Trump Scored a HUGE Election Integrity Win Last Night
Marco Rubio Just Gave a Speech About the Rise of Left-Wing Violence...and This...
Wait, That's Who Is Going to Be on a Panel That Screens NY...
GOP Holding Firm in State Attorneys General Races
Is This Why Abigail Spanberger's Approval Ratings Are in the Toilet?
This Republican Senator Just Declared That He Will Tank SAVE America Act
James Talarico's Smear Job on Ken Paxton Crashed and Burned When a Victim's...
The Odyssey Review: Nolan's Epic Failure
David Crowley Returns to WI Governor's Race As Democrats Continue to Panic
How Speaker Mike Johnson Will Save the SAVE America Act
The Lure of Cheating the Government Without Penalty
Mamdani's Regime Is About to Destroy Small Businesses and His Cronies Are Bragging...
Private Equity Didn't Kill the Patient
Brightline Is a Boondoggle—Secretary Duffy Must Not Give It Another Bailout
When Friends Stand Together
OPINION

We Don't Need a Balanced Budget Amendment

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
We Don't Need a Balanced Budget Amendment

The Constitution already places strict limits on what the federal government can and cannot do. The problem is that those limits have become stretched over the years to the point that the federal government can do pretty much what it pleases. As a result, Americans have become accustomed to, and dependent upon, the federal government to supervise their lives from cradle to grave.

Advertisement

Most Republicans are about as enthusiastic to confront this reality as most Democrats are in reversing it. Thus, the convenient resurgence in popularity for a balanced budget amendment on the part of Republicans has been driven by an unwillingness — or inability — to flesh out exactly what federal agencies and programs would have to go in order to bring the budget into balance without raising taxes.

Indeed, it's not a coincidence that the balanced budget amendment wasn't a priority for Republicans when they were jacking up spending and debt during George W. Bush's tenure. Now that the Obama Democrats have done the Republicans one better on the fiscal profligacy front, the GOP is really just looking to score political points for the November 2012 elections by hoisting up the balanced budget amendment as a litmus test for fiscal propriety.

Advertisement
However, the purpose of the balanced budget amendment is to put an end to budget deficits, and deficits are only a symptom of the real problem: too much spending. Therefore, Republicans who support the balanced budget amendment cannot cite it as evidence that they're serious about cutting spending unless they're prepared to detail what they would cut in order to bring the budget into balance.

While proponents of the balanced budget amendment argue that it would also reign in spending, almost all the states possess balanced budget requirements and that hasn't stopped state spending from continuing to increase. In fact, the balanced budget amendment would actually end up solidifying the oversized and overbearing federal government we have today. Therefore, policymakers who truly desire a federal government that is smaller in size and scope should concentrate their efforts on convincing the American people that the country would be better off.

Tad DeHaven is a budget analyst at the Cato Institute and co-editor of Downsizing Government.org.

More by Tad DeHaven

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement