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Obama’s Big Spending Numbers

Spending Your Money Like There Is No Tomorrow

Heritage’s Brian Riedl crunches some of the still-staggering numbers on the Democrats’ spending spree, including the fact that the projected 2009 budget deficit is larger than the Bush budget deficits for FY 2002-2007 (the six years when Bush had a Republican Congress to work with) combined. A worthwhile fact to recall when dealing with liberals who cannot comprehend how one could be more concerned about Obama’s deficits than Bush’s (of course, as always my concern is with spending, not deficits – deficits are just a symptom of overspending – but even then, Reidl’s point that 43 cents of every federal dollar spent at present is deficit spending is pushing into worrisome territory, especially with important sources of funding drying up).

This year, President Obama will spend a peacetime-record 26 percent of GDP….The 22 percent spending increase projected for 2009 represents the largest government expansion since the 1952 height of the Korean War (adjusted for inflation).

He also walks through the usual budget gimmickry, like how 75% of Obama’s projected budget “savings” are from not having another surge in Iraq each year, which was never anybody’s plan (note that these are budget numbers that don’t include the cost of the health care plan, either). Digest this, as you consider how many of Obama’s massive spending plans haven’t even been passed yet:

Federal spending per household (adjusted for inflation) remained constant at $21,000 throughout the 1980s and 1990s, before President Bush hiked it to $25,000. In 2009, Washington will spend $30,958 per household — the highest level in American history — and under President Obama’s budget, the figure will rise above $33,000 by 2019.

Read the whole thing. H/T Mark Tapscott.

Remember: Obama was the man who twice looked the nation in the eye in the October debates and pledged a net reduction in federal spending.

COMMENTS

  • mikedaire

    I see hyperinflation in our future, or worse, hyperdeflation. In either case, it won’t be pretty.

  • http://www.patrickscartoons.com Patrick_Murdock

    obama-nationaldebtclockexplodes-final

  • http://xmmlbchat.blogspot.com katesmith

    Not going to make Obama rich but still screws Americans which is the point. Heard and saw report today, the $4500 will be considered ordinary income, may put some taxpayers in a higher bracket. More cruel, state taxes may collect tax on the price of the new car AND the $4500. They’re saying a lot of people may not realize this.

    • Jack_Savage

      Please, please check again and tell me this is true. Please.

      I am LMAO right now.

      • http://moelane.com/ Moe Lane

        Maryland, for example, will be treating it as taxable income.

        http://www.baltimoresun.com/business/money/bal-bz.ambrose04aug04,0,2206605.story

        • Jack_Savage

          And why will it surprise Marylanders?

          I’ll bet the correlation between taxing the payment and blue states is 100%. Of course, I said “correlation”, not “causality”. Wouldn’t want to offend.

  • briang

    > President Obama will spend a peacetime-record 26 percent

    The spending is bad, but why use “peacetime” comparisons? At what point did we get to call this peacetime?

    • Richard Mullins

      other than that, it not something of record.

      • briang

        I understand the motivation for differentiating.

        My point was that we currently have two wars underway. Today made the August tied for the deadliest month in Afghanistan. We still have a “War” subsection of Redstate. And, I believe people refer to W. as a wartime President. So, for the sake of consistency, would it be fair to say we have not been in any wars for the past decade? If not, when did the wars end?