At this point, our dependence on borrowing has become not just an economic threat, but a national security threat, as well. It will be difficult to absorb the increases in defense spending we will almost surely need in what is proving to be an extremely risky geo-political environment. Just as one example, the Salt Typhoon attack showed us we desperately need to harden our defenses for a techno-driven warfare model. This will create more domestic pressure as we either fail to fund other pressing priorities or pile on more debt, and we will be far more vulnerable if and when we need to respond to attacks at home or abroad, given our dependence on foreign borrowing. The external risks from China and others should remind us that we can’t compete internationally if we can’t cooperate domestically, but even the national security wake-up call has failed to help us take the debt threat seriously thus far.
And this is how great nations fall – divided, distracted, distrustful, and drowning in debt.
The good news — and there still is some — is that the solutions are straightforward. This is not to say that they are easy, but that is what true leadership is about. Were we to choose to turn the situation around, we still could, though that window will not last indefinitely.
We must immediately agree not to make the situation worse. Political leaders should commit to “No New Borrowing” until the debt is back under control. Frankly, they should go a step further, and adopt Paygo-Plus, whereby anytime the debt-to-GDP ratio is over 100 percent, any new spending or tax cuts are not only offset, they are more than offset, say by 150 percent, so every bill is also at least a down payment on fiscal improvement.
Beyond that, we need to implement a debt reduction plan to stabilize the debt as the share of the economy, or get the deficit to 3 percent of GDP — the minimum goals we should aim for. To get there, it will take roughly $9 trillion in savings over the decade — a large amount for sure, that will require us to do a little bit of everything. We need a plan to make Social Security solvent, including lower benefits for the well-off, raising the retirement age for younger workers, and lifting the payroll tax cap. We need to fix our health care system, both by reducing inefficiencies and the many ways industry stakeholders and states game the system, along with more structural reforms including how benefits are delivered and how prices are structured.
We should comb through every other area of the budget, from agriculture to welfare to the defense procurement process. If we save 10 percent of the $89 trillion we are projected to spend over the decade, we are more than the full way there — just 5 percent would get us most of the way. We should likewise reduce spending through the tax code, which is roughly $25 trillion over the decade. To that end, if we cap all the tax breaks any taxpayer can receive at either a dollar amount or a share of their income, along with interest savings, we can achieve our fiscal target.
Every year we wait, the task gets more difficult and the chance that we have an inflation or debt crisis is greater. The time for casting blame and running away from our collective responsibility has passed if we hope to avoid a crisis.
Maya MacGuineas is the president of the bipartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.