Darkforum.com - Dark Stories, Dark Art, Poetry, Photography, Debates and Discussions
Home Register FAQ
Go Back   Darkforum.com - Dark Stories, Dark Art, Poetry, Photography, Debates and Discussions > Discussions > Debate and Discussion
Reload this Page Fudging the Budget
Debate and Discussion Discuss Fudging the Budget in the Discussions forums; WHEN President Bush sent his new budget to Congress yesterday, he trumpeted a continuing decline in the deficit and projected a swing back into the black by 2012. Skip to ...
Why not Register and remove some of the ads from The Dark Forums
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  (#1) Old
Uncletiggs is Offline
DF's Dirty 'ol Man
Forum Guide Mentor
Uncletiggs will become famous soon enough
 
Uncletiggs's Avatar
 
Posts: 9,673
Gallery: 0
Comments: 0
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: Hiding in the shadows
Zodiac Sign: Cancer
Rating: 1 Votes / 5.00 Average
Credits: 184,076
   
Fudging the Budget - 02-07-07

Quote:
WHEN President Bush sent his new budget to Congress yesterday, he trumpeted a continuing decline in the deficit and projected a swing back into the black by 2012.

Skip to next paragraph
Enlarge This Image

Gary Taxall
But the accounting in the thick volumes issued by his Office of Management and Budget bears about as much similarity to the practices of private sector companies as Sanskrit does to Chinese. For sometimes obscure and sometimes political reasons, the federal government reports its finances in a way that portrays them far more favorably than they deserve.

The “official” deficit figure for the 2006 fiscal year is just under $250 billion. But a more accurate calculation would indicate a deficit nearly three times higher, and that is even without including some vast obligations the government owes. And while a strong economy is pushing down that headline deficit, the government’s financial commitments actually grew more rapidly last year than in 2005.

In fact, the federal government itself obliquely acknowledges this chimera in a flotilla of other reports, including the obscure Financial Statement of the United States, prepared by the Government Accountability Office using methods closer to what a shareholder would find in an annual report.

These adjustments concentrate on one gap in federal budget bookkeeping: the government’s failure to properly account for the cost of pensions for its own workers. Simply incorporating this liability would increase the federal deficit by roughly $200 billion.

But the official accounting is also misleading another way — specifically, in the way it handles Social Security. In 2006, the federal government received $185 billion more in Social Security taxes than it paid out in benefits. Unlike a private company, which keeps such overages in its pension fund to cover future benefits, the White House pockets the money and declares the deficit to be smaller.

Interestingly, until 1968, the federal government followed private sector practice by putting trust funds like Social Security in separate budgetary silos. Then President Lyndon B. Johnson appointed a commission that brought these programs into a new “unified budget.”

While the commission argued that a single federal budget would be less confusing and more reflective of the government’s overall impact on the economy, skeptical commentators noted the salubrious effect — in the midst of the Vietnam era guns-and-butter debate — of wrapping in the Social Security surplus.

Even if we adjusted properly for pensions and entitlements, we would leave unaddressed the largest financing gap, unheralded by President Bush yesterday: by some estimates, $39 trillion would have to be set aside now to pay for Social Security, Medicare and similar benefits that have already been promised. Just a year ago, those future obligations were $3 trillion less. Taken as a whole, the federal government’s commitments have grown from $20 trillion in 2000 to $50 trillion today.

To be sure, arcane and even misleading accounting policies long predate the current administration; for the past 10 years, the G.A.O. has cited “material weaknesses in financial reporting” by the government. In recent Congressional testimony, David M. Walker, comptroller general of the accountability office, said, “Our fiscal and financial condition is worse than advertised.”

And of course, the private sector has its shortcomings, particularly in providing medical benefits to retirees. But when it comes to pension obligations, the disparity is striking. Just two weeks ago, the consulting firm Towers Perrin reported that at the end of 2006, the pension funds of the Fortune 100 companies were actually overfinanced.

Meanwhile, in Washington, the damage from gaming federal accounting idiosyncrasies grows exponentially. When President Johnson created the unified budget for the 1969 fiscal year, the ultimate effect was to turn a deficit of $507 million into a surplus of $3.2 billion. Today, our budgetary sleight-of-hand obscures hundreds of billions of dollars of shortfalls.

Sadly, the solutions to this problem are well known and painful: more revenues (yes, including from rolling back President Bush’s tax giveaway to the rich) or less spending (at long last, public outrage seems to be curbing the pork barrel “earmarking” process in Congress).

But we’ll have to go further than that. To make meaningful progress, we will need to tackle Social Security and Medicare. One glimmer of hope regarding Social Security has emerged from Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, whose many years of studying corporate financial statements doubtless contribute to his offering to work toward solutions with “no preconditions.” Both Democrats and Republicans should pull up chairs at Secretary Paulson’s table with open minds.

Building a political consensus behind difficult measures would be easier if the public were more accurately apprised of our fiscal condition. Unfortunately, simply importing private sector accounting practices wouldn’t properly express the complexity of the federal government’s activities and obligations.

Instead, we need to elevate “accrual accounting,” which better measures the government’s future pension responsibilities, to the same level of public visibility as the “cash accounting” figures that are now emphasized. And our primary measure of our deficit should exclude the Social Security surplus. Finally, our obligations for future entitlements payments — the $39 trillion — should also be emphasized in reports like today’s.

Back in 1802, Thomas Jefferson beseeched his Treasury secretary to adopt finances for America “as clear and intelligible as a merchant’s books” so that “every man of any mind in the union should be able to comprehend them.” More than 200 years later, that advice remains regrettably unheeded.

The Sarbanes-Oxley Act tried to reform misleading private sector practices. The federal government needs a similar effort.

Steven Rattner is managing principal at the Quadrangle Group, a private investment firm.
[LINK] http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/06/op...th&oref=slogin

Shame those Biatches didn't or don't listen to Jefferson...

Knew i shoulda gone into law and accounting!!


Beware the ex's.. They ARE out to get you...

Nice guys finish last
It isn't just a saying.. It's a fact of life!

Those things that produced your ex......you know, the bitchmakers! Metagion
  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!
Reply With Quote
  (#2) Old
thefr0g is Offline
Ooglemagthorpe
thefr0g is on a distinguished road
 
thefr0g's Avatar
 
Posts: 5,603
Gallery: 0
Comments: 0
Join Date: Sep 2000
Rating: Not Rated
Credits: 96,531
   
02-07-07

Jefferson knows about Budgets, hell that deluxe apartment in the sky is evidence enough.


  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!
Reply With Quote
  (#3) Old
Evil Fred II is Offline
The Price is Wrong bitch!
Evil Fred II is on a distinguished road
 
Evil Fred II's Avatar
 
Posts: 161
Gallery: 0
Comments: 0
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: *twitches*
Zodiac Sign: Aquarius
Rating: Not Rated
Credits: 3,742
   
02-21-07

-David M. Walker, comptroller general of the accountability office, said, “Our fiscal and financial condition is worse than advertised.”

haha i figured that, nice to know...


kangaroo done hung the guilty with the innocent.
-"The Pot" 10,000 days (Tool)

see kangaroo courts
  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
2006 Budget Plans(By Bush!) John Preston Politics 7 02-17-05 20:19
Budget blues for GOP? SirVLCIV Politics 1 03-19-04 12:02
The cost of a human life...BILLIONS IN CORPORATE GREED tomtom Debate and Discussion 337 03-18-04 18:25
National Budget patryn Politics 0 02-11-04 15:18
Cheney Agrees With Dgg John Preston Politics 45 01-29-04 15:33

Galleries
Toggle Newest Thumbs
RPG
Got Nades?
For Tiggs
A Storm Approaches
A Storm Approaches
A Storm Approaches
The Day I Moved In
blah
Just Me Again
ABU's

Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.0 RC2


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
LinkBacks Enabled by vBSEO 3.1.0
vBulletin Skin developed by: vBStyles.com

© 2006 - 2008 Dark Forum | About Dark Forum | Legal | A member of the Crowdgather Forum Community


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53