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Entitled to live in debt for ever?

What is truly worrying, though, is the medium-term outlook. Mr Obama’s budget reveals a road-map to fiscal catastrophe. At no point over the coming decade will the deficit be below 3.6% of GDP; and after 2018, it starts rising again. The cuts the president has proposed are comically insufficient: a budget freeze on non-security discretionary spending, which amounts to only about 17% of the entire $3.8 trillion budget; and a toothless deficit commission (a better version has already been killed by obstructive Republicans in Congress) whose recommendations will doubtless be ignored.

In the medium term there are only two ways to bring the deficit back to a sustainable level—which means no more than 3% of GDP. Either taxes will have to rise, or a serious attempt must be made to rein in the entitlements—legally mandated programmes such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security—that constitute the great bulk of spending. Mr Obama is proposing only a bit of the first, and none of the second. Taxes on the rich (those earning $250,000 a year or more) will go up from next January, as the Bush tax cuts expire; but Mr Obama had promised middle America that it will pay “not one single dime” more in tax, and so he is extending George Bush’s budget-busting tax cuts for the remaining 98% of Americans.

Any serious attempt to tackle entitlements now looks doomed. Health care offered a chance to do so (broader coverage could come with tougher cost controls). But a weak administration and a greedy Congress conspired to produce a baggy monster of a bill which, from a fiscal point of view, might have made things worse. No one dares touch defence, in a troubled world. The Social Security pension scheme is deemed sacrosanct by nervy politicians. It is a deeply depressing picture—and Mr Obama did nothing this week to lighten it.

America’s budget: Clueless in Washington | The Economist

Sawickipedia: If Obama is the closest we’ve come to an honest parent in the presidency and likely to get, then we’re screwed.  Even a more honest pol like BO i believe wants to be can’t touch Social Security then we’re super screwed.  What’s amazing is that no one I know under the age of about 45 actually believes Social Security will exist when we turn 70 so one would think there’s room for a conversation.

Also, both the right and left have to stop demonizing the rich.  Right now less then 50% of americans pay federal income tax.  Less then 50%!!!! At some point that needs to change.  Taxing the rich won’t get us there.  Personally a consumption tax is the better answer then an income tax (the rich spend more then the poor and thus would pay a hell of a lot more), but we need essentially everyone to pay taxes.  We’re screwed fiscally and it’s high time someone told us that.

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