The End of Small Government?

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The End of Small Government?

by William A. Niskanen

William A. Niskanen is chairman of the Cato Institute and was a member and acting chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Reagan.

On September 8, 2005, Wall Street Journal columnist David Wessel announced that "the era of small government is over. Sept. 11 challenged it. Katrina killed it." Wessel's declaration comes nearly a decade after President Clinton declared that "the era of big government is over."

But Clinton and Wessel are both wrong, for different reasons. The relative size of the federal government has been remarkably stable for over 50 years. In 1952, the third year of the Korean War, federal spending was 20.3 percent of GDP; in 2005 to date, the third year of the Iraq War, federal spending is 20.4 percent of GDP. The federal spending share of GDP in these two years was only slightly higher than the average of 19.85 percent over the whole period from 1952 to date, primarily because of the temporarily high military spending. The primary change in the budget has been a massive increase of federal transfer payments at the expense of military spending within a roughly constant federal spending share of GDP.

Clinton proved to be wrong because he could not imagine that his Republican successor would increase spending at the highest rate since Lyndon Johnson, and for much the same reasons -- the combination of an extended war and a rapid increase in domestic spending.

Wessel will prove to be wrong because he does not understand why federal spending increased so rapidly under George W. Bush or the conditions that will constrain the growth of future spending. The war on terrorism has been a rationale for increased spending, but not its primary cause. President Bush has endorsed a substantial increase in spending for agriculture, defense, education, energy, homeland security, Medicare, and transportation -- only a trivial amount of which is a direct response to Sept. 11 -- all the while refusing to veto a single spending bill. The primary cause of the rapid increase in federal spending to date is that the Bush administration and too many Republicans in Congress have embraced big government conservatism in both foreign and domestic policy at the expense of their traditional party commitment to fiscal responsibility.

If the era of small government is over, it ended in 2001, not in 2005.

The spending already proposed for relief of the Katrina victims and the restoration of the Gulf Coast is extraordinary, probably on the order of $100,000 per displaced household. But the net increase is not likely to be as large as Katrina-related spending for several reasons:

* Spending for Katrina relief will jeopardize other Bush priorities, such as "staying the course" in Iraq, the indefinite extension of the tax cuts, and Social Security reform.

* Bush will have much less influence on congressional Republicans during his second term, especially if Democrats gain seats in the 2006 election.

* The economic and political conditions that have led to remarkable stability in the federal spending share of GDP for over 50 years are likely to restore a spending share somewhat closer to the average after the temporary spending increases for the war in Iraq and Katrina relief.

The primary condition that will threaten a substantial increase in the federal spending share of GDP is the combination of unfunded promises for Social Security and Medicare and a substantial increase of the ratio of retirees per worker -- a problem that will become clearer as baby boomers begin to retire in 2008. The primary cost of the war in Iraq and Katrina relief may turn out to be the inability to gain bipartisan attention to these much larger long-term problems. Whether the era of small government is over depends primarily on how these long-term problems are sorted out, not on the temporary spending for the war in Iraq and Katrina relief.

This article appeared on the American Spectator on Sept. 20, 2005.
 
If the era of small govt is over, it ended in 2001, not 2005.

Not exactly. Small govt ended in 1864 at the end of the War to Re-establish the Constitution. Some would argue it ended before then.
2001 was when they stopped pretending there was such a thing as small govt.
 
Not exactly. Small govt ended in 1864 at the end of the War to Re-establish the Constitution. Some would argue it ended before then.
2001 was when they stopped pretending there was such a thing as small govt.

At first I thought it ended with Johnson and the great society but then I remembered Roosevelt and Social Security.. Not to worry guys it will all fall before long. The national debt will devalue money and along with the loss of jobs over seas this country will be in the tank for about ten years..

Watch intrest rates go real high along with housing is going to plumet. Then because they knew this was going to happen they have allready changed your ability to bankrupt yourself to freedom. Houseing has to plumet because people are taking huge sums out in loans to be liquid for the comming crash.

Another indicator is Gold, why do you think it is rising?

25
 
I think the era of small gov't ended with FDR's New Deal. But maybe Stevelyn is right and it was the Civil War that put it on our backs. Either way its been dead for years.

I am extremely disappointed with the Republicans in this regard. They have lost touch with their base and their ideology. Especially Bush, who should have used his veto power several times now on gross overspending bills sent up by congress.

Model 25, you are one really uplifting guy. Not that I think you're wrong; I have recently started thinking about purchasing gold for the reasons you mentioned. I don't think the Fed's will be very aggressive with the interest rates in an attempt to soften any fall that might occur within the housing market. However, our debt and entitlement programs are going to catch up to us. I fear we might not make it past 2020 as a strong nation.
 
The death blow to small government was Roosevelt's New Deal. As soon as the government began giving out free handouts, and as soon as people came to expect such as handout, the continued growth of the government was assured.
 
I agree with Cosine

Ever since people started relying on the government to provide for them, the die was cast.

It wasn't so much that the government provided jobs, but then evolved into providing housing for those workers, then into providing insurance, then medical care, then safety standards, then health standards, then retirement, then equality, then a host of idealized regulations imposed on private business that started the whole welfare, free-ride, government will take care of me and owes me situation!

This is not to say that these weren't worthy goals at the outset, but the abuse of the system has created a class of expectants and I deserves.

Since FDR, it's been offer an inch, demand a yard.

There are too many volunteer/low wage opportunities out there to not require recipients of government hand-outs to earn their keep!

It is time for the federal, state, and local governments to stand up to the 30% of the population of free-loaders and say no more! Make them work the jobs illegal immigrants are working! Eliminate the need for illegals by making the recipients of welfare a viable workforce!

The United States of America should not be turning a blind eye on illegal workers while paying healthy Americans living wages to do nothing!

To justify illegal immigration and employment on the lack of able and needy "Americans" is ludicrus! If we were to round up the homeless and non-working welfare recipients, we would have more than enough workers to eliminate the influx of illegal aliens from our southern borders!

In business, the way to win is to be better than the competition. Flood the market with low wage workers and provide basic (military standards) living standards. If it's good enough for our troops, it's good enough for free-loaders.

Within these camps, provide education opportunities, so that anyone, and everyone, can rise above and get out and become whatever their heart desires as is the American dream!

It's just like any situation, possible and practicable, just not complicated enough for government to give it a chance.
 
The moment that the States bordering Mexico allowed illegals to stay they signed the death warrant to those states...which one takes more public money, an unemployed man in Wisconsin with two kids or 30 year old Mrs Sanchez with 14 kids, all of them born after their mother ran across rio grande?
 
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