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Three Negative Consequences of Biden’s $6 Trillion Budget

primeros 100 días, Joe Biden, gobierno, radical

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By Brad Polumbo

 [Leer en español]

History will not remember President Biden for his frugality. The president has already signed into law a massive multi-trillion-dollar “COVID” stimulus spending package and proposed trillions more in “infrastructure” spending. Now, the White House has released its budget request for Fiscal Year 2022—a stunning $6 trillion.

“President Biden will propose a $6 trillion budget on Friday that would take the United States to its highest sustained levels of federal spending since World War II, while running deficits above $1.3 trillion throughout the next decade,” the New York Times reports

These enormous spending levels would lead to skyrocketing budget deficits.

“The federal budget deficit would hit $1.8 trillion in 2022, even as the economy rebounds from the pandemic recession to grow at what the administration predicts would be its fastest annual pace since the early 1980s,” the Times continues. “It would recede slightly in the following years before growing again to nearly $1.6 trillion by 2031.”

Our national debt would quickly hit record levels.

“Total debt held by the public would more than exceed the annual value of economic output, rising to 117 percent of the size of the economy in 2031,” the report adds. “By 2024, debt as a share of the economy would rise to its highest level in American history, eclipsing its World War II-era record.”

Simply put, the president wants to spend an astounding amount of our money.

Of course, with figures this big and every president in recent history having spent recklessly, it’s understandable that the significance of such spending levels can easily be lost on weary Americans. So to break it down, here are three glaring consequences that everyday Americans will face in their lives if Biden’s proposed blowout budget becomes reality.

Every year, the federal government has to confiscate huge sums in taxes just to cover the annual interest payments on the national debt. These annual payments—just the interest on the debt—would double over the next decade under Biden’s proposal. Even if interest rates stay low, the payments will total trillions in the near future that will require tax increases. And if interest rates do tick up, these annual payments will quickly become unimaginably large. 

Your wallet will feel it.  

Large levels of government debt drag down the economic growth that improves our living standards. It directly lowers your paycheck, too. For example, according to the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, “A generic plan to gradually reduce the [national] debt to its historic average would… increase income per person by $5,500.” 

Biden’s plan to go in the opposite direction will have the opposite effect.

Since the government can’t create wealth out of thin air, the resources it spends have to come from somewhere else. Biden’s proposed $6 trillion in spending is no exception.

Some of it would likely be paid for through regular taxation, but much of it would likely be financed through massive money printing. This would lead to price inflation, which amounts to a sneaky form of taxation.

Massive money printing also leads to a vast misallocation of resources, as Senator Rand Paul recently remarked.  Not only does money pumping raise the overall price level, but it also misleads businesses into making unsustainable investments. As taught by economic theory, this inevitably leads to a corrective crash in the economy—the brunt of which will be borne by average Americans.

The issue with President Biden’s record-breaking budget proposal is more than just our inability to afford it. Such a drastic acceleration in government spending would hurt the financial prospects of everyday Americans in too many ways to count.

Foundation for Economic Education (FEE)

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