TESTIMONY OF
JACOB J. LEW
DIRECTOR
OFFICE OF MANAGEMENT AND BUDGET
BEFORE THE
SENATE COMMITTEE ON THE BUDGET
FEBRUARY 2, 1999
One year ago, President Clinton set the
course of the
Nation's budget policy with his
charge to "Save Social Security First." The President recognized that we
were entering a new era
as we left behind the decades of large budget deficits. He was building
the foundation for
budgeting in this new era of surpluses.
Fiscal progress has produced a strong economy
The year 1998 was one of the most
extraordinary in
modern U.S. economic history. We
enjoyed the first budget surplus in 29 years -- the largest ever in dollar
terms, the largest as a
percentage of the economy in more than 40 years. And this budget surplus
was not the result of a
temporary wartime policy, as was the last surplus in 1969. We will have a
budget surplus again
in the ongoing fiscal year -- at an estimated $79 billion, larger than last
year's -- which will mark
the first back-to-back surpluses in more than 40 years. The budget I
present to you today
proposes a third consecutive surplus -- the first time that will have
happened in half a century.
And our 1998 budget surplus was the sixth consecutive year of improvement
in the U.S. fiscal
position -- the first time that has happened in American history.
The private sector is the key to economic
progress, but
we have clearly seen in the decade
immediately past that the Federal Government can either hinder or promote
economic progress.
If the Federal budget deficit is high, so that the cost of capital is
driven up and the financial
future is uncertain, the private sector cannot yield the progress of which
it is otherwise capable.
But if, instead, the Federal Government declares its intentions of
responsible fiscal behavior, and
lives by those intentions -- and if the Federal Government supplies the
public investments that
America needs -- then the economy is free to prosper. This is the path
that this Administration
has taken.
In 1998, we reaped the fruits of five
years of fiscal
responsibility. After the best
sustained growth of business investment since the 1960s, the U.S. economy
fueled that
decades-absent budget surplus. And the economy itself defied the pundits,
staying on a pace of
solid,
above-trend expansion, in the face of an international financial disruption
that broke the stride of
most other economies around the world. Unemployment and inflation both hit
three-decade
lows, with the lowest unemployment rates for African Americans and
Hispanics in the history of
those statistics; real wages continued to grow after more than a decade of
stagnation, and a record
percentage of adult Americans worked in those higher-paying jobs; the
percentage of Americans
on welfare fell to a 30-year low; the 10-year Treasury bond rate reached
its lowest level in 30
years; and a higher percentage of Americans attained home ownership than at
any time in our
history.
The President deserves a great deal of
credit for the
virtuous economic cycle that we now
enjoy. The announcement of a firm intention of fiscal responsibility in
1993 was greeted by a
continued reduction of interest rates, which helped to trigger the
investment boom that has
proved central to sustained strong, non-inflationary economic growth. The
two other pillars of
the President's policy -- investing in our people and our technology, and
opening foreign markets
to U.S. exports -- complete this winning economic strategy.
The 2000 Budget is a defining moment
This extraordinary budget-and-economic
performance --
with the budget setting historical
standards and the resilience of the economy setting global standards --
tells us something. It tells
us that we have developed a winning economic policy and that we must not
turn back. We must
not discard the economic philosophy that got us here, to this confluence of
economic indicators
that all sides now agree is the best in modern memory.
So in one sense, our budget policy now
clearly should
be built on continuity. We have
achieved a sustained fiscal improvement, and we should continue to sustain
that improvement.
We have an economy that achieved a record sustained peacetime expansion,
and we should
continue to sustain that expansion.
But in another sense, we have stepped into
a new world.
Where our budget used to be
written in red -- for so many years that people came to take it for granted
-- now we are in the
black. And this change has tempted some to throw away all of the policy
principles that got us
here.
For two decades now, there has been much
discussion
about fiscal discipline, restraint,
and deficit reduction. Since 1993, we have taken action; and far beyond
the expectations of even
the most optimistic, we now have budget surpluses
as far as the
eye can see. But now, as the
first surpluses appear, it is important that we not revert to the practice
of cutting taxes and raising
spending first, and thinking about the fiscal consequences later.
As the President suggested in his State of
the Union
address two weeks ago, this is a
moment that will do much to determine the character of our country at the
end of the
next
century. We can build and strengthen the fiscal foundation that first
arose in these last few years.
Or we can sweep it away, before it is firm and strong, and set our economy
to foundering again.
The choice is clear and the President is determined to pursue a balanced
program of fiscal
discipline and prudent investment for the future. This budget charts that
course into an era of
surplus.
Fiscal policy since 1993 was pivotal to our current good
fortune
To see why fiscal responsibility matters,
consider where
this Administration started six
years ago. In 1992, the budget deficit was $290 billion, the largest in
the Nation's history.
Between 1980 and 1992, the debt held by the public, the sum of all past
unified budget deficits,
quadrupled; it doubled as a share of our Nation's production, or GDP --
from about 25 percent to
about 50 percent.
These adverse trends showed every sign of
accelerating.
Both CBO and OMB projected
that, without changes of budget policy, growing deficits would add to the
Nation's debt, and
growing debt service costs would add, in turn, to the Nation's deficits.
OMB forecast the 1998
deficit, in the absence of policy change, at $390 billion, or 5.0 percent
of GDP; by 2003, we
expected the deficit to be $639 billion, or 6.6 percent of GDP. And there
was nothing in the
forecast to indicate that this exponential trend would stop.
This threat was not turned back by
accident. It required
tough policy choices, which the
Administration and the Congress took in 1993 and 1997. The President's
initial economic
program cut spending and increased revenues in equal amounts. Since that
time, deficit
reduction (and ultimately surplus increase) has more than doubled the
estimates for the
President's plan -- instead of the projected cumulative $505 billion,
deficits have fallen by $1.2
trillion. That is $1.2 trillion less in debt that the American taxpayer
must service -- forever.
And this deficit reduction has come as
much from lower
spending as from higher
revenues. Spending has declined to its smallest share of the GDP in a
quarter of a century. And
thanks to the strong economy, receipts have grown beyond expectations, even
though the tax
burden on individual families is lower than it
has been for about a
quarter century:
- The typical family of four -- with the median family income of
$54,900 -- will
pay a lower share of its income in income and payroll taxes this year than
at any
time in 23 years. Its income tax payment considered alone will be the
lowest
share of income since 1966.
- A family with an income at one-half of the median level, $27,450,
will pay the
lowest share of its income in income and payroll taxes since 1965. Its
income tax
bill will be negative; it will receive money back because of the earned
income tax
credit. That was never the case before 1998.
- Even a family at twice the median income level, $109,800, will
pay less in
combined income and payroll taxes as a share of its income than in any year
since
1977. Taken alone, its income tax as a percentage of income will be the
lowest
since 1973.
Receipts have risen as a percentage of GDP
not because
of a heavier tax burden on
typical individual families, but rather because of the extraordinary growth
of incomes of
comparatively affluent Americans (including capital gains and stock options
that are not included
in measured GDP); and because of the rapid growth of corporate profits.
The historic bipartisan balanced budget
agreement of
1997 has reinforced expectations of
Federal fiscal responsibility. This has had a favorable effect on interest
rates, and the economy at
large.
In the last six years, we have enjoyed an
extraordinary
economic performance because
our fiscal policy was responsible and sound. If we want to continue to
enjoy such strong
economic performance, we must continue our sound fiscal policy. As the
experience of the last
20 years clearly shows, budget problems are very easy to begin, and very
hard to end.
Reducing debt burden is as important to
the Nation as it
would be to a family. The
Nation must service its debt. If we gratify ourselves today by collecting
taxes insufficient to
cover our spending, and accumulate debt, our children and our grandchildren
will have to service
that debt. If, instead, we reduce our debt, our children and our
grandchildren will be freed of the
obligation to tax themselves more heavily in the future just to pay the
interest on the debt they
inherited.
The President's proposal will fully
reverse the buildup
of debt of the 1980s -- and then go
further. By 2014, the end of the 15-year horizon of the President's
program, the combined
effects of the President's commitments to Social Security and Medicare will
reduce the Nation's
debt burden to an estimated seven percent of GDP. This will be the lowest
ratio of debt to
income that the Nation has enjoyed since before it entered World War I.
And as most experts
would tell us, this will be one of the greatest gifts that we could ever
give our children, as we
exercise our fiscal stewardship of these United States.
The President's policy would devote more
than
three-fourths of future budget surpluses to
reducing the Nation's debt through contributions to Social Security and
Medicare; and would
dedicate another 12 percent to household savings through Universal Savings
Accounts. This is
important to our economic performance for four basic reasons: First, it
increases the Nation's
savings rate, which is critical to productivity gains and economic growth.
Second, it reduces the
debt. Third, it improves the fiscal position of the country, and puts it
on a stronger footing for
whatever uncertainties might arise. And finally, it improves the
retirement security of all
Americans.
The current challenge is to use the surplus prudently
In 1993, we faced the challenge of
eliminating projected
budget deficits of $4.3 trillion
over ten years. Today we face the enormous opportunity of projected
surpluses of more than
$4.8 trillion over the next 15 years. The challenge is to use this surplus
prudently -- to maintain
our strong economic and budgetary performance.
We must save Social Security first. A
statement of
good intentions is not good enough
for the millions of Americans, retired and working today, who rely on
Social Security for their
retirement security -- and for protection for their families against
disability and premature death.
From the beginning, this Administration has kept its eyes on the future,
and taken policies that
would benefit the Nation for generations to come. It has paid off. Saving
Social Security first is
precisely such a future-oriented policy.
The President's FY 2000 budget --
symbolically, as well
as financially, "in the black" --
continues firmly on that successful path. The budget maps a course for the
Federal Government
after Social Security is reformed -- and makes its own policy
recommendations for the beginning
of the bipartisan Social Security reform process that the President
inaugurated last year. But the
budget also draws a line that this Administration will not pass without
Social Security reform.
Thus, the FY 2000 budget is fully paid for
within the
existing budget law. Just as in
every previous year, the President has specified his own priority
initiatives, but has paid for all of
them -- line by line, dime by dime -- with savings from elsewhere in the
budget.
The President's policy calls for a
bipartisan Social
Security reform, this year. The
President has already committed 62 percent of our projected budget
surpluses -- enough to
extend Social Security's solvency almost an extra quarter century, to 2055.
We hope that this
will launch a bipartisan process to address long-term Social Security
solvency. We are gratified
that several leaders from the Congress have already accepted this principle
and hope that both
parties, the President and the Congress, can follow through on this
commitment and achieve
sufficient additional reforms to extend the solvency of the trust fund at
least through the
traditional 75-year actuarial horizon.
If we achieve that objective, the budget
makes further
commitments of the surplus to
priority National objectives in the future. The President proposes to
dedicate 15 percent of the
surplus to extending the solvency of the Medicare trust fund. This is a
key element of the
President's program, because the financial security of Medicare will be
threatened even sooner
than that of Social Security. In 1997, the President and the Congress,
acting together, made
Medicare financially sound through 2010. The President's 2000 budget would
extend that
lifetime ten years further, to 2020. We see the commitment of the surplus
as a vital step to
facilitate an environment in which a bipartisan effort -- including the
current Medicare
Commission -- can go even farther; with the time horizon so short, even
after the contribution of
15 percent of the surplus, we cannot delay Medicare reform. As the
President stated, he wants to
consider, as a part of this reform process, expanding Medicare coverage to
include prescription
drugs.
The President also proposes using 12
percent of the
surplus to finance his new Universal
Savings Accounts -- "USAs." This proposal includes seed money for Federal
contributions, plus
additional funds for matching contributions if individual workers
contribute their own money.
The matching contributions will provide a larger percentage inducement for
low-wage workers.
The goal is for all Americans to see the rewards of saving building up in
these USAs -- and with
this introduction to the power of compound interest, to begin to save
further on their own. The
President believes that this program, with its Government seed
contribution, has the potential to
reach even those who have failed to respond to the generous subsidies in
the current-law
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs).
The President wants a fiscally responsible
tax cut. He
believes that the USA is the right
kind of tax cut -- targeted toward the future, and helping the many
American families who have
the most difficulty saving for their retirement. It strengthens perhaps
the most neglected of the
figurative three legs of the retirement stool -- personal saving, to stand
alongside Social Security
and employer pension plans -- and for the many who have no employer plan,
this initiative may
be crucial. Most importantly, it is part of a plan that fixes Social
Security first.
Finally, the budget proposes that the
remaining 11
percent of the surplus be dedicated to
other important priorities -- including education, National security, and
health care. In last
October's negotiations on the Omnibus appropriations for fiscal year 1999,
Congressional leaders
argued that our National defense needs had outgrown the existing
discretionary spending caps --
and, indeed, defense received the largest share of the additional emergency
funds made available
in that legislation. Likewise, the American people have recognized that
the quality of their
children's education will determine how they progress in life -- and also
the strength of the future
economy. The President's budget is a sound, disciplined way to provide the
additional resources
for these priorities that both sides recognize will be needed if our
country is to survive and
prosper in the next century.
The President's framework for Social Security reform and
long-term fiscal
discipline works
The President's contribution of the
surplus to Social
Security will use many of the
existing financial management tools of the Federal Government. It will be
in addition to the
accumulation in the Social Security trust fund that would occur with no
change in the current
law.
After the trust fund is credited for all
of its own receipts,
exactly as in current law, the
Treasury will be left with the unified budget surplus. Each dollar of that
unified surplus can be
used only once -- for cutting taxes, increasing spending, or buying down
the debt. The President
has brought the debate right to the point: What should we do with that
surplus? Or to put it
another way: If we were to look back fifteen years from now, or at the end
of the
next century --
what would we want to be able to say that we had accomplished with this
opportunity? The
President wants to leave a legacy of building for the future: saving Social
Security and Medicare;
encouraging Americans to save for their own futures, build wealth, and
prepare for retirement;
investing in education; ensuring our National security; and making other
key investments.
So the President started by committing 62
percent of the
surplus to save Social Security
first. Most of the share committed by the President to Social Security
will be used to buy down
the publicly held Federal debt through the periodic debt refundings of the
Treasury Department,
in exactly the same way as debt was retired last year. That same amount
will be credited to the
Social Security Trust Fund, in the form of Treasury securities. This same
procedure will be
followed for the President's contribution to the Medicare trust fund.
This commitment will significantly extend
Social
Security solvency. At the end of 1999,
the currently estimated combined balances of the OASDI trust funds is about
$850 billion.
Through 2014, we estimate that additional contributions to the trust funds
under the current law,
including interest, will total about $2.7 trillion, leaving a total balance
of about $3.5 trillion. The
President's program would contribute an additional $2.8 trillion to the
trust funds over the next
15 years. Taking into account additional interest earnings, that would
leave a balance in the trust
funds of more than $7 trillion -- instead of the approximately $3.5
trillion under the current law.
The President's program will more than double the balances in the trust
funds over the next 15
years -- without accounting for higher earnings on the portion of the
surplus invested in corporate
equities.
Because the President's plan will reduce
the public debt,
the total obligations of the
Federal Government will not increase. We are already committed to paying
benefits beyond
2032, when the trust fund is now expected to be exhausted. The President's
proposal would
deposit assets in the Social Security trust fund to pay these obligations,
and reduce by an equal
amount the debt borrowed from the public. Interest payments will go to the
trust fund, to cover
future Social Security benefits, rather than to banks, individuals and
other investors in
Government bonds.
A small portion of the President's
commitment to Social
Security (21 percent of the
commitment) will take the form of holdings of corporate stock. Because the
Social Security trust
fund will need that amount of the cash surplus to purchase the shares, this
contribution will not
reduce the public debt. However, it will improve the Federal Government's
implicit balance
sheet -- to the same degree, but in a different way. While the reduction
of debt will reduce the
Federal Government's liabilities, the corporate shares will
increase the Federal
Government's
assets. The salutary effect on the Government's balance sheet
will be the same, but it
will appear
on the other side of the balance sheet.
Thus, the President's policy in no way
increases the
total obligations of the Federal
Government. In fact, by retiring part of the public debt, it strengthens
our economy in exactly
the same way that reducing the budget deficit, and avoiding the
accumulation of debt, has helped
the economy over the last six years. The President's program does
shift the Federal
Government's commitments to Social Security, however, and in that
way improves
Social
Security's solvency for the next century. This will give Social Security a
first call on the
economic benefits associated with long-term reductions in publicly held
debt.
The President believes that budgeting in
an era of
surpluses requires a focus firmly on the
future. We must put money aside against our current obligations before we
incur any new
obligations. The President's program does that, by retiring debt and
accumulating assets against
the Social Security commitments that we already have.
We must balance fiscal discipline with prudent investments for
the future
In addressing these priorities, the FY
2000 budget
builds upon the investments in our
people and our technology that were set in motion by past budgets.
Last year's
budget
implemented the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, maintained fiscal
discipline -- reserving the surplus until we save Social Security first --
and provided a strategy of
targeted investments to help sustain economic growth. For example, last
year's budget provided
resources for:
- The first year's investment to reduce class size by hiring
100,000 new
teachers.
Smaller classes ensure that students receive more individual attention, a
solid foundation
in the basics, and greater discipline in the classroom. In this year's
budget, the President
proposes investments in this area, ultimately to reduce class size in the
early grades to a
national average of 18.
- Investments to protect our economic interests at home by
responding to
international economies in turmoil. The disruption in financial
markets last year lead
to economic dislocation in Asia, Latin America and the Soviet Union. This,
in turn, hurt
American exporters, farmers and ranchers, who found that markets overseas
were
beginning to dry up. With President Clinton's leadership, Congress
approved nearly $18
billion for the International Monetary Fund, a stabilizing force in the
world economy.
- A guaranteed, record-level investment for the next five years
in the Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century to continue rebuilding America's highways
and
transit systems, which are essential to continue the growth of modern
commerce.
This legislation also funds programs for highway safety, transit
and other surface
transportation, while safeguarding air quality, and helping former welfare
recipients get
to their jobs.
Over the past six
years,
the President also worked with the Congress to establish and
build upon significant investments in education and training, the
environment, law enforcement
and other priorities to help raise the standard of living and quality of
life for average Americans
both now and in the future. For example, the President's commitment to
fund key domestic
investments has:
- Advanced cutting-edge research, putting the National Institutes of
Health on a path to
doubled funding for research including intensified work on diabetes,
cancer, genetic
medicine, and the development of an AIDS vaccine.
- Established the children's health care initiative, the largest
investment in health care for
kids since Medicaid was created. Last year, 47 states began programs
designed to
provide meaningful benefits to as many as five million uninsured
children.
- Increased Head Start's ability to provide greater opportunities for
disadvantaged children
to participate in a program which prepares them for grade school. Last
year, a boost in
Head Start funding put 835,000 children into the program, making further
progress
toward the President's goal of putting a million children in Head Start by
2002.
- Invested in public schools to help States and communities raise
academic standards,
strengthen accountability, connect classrooms and schools to the
information
superhighway, and promote public school choice by opening 900 charter
schools.
- Protected and restored some of the Nation's most treasured lands, such
as Yellowstone
National Park, and the Everglades; provided the funds to conserve others;
and accelerated
toxic waste clean-ups.
- Built the COPS program to support community policing. This year COPS
will reach the
goal of putting 100,000 more police on the streets of America's
communities. COPS has
helped reduce violent crime for six straight years. The 21st Century
Policing Initiative
proposed in this budget will expand on the number of police and provide
other law
enforcement tools to the community.
This year's
budget builds
on the President's efforts to invest in the skills of the American
people. It continues his policy of helping working families with their
basic needs -- raising their
children, sending them to college, and expanding access to health care. It
also invests in
education and training, the environment, science and technology, law
enforcement and other
priorities, to help raise the standard of living and quality of life of
Americans.
Families and Children: For six years, the President
has sought to help
working families
balance the demands of work and family. In this year's budget he proposes
a major effort to
make child care more affordable, accessible and safe -- by expanding tax
credits for
middle-income families, and for businesses to expand their child care
resources; by assisting
parents who
want to attend college meet their child care needs; and by increasing funds
with which the Child
Care and Development Block Grant can help more poor and near poor children.
The budget
proposes an Early Learning Fund, which would provide grants to communities
for activities that
improve early childhood education and the quality of childcare for those
under age five.
Education: The President has worked to enhance access
to, and the quality
of, education and
training. The budget takes the next steps by continuing to help States and
school districts reduce
class size by recruiting and preparing thousands more teachers and building
thousands more new
classrooms. The President proposes improving school accountability by
funding monetary
awards to the highest performing schools that serve low-income students,
providing resources to
States to help them identify and change the least successful schools, and
ending social promotion
by funding additional education hours through programs like the
21st Century
Learning Centers.
The budget also proposes further increases in the maximum Pell Grant to
help low-income
undergraduates complete their college education, and more funding for
universal reemployment
services to help train or find jobs for all dislocated workers who need
help.
Environment: This Administration proposes a historic
interagency Lands
Legacy initiative to
both preserve the Nation's Great Places, and advance preservation of open
spaces in every
community. This initiative will help address sprawl and air and water
pollution, through land
acquisition, preservation efforts, environmental protection and local
growth management. The
Administration also proposes a new financing mechanism, Better America
Bonds, to further
creation of open spaces in urban and suburban areas. The Better America
Bonds initiative is an
example of our use of targeted, paid-for tax cuts to achieve the Nation's
priority goals. In
addition, the budget would restore and rehabilitate national parks,
forests, and public lands and
facilities; expand efforts to restore and protect the water quality of
rivers and lakes; continue
efforts to double the pace of Superfund clean-ups; and better protect
endangered species.
Defense: The President is committed to maintaining
world military
leadership to provide for the
safety of American citizens and the primacy of American Armed Forces. To
ensure America's
Armed Forces are fully prepared to meet the challenges of the next century,
the President
proposes a long-term, sustained increase in defense spending to enhance
military readiness,
improve recruitment and retention, and provide the most modern and
effective weapons. In
addition, these resources will reinforce the ability of the Defense
Department to counter
emerging threats such as terrorism, reduce threats from weapons of mass
destruction, maintain
the nation's nuclear deterrent, and provide humanitarian and disaster
assistance.
Health Care: The President has worked hard to expand
health care
coverage and improve the
Nation's health. The budget gives new insurance options to hundreds of
thousands of Americans
aged 55 to 65, and it advocates bipartisan national legislation that would
reduce tobacco use
among the young. The President's budget proposes initiatives to help
patients, families and care
givers cope with the burdens of long-term care; and it helps reduce
barriers to employment for
individuals with disabilities. The budget also enables more Medicare
recipients to receive
promising cancer treatments by participating more easily in clinical
trials. And it improves the
fiscal soundness of Medicare and Medicaid through new management proposals,
including
programs to combat waste, fraud and abuse.
Embassy Security: The bombings of U.S. embassies in
Kenya and
Tanzania highlight the
dangers faced daily by Americans who work in U.S. facilities abroad. The
budget proposes an
increase to the State Department's operating budget to ensure protection of
embassies and other
facilities, and the valuable employees who work there. The budget also
includes a request for $3
billion in advance appropriations for a multi-year security construction
program.
The 2000 Budget saves the surplus until we fix Social Security
first
The President's FY 2000 budget is fully
paid for, in
compliance with the discretionary
caps and the pay-as-you-go budget rules. The budget allows for
appropriations for important
domestic and national security priorities by limiting other discretionary
spending and achieving
mandatory savings. Offsets to discretionary spending include the
President's tobacco policy
(which would reimburse the Federal Government for tobacco-related
discretionary health care
costs), FAA user fees, health care savings, Superfund receipts, student
loan savings and the recall
of additional federal fund reserves at lending guaranty agencies, and
reform of the existing
harbor maintenance excise tax. With the use of these offsets, in keeping
with longstanding
budget practice, the 2000 budget complies with the discretionary spending
caps.
The budget provides targeted tax
reductions, financed
by the elimination of tax loopholes,
and inefficient or obsolete tax subsidies. Important tax cuts and
incentives, in addition to the
President's USA retirement savings program, include the tax credit for
long-term care needs, the
public school construction and modernization bonds, the expansion of the
child and dependent
care tax credit, the new Better America Bonds, extension of the R&E tax
credit, the work
opportunity tax credit, the welfare-to-work tax credit, and the tax
incentives for reductions of
carbon emissions that cause global warming. Important mandatory
initiatives include child care,
the Medicare buy-in, disability and cancer clinical trials programs, and
extension of health-care
programs to immigrants. Taking all of these policy steps together, the
budget complies with the
pay-as-you-go rules, and the tax cuts and mandatory initiatives are fully
paid for.
We need adequate resources for a strong defense and critical
domestic
priorities
For future years, the budget includes the
discretionary
resources contemplated as a part of
the plan for Social Security reform. While these funds will only be
available if Social Security
reform is enacted, the Administration's policy is categorically defined
including those resources.
Social Security reform is one of the President's highest priorities for
this year and we must work
on a bipartisan basis to accomplish this important goal. The comprehensive
framework for
allocating the surplus will also provide these critical discretionary
resources.
The President believes that his
discretionary priorities
are important to economic growth,
and to the Nation's well being and quality of life. Some have disagreed,
and have argued that
Federal spending in general is too high. This debate requires some
perspective.
First, and perhaps most fundamentally,
consider the
record. Over the years 1980-98,
Federal spending averaged 21.9 percent of GDP. But Federal receipts
averaged only 18.5
percent of GDP. Thus, the Federal budget averaged a deficit of about 3.4
percent of GDP. When
this Administration set out to cut the budget deficit that we inherited,
our original plan called for
roughly equal spending cuts and revenue increases (with spending cuts in
fact slightly larger).
While the results of this plan have been far beyond what we ourselves
anticipated -- with the
deficit falling by more than twice as much as our original estimates --
they did maintain the
balance between spending cuts and revenue increases.
In balancing the budget, this
Administration has
controlled Federal spending well beyond
the record of its predecessors. As a percentage of GDP, spending in
every year for which
President Clinton submitted a budget has been lower than in
any
year of the two preceding
Administrations. In every budget year from 1994
through 1998,
Federal spending as a
percentage of GDP fell. Spending as a percentage of GDP in 1998, at 19.7
percent, was the
lowest in almost a quarter century.
Some argue that "Federal spending is still
going up." In
the simplest terms -- total dollars
with no discounting for inflation, no allowance for the growth of the
economy, and no allowance
for the growth of the population government serves -- that is true. But
even in this format, the
analysis tells a great deal about the record of Federal spending under this
Administration.
From 1993 through 1998, 31 percent of the
simple
dollar increase in Federal outlays
came because more elderly people retired on Social Security benefits, and
prior retirees received
cost-of-living increases; 26 percent arose because of additional
beneficiaries and higher costs
under Medicare; 18 percent arose because, even with a rapidly declining
budget deficit -- and by
1998, a budget surplus -- there was more debt to service, and so net
interest costs went up; and
10 percent came from increased costs under Medicaid, more than two-thirds
of which went for
the expenses of the indigent elderly, blind, disabled, and mentally
retarded, many of those in
long-term care.
Thus, there has been almost no spending
growth in
programs other than Social Security,
Medicare, Medicaid, and net interest. Spending of the entire remainder of
the Federal
Government over 1993 to 1998 shrank by 5.4 percent in inflation-adjusted
dollars, and fell from
11.5 percent to 8.8 percent of the Nation's GDP.
This shrinking of core government
operations cannot go
on forever if government is to accomplish the missions assigned to it. We
all take for granted the
obligation to maintain critical core functions like the FAA, the FBI, and
the administration of
Medicare. As we consider how to budget in this era of surpluses, we must
consider carefully the
resources available for these often-anonymous functions that the Nation has
a right to expect its
government to perform well.
A key element in the Administration's
ability to expand
strategic investments, while balancing the budget, is the reinvention of
government -- doing more
with less. Efforts led by Vice President Gore's National Partnership for
Reinvention have
streamlined government, reduced its workforce, and focused on performance
to improve
operations and delivery of service. And these efforts, by reducing the
cost of government
operations, have improved the bottom line and contributed to our strong
economy.
Since 1993, the Administration, working
with Congress,
has evaluated and eliminated hundreds of unnecessary programs and projects.
The
Administration has cut the size of the Federal civilian work force by more
than 365,000 people,
creating the smallest work force in 35 years and, as a share of total
civilian employment, the
smallest since 1931.
The Administration, however, is working to
create not
just a smaller Government, but a better one -- a Government that best
provides services and
benefits to its ultimate customers, the American people. It has not just
cut the Federal work force,
it has streamlined layers of bureaucracy. It has not just reorganized
headquarters and field
offices, it has ensured that those closest to the customers can best serve
them.
For 2000, this Administration once again
is turning its
efforts to the next stage of
"reinventing" the Federal Government. It plans to dramatically overhaul 32
Federal
agencies to
improve performance in key services, such as expediting student loan
processing and speeding
aid to disaster victims. It also plans to tackle critical challenges, such
as ensuring that
Government computers can process the year 2000 date change, and making more
Government
services available electronically.
Under the 1993 Government Performance and
Results
Act, Cabinet departments and
agencies have prepared individual performance plans that they will send to
Congress with the
performance goals they plan to meet in 2000. These plans provided the
basis for the second
Government-wide Performance Plan which is contained in this year's Budget.
For the first time
in 2000, agencies will submit to the President and Congress annual reports
for 1999 that compare
actual and target performance levels and explain any difference between
them.
We have an historic opportunity for long-term prosperity if we
rise to the
moment
There is much to be proud of in America
today. By
balancing the budget, we have not
just put our fiscal house in order; we have left behind an era in which the
budget deficit, as the
President said recently, "came to symbolize what was amiss with the way we
were dealing with
changes in the world." Today we have risen to the challenge of change --
by preparing our
people through education and training to compete in the global economy, by
funding the research
that will lead to the technological tools of the next generation, by
helping working parents
balance the twin demands of work and family, and by providing investment to
our distressed
communities to bridge the opportunity gap.
If the deficit once loomed over us as a
symbol of what
was wrong, our balanced budget is
proof that we can set things right. Not only do we have well-deserved
confidence, we have
hard-earned resources with which to enter the next century.
As the President said, what we do now --
after having
balanced the budget -- will shape
the character of the next century. We can build upon our newfound firm
economic foundation;
or we can squander it.
The President has brought the debate right
to the point:
What should we do with the
surplus? Or to put it another way: If we were to look back fifteen years
from now, or at the end
of the next century -- what would we want to be
able to say that
we had accomplished with this
opportunity?
The President wants to leave a legacy of
building for the
future: saving Social Security
and Medicare; encouraging Americans to save for their own futures, build
wealth, and prepare
for retirement; investing in education; ensuring our National security; and
making other key
investments.
There is no more pressing issue facing us
as a nation
than the need to guarantee that
Social Security will be there for generations to come. And there is no
better time to act than now
while the system is still strong. This is truly an exceptional moment in
America -- the economy
is prosperous, the budget is in balance, and the President's commitment to
national dialogue has
created conditions for constructive action. We must seize this moment.