Debunking Biden’s malarkey: 7 ways he added $6 trillion to deficits

Opinion
Debunking Biden’s malarkey: 7 ways he added $6 trillion to deficits
Opinion
Debunking Biden’s malarkey: 7 ways he added $6 trillion to deficits
State of the Union
US President Joe Biden speaks during his State of the Union address to a Joint Session of Congress at the US Capitol in Washington, DC, March 1, 2022.

President Joe Biden has a long,
well-documented
history of telling
tall tales
. Accordingly, it was not a surprise that his State of the Union address Feb. 7 included many misleading and inaccurate claims.

Although a
group of experts
dissected
the speech
in real time, one line in particular is worth rebutting at length:

In the last two years, my administration has cut the deficit by more than $1.7 trillion—the largest deficit reduction in American history.

With the
national debt
and federal spending set to be a pivotal political battle this year, understanding the truth about Biden’s fiscal record is vital.

The deficit for fiscal year 2020 was a record $3.1 trillion. There’s no mystery about why: Lower tax revenue due to
pandemic lockdowns
reducing economic activity combined with increased spending (much of it
wasted
) meant the year was a perfect storm for adding to the national debt.

Although some pandemic-related restrictions
lingered
, the end of lockdowns meant the economy (and tax revenue) largely bounced back in fiscal year 2021 — and this would have happened regardless of who was president. Similarly, the bulk of stimulus spending enacted in 2020 wasn’t designed to carry over into future years, meaning that federal spending was expected to dip in 2021.

Because of those factors, the Congressional Budget Office
predicted
that the federal deficit would decline sharply between fiscal years 2020 and 2022.

However, an
updated report
from the CBO reveals that the deficit Biden has been bragging about was actually $319 billion higher than what was expected when he had just taken office on Jan. 20, 2021. In fact, deficits through fiscal year 2031 are on pace to total a staggering $6 trillion more than when the Biden administration began, or about $46,000 for every household in the country.

This isn’t an accident, but instead the result of many deliberate choices by Biden and Congress to increase spending and add to the national debt recklessly. Here are seven:

  • The largest by far was the $1.9 trillion package of 
    welfare expansions and bailouts
     in March 2021, which passed Congress with Democrat-only support. It was promoted as a response to COVID-19. 
    In reality
    , the bill was a textbook example of political opportunism that took advantage of the pandemic to enact a raft of the Left’s priorities.
  • The 2021 infrastructure package, which Biden regularly cites as an achievement, was loaded with 
    budget gimmicks
     to hide its true cost and included many wasteful 
    carve-outs
     for progressives. The Biden administration’s highly 
    flawed and partisan
     implementation of the bill only has made things worse.
  • Biden was happy to sign two 
    omnibus
     appropriations packages, both of which were thousands of pages long, larded up with 
    pork
     and unnecessary spending increases for the swamp, and included tens of billions in questionable 
    non-military aid
     to Ukraine.
  • The so-called 
    Inflation Reduction Act
    , a mix of tax hikes and Green New Deal-style industrial subsidies, was designed in a way that will 
    add to deficits
     over the first five years and add even more down the line if any of its spending is renewed. Incredibly, things would have been even worse if the originally planned 
    “Build Back Better”
     debacle had become law.
  • The COMPETES Act, supposedly about addressing challenges posed by China, was in fact a deficit-financed mess of 
    corporate welfare
     and increased spending authorizations for federal “science” bureaucracies.
  • The PACT Act started as a reasonable measure to assist veterans who suffered from toxic exposure, but was turned into a 
    massive expansion
     for the government-run Veterans Affairs system with a huge price tag. Since veterans’ benefits are a core federal responsibility, Congress should have the decency to ensure the VA system is paid for rather than casually swiping the national credit card.
  • Biden has enacted or is in the process of implementing several executive orders and regulations that add billions of dollars apiece to costs, leading to a mix of higher deficits and reduced purchasing power. These include a massive “Thrifty Food Plan” increase in 
    food stamp benefits
    ; college loan repayment deferrals and the still-pending 
    forgiveness scheme
    ; an Obamacare 
    eligibility expansion
    ; and more stringent rules for 
    two types
     of 
    labor mandates
     on infrastructure projects.

This continual surge of deficit spending was a leading factor in the
surge of inflation
, leading the Federal Reserve to start hiking interest rates, a development that could stall the economic recovery.

During his State of the Union speech, Biden blamed the high national debt on the Trump administration. This deflection has a kernel of truth — deficits were
too high
from 2017 through 2020 — but removes all context. The bulk of Trump-era deficit increases were the result of bipartisan spending bills such as the CARES Act of March 2020 and excessively large
appropriations packages.

Democrats also attempt to blame deficits on the 2017 tax cut, but tax revenues now actually
exceeded projections
made before that bill’s passage and in 2022 were at a multidecade high as a share of the economy.

The bottom line is that the debt is too high, the
long-term budget outlook
is dismal, and both parties recklessly have made this problem worse over the past 20 years. Accordingly, both parties need to take the issue seriously and prioritize the nation’s financial health.

A good place for legislators to start is The Heritage Foundation’s
Budget Blueprint,
which provides comprehensive guidance across the spectrum of policy issues. (The Daily Signal is Heritage’s multimedia news organization.)

The Budget Blueprint contains $15.5 trillion in spending reductions, along with trillions of dollars in improvements to the tax code. Although many of the proposals are unlikely to occur while Democrats control the Senate and the White House, even a fraction of that amount would be a huge first step toward digging out of the enormous hole we’re in.

The alternative — ignoring the problem and prioritizing short-term political calculations — invites more waves of punishing inflation and debilitating interest rate hikes.


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This is a time for leadership. And if policymakers in Washington won’t lead, it will be up to the American people to hold them accountable.

This article originally appeared in the Daily Signal and is reprinted with kind permission from the Heritage Foundation.

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