Introduction to Symposium: The Crisis in Federal Budgeting

Pub Date : 2012-09-01 DOI:10.1111/J.1540-5850.2012.01019.X
P. Joyce
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Abstract

It will not come as a surprise to anyone who reads this journal that the federal budget— indeed, federal budgeting—is a mess. The problems are both substantive and procedural. Barring some unforeseen and unprecedented event, fiscal year 2012, which will end on September 30th of this year, will represent the fourth consecutive year of deficits in excess of $1 trillion. Over this four-year period, more than $5 trillion has been added to the national debt, which will stand at more than $11 trillion (more than 70 percent of GDP) by the end of 2012. While much of this growth in debt can be traced to the most recent recession and attempts to address it, something will have to be done to address the chronic imbalance between taxes and spending. The procedural story is not much better. In fact, the procedural challenges facing the budget predate the recent increase in the deficit. There are three main problems with the federal budget process as of 2012. First, appropriations legislation, necessary to fund 40 percent of the government on an annual basis, is chronically late. Second, and related, the budget resolution, designed to promote the setting of overall fiscal policy, has become an “optional” device, seemingly only enacted when broad consensus already exists on a path for the budget; there has been no budget resolution in 7 of the past 15 years. Third, the budget process, far from encouraging fiscal discipline, detracts from a responsible approach to budgeting, in part because of the dysfunction of the political system and partly because the appropriations process tends to focus on the provision of specific benefits to particular constituencies. Both the magnitude of the problems, and past history, would indicate that these difficulties are not likely to disappear between now and the 2012 election. In fact, the campaign itself is unlikely to feature an illuminating debate concerning the future fiscal path that
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专题讨论会导言:联邦预算危机
对于任何读过本刊的人来说,联邦预算——实际上是联邦预算——是一团乱麻都不足为奇。这些问题是实质性的和程序性的。除非发生一些不可预见和前所未有的事件,将于今年9月30日结束的2012财政年度将是赤字连续第四年超过1万亿美元。在这四年里,国家债务增加了5万亿多美元,到2012年底将超过11万亿美元(占GDP的70%以上)。尽管债务增长在很大程度上可以追溯到最近的经济衰退和解决经济衰退的努力,但必须采取一些措施来解决税收和支出之间的长期失衡。程序故事也好不到哪里去。事实上,预算面临的程序性挑战早在最近赤字增加之前就存在了。截至2012年,联邦预算程序存在三个主要问题。首先,每年为政府提供40%资金所必需的拨款立法长期拖延。其次,与此相关的是,旨在促进制定整体财政政策的预算决议,已成为一种“可选”手段,似乎只有在对预算路径存在广泛共识的情况下才会生效;过去15年中有7年没有预算决议。第三,预算程序非但没有鼓励财政纪律,反而有损于负责任的预算方法,部分原因是政治制度的功能失调,部分原因是拨款程序往往侧重于向特定选区提供具体利益。问题的严重性和过去的历史都表明,从现在到2012年大选期间,这些困难不太可能消失。事实上,竞选活动本身不太可能就未来的财政路径展开一场有启发性的辩论
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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