or not, that still does not include all the spending that was included in the 2022 additional budget measures in the so-called Inflation Reduction Act, with $369 billion for green-energy subsidies and tax credits, including $85 billion for electric-vehicle subsidies.

That represents a target-rich environment for House Republicans hoping to restore any semblance of fiscal sanity in Washington, D.C., as House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R–Calif.) looks to leverage the national-debt ceiling, now set at $31.4 trillion.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has previously warned that the U.S. debt ceiling would come due on Jan. 19, as so-called “extraordinary measures” of refinancing the debt up to the current limit have ensued since then.

The debt-ceiling legislation was last increased in December 2021 by $2.5 trillion when Democrats controlled both the House and the Senate, to accommodate these massive increases in spending.

Now, Republicans have the majority in the House, meaning they get a say just like in 2011, when they adopted discretionary spending caps, known as budget sequestration, that limited the growth of defense and non-defense discretionary spending. That saved hundreds of billions of dollars.

As a result, the budget deficit was brought from $1.3 trillion in 2011 all the way down to $441 billion in 2015, the year Republicans won back the U.S. Senate. From there, the practice was terminated, and the budget deficit again ballooned, reaching $983 billion by 2019.

That was before COVID. In 2020, the U.S. had a record $3.1 trillion deficit, according to data compiled by the White House OMB, $2.7 trillion in 2021, and $1.4 trillion in 2022.

All told, more than $6 trillion was printed, borrowed, and spent into existence to offset the global economic lockdowns that temporarily disabled labor markets’ functionality as citizens were told to remain in their households.

Now, with the 25 million jobs that were lost to COVID all recovered (16 million before Biden ever took office) and the unemployment rate down to 3.5 percent, whatever excuse there was for all the spending is gone. We don’t need it anymore.

And with another recession looming, thanks to all the inflation caused by all of the spending plus the production halts from COVID via economic lockdowns, and the further supply disruptions from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, that means now is the time cut spending. 

Already, House Speaker McCarthy has said he is open to this possibility, looking to freeze spending at 2022 levels. That means rolling back the green spending, as well as the stepped-up IRS enforcement, including the additional 87,000 IRS agents put in place by Biden and last year’s Democratic-controlled Congress, and creating another years-long plan to reduce the budget deficit to more sane levels.

In truth, with no other must-pass pieces of legislation coming up any time soon — Congress can keep kicking the can on appropriations with continuing resolutions — the reality is there is no other way. It’s now or never.        


Robert Romano is the VP of public policy at Americans for Limited Government (ALG). The organization says it is a “non-partisan, nationwide network committed to advancing free-market reforms, private property rights, and core American liberties.” 

Robert Romano: