Arlington, VA – With the fiscal year ending on September 30th and another potential government shutdown looming, AFP senior fellow in fiscal policy Kurt Couchman is releasing a new report on failed budget targets of the past and promising options for our future. He shows how smart budget goals can help break the cycle of crisis-to-crisis governing that produces waste, shuts out too many members, and otherwise lets the American people down.
In the report, “Better Budget Targets Can Help Congress Balance Near- and Long-Term Needs,” Couchman explains why many enacted or proposed accountability measures to keep spending in check, such as debt and deficit limits, spending caps, and revenue ceilings, among others, have failed or would fail. Instead, Couchman argues Congress needs budget targets that are comprehensive, neutral, practical, and adaptable to changing circumstances.
Of these better budget goals, Couchman says:
“U.S. states and many other countries have effective fiscal targets. The U.S. government does not currently have them, but it can. Congress has tried or proposed many options, but each has fallen short or would fall short if tried. Learning their lessons and drawing inspiration from other countries and from the states illuminates several promising directions for new approaches to federal budget targets.”
Two main options exist for well-designed budget targets: 1) structural primary balance, and 2) medium-term debt-to-GDP targets.
Structural primary balance could let non-interest spending (primary spending) grow with trend economic growth. Surpluses during good years would offset deficits during recessions, and that provides policy stability and predictability across booms and busts. Congress could focus more on long-term needs with advance notice of upcoming adjustments. Senator Mike Braun and Representative Tom Emmer’s Responsible Budget Targets Act takes this approach.
Medium-term debt-to-GDP targets would require Congress to reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio by one percentage point by the end of each five-year period. Compounding savings would get debt under control, and the medium-term focus gives Congress room to account for the condition of the economy.
Congress could help enforce these targets in several ways:
Read the paper and learn more about better federal budgeting.
© 2024 AMERICANS FOR PROSPERITY. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. | PRIVACY POLICY
Receive email alerts to learn how to get involved