Government’s spending addiction, trillion-dollar deficits, and debt ceiling crises
by David Leach • March 4, 2019 On the same day Trump was hugging the flag while receiving loud shouts of “hosanna†from the adoring worshipers in attendance at the revival services hosted by the National Church of Trump — aka CPAC — America was preparing to once again deal with the consequences of his and the GOP’s big-government spending.
On Saturday, the temporary extension of the national debt limit that Trump and the GOP included in the “bipartisan†budget act of 2018 expired. While the government can and will buy itself some time until sometime around September by using some creative bookkeeping — government calls that “extraordinary measures†— the countdown to America’s default on the national debt has begun once again.
The U.S. “comes shockingly close on a yearly basis to defaulting on it obligations,†says Shai Akabas, director of economic policy for the Bipartisan Policy Center. “But we keep choosing to roll the dice.â€
The “dice†analogy is actually quite fitting when discussing Washington’s handling of the national debt. Just as gambling can become an out-of-control addiction, spending can become one as well. And as our $22 trillion deficit proves, Washington is a case study for what a spending addiction looks like.
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https://www.stridentconservative.com/governments-spending-addiction-trillion-dollar-deficits-and-debt-ceiling-crises/