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What Happened to D.C.'s Fiscal Watchdogs?

Debra Saunders on

WASHINGTON -- The April jobs report found the U.S. economy added 175,000 new positions, but it fell below expectations. Unemployment nudged up to 3.9% last month, which at least keeps unemployment below 4% for 27 months in a row. Despite the middling reports, President Joe Biden crowed in a statement, "The great American comeback continues."

The voting public is not on board. According to the RealClearPolitics polling average, 65% of Americans think the country is heading in the wrong direction, and just under 25% see the country headed in the right direction.

"The reason people are so unhappy is they know where they stood three years ago, and they're still trying to catch up," David Ditch, an economist with the conservative Heritage Foundation, told me Friday.

To ward off stagnation, the Federal Reserve wants to reduce inflation to 2%.

It's headed in the wrong direction, according to Ditch, co-author of a Heritage paper released in September, "The Road to Inflation: How an Unprecedented Federal Spending Spree Created Economic Turmoil." The paper laid out how COVID-19 pandemic spending and subsequent overspending in the Biden years "has left the U.S. with a weakened economy, an inflation crisis, and a looming debt crisis."

But you knew that.

 

It took 215 years for the national debt to reach $7 trillion. In the wake of COVID, from March 2020 to June 2022, Washington overspent another $7 trillion.

It was understandable that in 2020, then-President Donald Trump pumped money into the economy during (excessive) government shutdowns, but it didn't end there.

I was there in 2019 at a Peter G. Peterson Foundation summit when Trump Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney admitted he didn't know if the administration could get the annual deficit below $1 trillion. That was before COVID.

Biden's increased spending -- including a $95 billion national security package to help Ukraine and Israel (which I support) and efforts to "forgive" student loan debt (which I do not support ) -- only will make it harder for future elected officials to balance the books. And when the economy is vulnerable, you don't raise taxes.

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