Chapter 10: Government
Spending Chapter
10 explores the way federal, state, and local governments
spend their revenues. In 2003 these expenditures were about
$10,300 per capita.
Section 1 discusses the growth of government
spending and examines the two types of expenditures: (1) goods
and services, and (2) transfer payments for which the government
does not receive anything in return. This spending affects
the distribution of income and competes with the private sector
for scarce resources.
Section 2 examines the process required
of the president, the House of Representatives, and the Senate
to develop and approve the federal budget. Currently, the
three largest components of the federal budgetaccounting
for more than one-half of all federal expendituresare
Social Security, national defense, and income security.
Section 3 describes the major categories
of state and local spending. The largest state expenditures
are intergovernmental transfers, public welfare, insurance
contributions, and higher education. The largest single category
of spending for local governments is elementary and secondary
education. Public utilities, hospitals, police protection,
interest on debt, public welfare, and highways follow.
Section 4 discusses the persistent
nature of the federal budget deficit and the way that deficit
spending adds to the federal debt. Attempts to control the
deficit have taken the form of mandated deficit targets and
pay-as-you-go provisions. President Clinton's Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1993 significantly reduced the federal budget deficit
by introducing higher marginal tax brackets. The 1996 line-item
veto also gave the president some power to trim federal expenditures,
but it was ruled unconstitutional by the Supreme Court. Spending
caps were introduced in the balanced budget agreement of 1997
in a further attempt to control the deficits. Finally, after
29 consecutive years of deficits, the federal budget was in
surplus by 1998.
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