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Wednesday, April 01, 2009
The GOP's Alternative Budget
Posted by: John Campbell at 9:13 AM
In my opinion, the best and most articulate Member of Congress, present company included, is Paul Ryan (R-WI). He is the Ranking Member of the Budget Committee, and a guest blogger here at the Greeneyeshade. Here is a 4 minute clip of his very powerful closing argument in last Wednesday’s debate.  Right below the video, I have included a link to his Op-Ed in today's edition of the Wall Street Journal.




The GOP's Alternative Budget - WSJ.com

President Obama offers us the option of European big government.






Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Budget Battle on Capitol Hill
Posted by: John Campbell at 9:19 AM

President Obama's Budget passed through the House Committee on the Budget, of which I am a member, late Wednesday night on a party line vote. It will come to the House floor late next week, and I expect it to pass. Like the ‘non-stimulus package,’ I expect that not a single Republican will vote for it, and a few moderate Democrats will also likely oppose it. This budget quickly moves America to the sort of place that Pastor Rogers described in yesterday's quote.

I usually give you lots to read, but today I'll give you a few things to watch. Here is my opening statement on the budget debate.  It explains some of the reasons why I oppose this budget with such vigor. It is 3 minutes long.



If you want to see what a 30% tax increase looks like, take your paycheck and multiply the total taxes deducted by 1.3.  Then, subtract that from your gross income and that will be close to your new net income. So, if you made $3,000 gross and $2,000 net, you will now only net $1,700. Oh, and that won't include the cuts your employer has to make in order to pay for their tax increases. By the way, this budget includes all kinds of things that are minor in the grand scheme of things, but big to certain people. For instance, it would repeal the use of the ‘Last In, First Out’ (LIFO) inventory accounting method.  This will dramatically raise taxes on all retail businesses who carry inventory.






Tuesday, February 17, 2009
Op-Ed: Thirty Years Later, a Return to Stagflation
Posted by: John Campbell at 2:58 PM
This Op-Ed was published in the New York Times on Saturday February 14, 2009.

New York Times

Thirty Years Later, a Return to Stagflation

By Representative PAUL D. RYAN

Congress has made a terrible mistake. Amid a rhetorical debate centered on words like “crisis,” “emergency” and “catastrophe,” it acted too fast. While arguments were made about the stimulus bill’s specific components — taxpayer money for condoms, new green cars and golf carts for federal bureaucrats, another round of rebate checks — its more dangerous consequences were overlooked. And now the package threatens a return to the kind of stagflation last seen in the 1970s.

To get a sense of the pressures ahead, we must first assess our fiscal health. We started this year with a projected trillion-dollar budget deficit for the 2009 fiscal year. In 2008, we spent $451 billion just to pay the interest on our debt.

With the stimulus bill now becoming law, we’re digging even deeper into debt. The headline price tag of $787 billion doesn’t include the extra $348 billion it will take to finance the new debt, or what it will cost when Congress extends the spending programs in the bill, as is likely — as much as $2 trillion more. Add in the billions that are being used to prop up the financial system, and when the dust settles on 2009, with millions of baby boomers retiring and entitlement spending exploding, taxpayers will face a financial nightmare.

From a global perspective, the picture only looks worse. As we have debated how much money to borrow and spend in hopes of jump-starting our economy, we’ve ignored the worldwide stimulus binge. China, Europe and Japan are all spending hundreds of billions of dollars they don’t have in hopes of speeding up their economies, too. That means the very countries we have relied on to buy our bonds, notably China and Japan, are now putting their own bonds on the global credit markets.

American Treasury bonds have been selling briskly on the global credit markets because they have been the calm in the storm of the global credit crisis. This has allowed advocates of borrow-and-spend to argue that for the United States, borrowing is uniquely cheap. But what happens when there is an excess supply of bonds on the worldwide markets? The cost of borrowing will rise. Today we fear deflation, but eventually our fears will turn to inflation.

It seems that no one in Washington is discussing what happens when the world begins this gargantuan borrowing spree. How high will interest rates rise? And more fundamentally, who will have the money to buy our bonds? It is possible that the Federal Reserve will succumb to pressure to “monetize” our debt — that is, print new money to buy our bonds. In fact, the Fed is already suggesting that it will buy long-term Treasury securities in order to lower borrowing costs. If it does, then our money supply, which has already increased substantially over the past year, will grow even faster.

As Milton Friedman noted, “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.” It is a situation in which too few goods are being chased by too much money.

To American families, inflation is a destroyer of savings, a killer of wealth, a crusher of confidence. It calls into question the value of our money. And while we all share in the pain, the people whom inflation hits hardest are elderly people who live on fixed incomes, those in the middle class who are struggling to save for retirement and college and lower-income people who live paycheck to paycheck.

Combine high inflation and high unemployment and you have stagflation. Hindsight shows how the pain of the late 1970s and early 1980s could have been avoided, yet we’re now again planning to borrow and spend — and raise taxes — as President Jimmy Carter did. Soon we may again find ourselves watching a rising “misery index” of inflation and unemployment together. If that happens, individual earning power will evaporate, and our standard of living will decline.

To prevent stagflation, we should enact fiscal policy reforms that apply the lessons we learned from the 1970s. Keynesian stimuli based on borrowing and spending have not worked and will not work. One-time rebate checks do not increase the incentive to expand business operations and create jobs. But marginal cuts in tax rates do. We also must lower our job-killing corporate income tax rate, the highest in the industrialized world after Japan, and ease business worries by making it clear that there will be no tax increases in 2010.

We should also re-establish the sound dollar. For the past decade, the Federal Reserve has manipulated interest rates and vastly over-expanded the money supply — and in so doing fueled the housing bubble that precipitated our current crisis. To end uncertainty about the economy, to keep interest rates down, and to give Americans the confidence they need to take risks and ensure future growth, we should make price stability a priority, guaranteeing the value of the dollar.

Finally, we should tackle the entitlement crisis, which will be a $56 trillion liability that we have not figured out how to pay for. As members of the baby boom generation retire, and health care costs continue to spiral out of control, Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid will collapse. By reforming those programs and bringing their costs down to sustainable levels, we will show the world and the credit markets we are serious about reducing our debt. Then our credit will improve, the cost of necessary borrowing will drop, and we can stave off stagflation.

Paul D. Ryan is a Republican representative from Wisconsin, and the Ranking Member on the House Committee on the Budget






Tuesday, August 12, 2008
Guest Blog: Congressman Paul Ryan
Posted by: John Campbell at 12:53 PM

Congressman Ryan (WI) is the Ranking Member from the Committee on the Budget, and the main designer of the American Roadmap. 

America is on an unsustainable fiscal course. Today, U.S. Congressman Paul Ryanthe unfunded liability of just our two largest entitlement programs – Medicare and Social Security – is $40 trillion. That’s nearly $400,000 for every household in the U.S., and this burden continues to grow every year Congress fails to act.

If we continue down this path and do nothing to reform these programs -- the federal government will double in size, shackling the country with a future of higher debt, higher taxation, and a lower standard of living.

It is unconscionable to leave our children with this type of future. America’s legacy has always been to leave the next generation better off than the one before it. Unfortunately, Congress’ unwillingness to address the nation’s entitlement crisis threatens to shatter this legacy. 

That’s why I’ve introduced A Roadmap for America’s Future, comprehensive legislation that seeks to transform the major federal entitlement programs, as well as the federal tax code.  My plan achieves three important goals: 1) it provides universal access to health care and saves Social Security and Medicare; 2) it lifts the looming debt burden off of future generations; and 3) it ensures America leads and continues to create jobs in an increasingly competitive global economy. 

Rather than working to address the unsustainable growth in the entitlement programs, many in Congress claim it’s not politically feasible to try to reform them in an election year. Well, it’s an election year every other year.  They make excuses, taking a pass on tackling a problem that is going to tackle us. 

Not Representative John Campbell.  He understands this problem and wants to fix it.  He has the courage to talk about what is necessary to address this problem, and I’m lucky to have him as a cosponsor on my bill. 

America has risen to overcome greater challenges in the past.  With the leadership from members like John Campbell and the ingenuity, strength and resolve of Americans, we can solve this problem and leave a greater legacy for our children and grandchildren.  

For more details on A Roadmap for America’s Future, please visit www.americanroadmap.org

Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)
Ranking Member
Committee on the Budget 






Thursday, September 13, 2007
Lessons to Mitt and Rudy... RESPECT THE FRED!
Posted by: Kevin McCullough at 7:49 PM

Mitt's disingenuous, "I'm not responsible for the FredSpoofSite..." tap dance was silly. Which was sad because I thought he acted honorably in the Senator Craig scenario.

But Rudy has also enjoyed some more silly moments lately... leaving the impression that he's more than ok with illegal immigration...

A misdemeanor IS a crime. It may not be a felony, but it is a crime. It is a violation of law and sovereignty. And whatever the Mayor MEANT, what he chose to SAY and how the 1000's of news outlets wrote the headlines: "Rudy says Illegal Immigration shouldn't be a crime," could not have been a worse slogan to be branding himself with. It just reminds everyone that the Mayor is a huge fan of the entire Sanctuary City policies that gave us three dead Newark kids who were, by all accounts, the shining stars of their communities.

FRED went on offense this week and tackled Hillary, he stayed clear of saying anything nasty about an opponent in GOP circles and in doing so stayed "above the frey." And according to Rasmussen it is a strategy that is WORKING!

Since Labor Day look at the movement:

Still don't know why George Will and Ryan Sager are so openly hostile to Big Fred, but I think eventually they may see more merit in his candidacy than they presently do...





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Comments Comments

Vermin hiding in the dark should expect
 Re: Don't Give Up!
  By socalcon
Cicero
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By Molotov
Hiding again?
 Re: The Real Cost of Health Care "Reform"
  By Patrice
Where are the arm twisters?
 Re: The Acid Test
  By Patrice
Not interested in members
 Re: Why Does AARP Support Obamacare?
  By Patrice
I sure can't wait
 Re: The Acid Test
  By Brendan
Patrice, You are so right!
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By arch
Naked guy was Vlad/Lucky Pozzo!
 Re: Updated: Man Faces Up to Year in Prison for Being Naked in Own Home
  By arch
Arch, ask know it all........
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By Patrice
Patrice
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By arch
another smokescreen
 Re: What Was Nelson's Price?
  By Patrice
Jo 3:51 PM
 Re: JAM DOWN
  By Bob Munck
Munky boy wrong?
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By Patrice
Bob Munck Wrong!
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By arch
that's right Mike
 Re: What's the Next Step?
  By Patrice
Axe is out of touch with reality:
 Re: What Was Nelson's Price?
  By homer noble
Cicero 7:47 PM
 Re: China And India Walk Out Of Copenhagen
  By Bob Munck
To Rider
 Re: Obama in Copenhagen: Our Dramatic Breakthrough "Limits Warming To No More Than 2 Degrees"
  By Bill
Take responsibility
 Re: JAM DOWN
  By Patrice
I honestly believe
 Re: Don't Give Up!
  By douglas

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