
But then
maybe that's the point. The Financial Times suggests that "more
extreme Republicans" actually want a fiscal train wreck: "Proposing
to slash federal spending, particularly on social programs, is a tricky
electoral proposition, but a fiscal crisis offers the tantalizing prospect
of forcing such cuts through the back door."

Good for The Financial Times. It seems that stating the obvious has
now, finally, become respectable.
It's no secret that right-wing ideologues want to abolish programs Americans
take for granted. But not long ago, to suggest that the Bush administration's
policies might actually be driven by those ideologues that the
administration was deliberately setting the country up for a fiscal
crisis in which popular social programs could be sharply cut
was to be accused of spouting conspiracy theories.
Yet by pushing
through another huge tax cut in the face of record deficits, the administration
clearly demonstrates either that it is completely feckless, or that
it actually wants a fiscal crisis. (Or maybe both.)
Here's one way to look at the situation: Although you wouldn't know
it from the rhetoric, federal taxes are already historically low as
a share of G.D.P. Once the new round of cuts takes effect, federal taxes
will be lower than their average during the Eisenhower administration.
How, then,
can the government pay for Medicare and Medicaid which didn't
exist in the 1950's and Social Security, which will become far
more expensive as the population ages?
(Defense spending has fallen compared with the economy, but not that
much, and it's on the rise again.)
The answer is that it can't. The government can borrow to make
up the difference as long as investors remain in denial, unable to believe
that the world's only superpower is turning into a banana republic.
But at some
point bond markets will balk they won't lend money to a government,
even that of the United States, if that government's debt is growing faster
than its revenues and there is no plausible story about how the budget
will eventually come under control.At that point, either taxes will go
up again, or programs that have become fundamental to the American way
of life will be gutted. We can be sure that the right will do whatever
it takes to preserve the Bush tax cuts right now the administration
is even skimping on homeland security to save a few dollars here and there.
But balancing the books without tax increases will require deep cuts where
the money is: that is, in Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security.
The pain of these benefit cuts will fall on the middle class and the poor,
while the tax cuts overwhelmingly favor the rich. For example, the tax
cut passed last week will raise the after-tax income of most people by
less than 1 percent not nearly enough to compensate them for the
loss of benefits. But people with incomes over $1 million per year will,
on average, see their after-tax income rise 4.4 percent.
The Financial Times suggests this is deliberate (and I agree): "For
them," it says of those extreme Republicans, "undermining the
multilateral international order is not enough; long-held views on income
distribution also require radical revision."
How can this be happening? Most people, even most liberals, are
complacent. They don't realize how dire the fiscal outlook really is,
and they don't read what the ideologues write. They imagine that the Bush
administration, like the Reagan administration, will modify our system
only at the edges, that it won't destroy the social safety net built up
over the past 70 years.
But the people now running America aren't conservatives: they're radicals
who want to do away with the social and economic system we have, and the
fiscal crisis they are concocting may give them the excuse they need.
The Financial Times, it seems, now understands what's going on, but when
will the public wake up?