ur elected representatives in Congress have been voting larger expenditures
year after year--larger not only in dollars but as a fraction of the national
income. Tax revenue has been rising as well, but nothing like so rapidly. As a
result, deficits have grown and grown.
At the same time, the public has demonstrated increasing resistance to higher
spending, higher taxes, and higher deficits. Every survey of public opinion
shows a large majority that believes that government is spending too much
money, and that the government budget should be balanced.
How is it that a government of the majority produces results that the majority
opposes?
The paradox reflects a defect in our political structure. We are ruled by a
majority--but it is a majority composed of a coalition of minorities
representing special interests. A particular minority may lose more from
programs benefiting other minorities than it gains from programs benefiting
itself. It might be willing to give up its own programs as part of a package
deal eliminating all programs--but, currently, there is no way it can express
that preference.
Similarly, it is not in the interest of a legislator to vote against a
particular appropriation bill if that vote would create strong enemies while a
vote in its favor would alienate few supporters. That is why simply electing
the right people is not a solution. Each of us will be favorably inclined
toward a legislator who has voted for a bill that confers a large benefit on
us, as we perceive it. Yet who among us will oppose a legislator because he has
voted for a measure that, while requiring a large expenditure, will increase
the taxes on each of us by a few cents or a few dollars? When we are among the
few who benefit, it pays us to keep track of the vote. When we are among the
many who bear the cost, it does not pay us even to read about it.
The result is a major defect in the legislative procedure whereby a budget is
enacted: each measure is considered separately, and the final budget is the sum
of the separate items, limited by no effective, overriding total. That defect
will not be remedied by Congress itself--as the failure of one attempt after
another at reforming the budget process has demonstrated. It simply is not in
the self-interest of legislators to remedy it--at least not as they have
perceived their self-interest.
Dissatisfaction with ever-increasing spending and taxes first took the form of
pressure on legislators to discipline themselves. When it became clear that
they could not or would not do so, the dissatisfaction took the form of a drive
for constitutional amendments at both the state and the federal levels. The
drive captured national attention when Proposition 13, reducing property taxes,
was passed in California; it has held public attention since, scoring successes
in state after state. The constitutional route remains the only one by which
the general interest of the public can be expressed, by which package deals, as
it were, can be realized.
Two national organizations have led this drive: the National Tax Limitation
Committee (NTLC), founded in 1975 as a single-issue, nonpartisan organization
to serve as a clearinghouse for information on attempts to limit taxes at a
local, state, or federal level, and to assist such attempts; and the National
Taxpayers Union (NTU), which led the drive to persuade state legislatures to
pass resolutions calling for a constitutional convention to enact an amendment
requiring the federal government to balance its budget. Thirty-one states have
already passed resolutions calling for a convention. If three more pass similar
resolutions, the Constitution requires Congress to call such a convention--a
major reason Congress has been active in producing its own amendment.
The amendment that was passed by the Senate last August 4, by a vote of 69 to
31 (two more than the two thirds required for approval of a constitutional
amendment), had its origin in 1973 in a California proposition that failed at
the time but passed in 1979 in improved form (not Proposition 13). A drafting
committee organized by the NTLC produced a draft amendment applicable to the
federal government in late 1978. The NTU contributed its own version. The
Senate Judiciary Committee approved a final version on May 19, 1981, after
lengthy hearings and with the cooperation of all the major contributors to the
earlier work. In my opinion, the committee's final version was better than any
earlier draft. That version was adopted by the Senate except for the addition
of section 6, proposed by Senator William Armstrong, of Colorado, a Republican.
Approval by the Senate, like the sponsorship of the amendment, was bipartisan:
forty-seven Republicans, twenty-one Democrats, and one Independent voted for
the amendment.
The House Democratic leadership tried to prevent a vote on the amendment in the
House before last November's elections. However, a discharge petition forced a
vote on it on October 1, the last full day of the regular session. The
amendment was approved by a majority (236 to 187), but not by the necessary two
thirds. Again, the majority was bipartisan: 167 Republicans, 69 Democrats. In
view of its near passage and the widespread public support for it, the
amendment is sure to be reintroduced in the current session of Congress. Hence
it remains a very live issue.
The amendment as adopted by the Senate would achieve two related objectives:
first, it would increase the likelihood that the federal budget would be
brought into balance, not by prohibiting an unbalanced budget but by making it
more difficult to enact a budget calling for a deficit; second, it would check
the growth of government spending--again, not by prohibiting such growth but by
making it more difficult.
The amendment is very much in the spirit of the first ten amendments--the Bill
of Rights. Their purpose was to limit the government in order to free the
people. Similarly, the purpose of the balanced-budget-and-tax-limitation
amendment is to limit the government in order to free the people--this time
from excessive taxation. Its passage would go a long way to remedy the defect
that has developed in our budgetary process. By the same token, it would make
it more difficult for supporters of ever-bigger government to attain their
goals.
It is no surprise, therefore, that a torrent of criticism has been loosed
against the proposed amendment by people who believe that our problems arise
not from excessive government but from our failure to give government enough
power, enough control over us as individuals. It is no surprise that Tip
O'Neill and his fellow advocates of big government tried to prevent a vote in
the House on the amendment, and used all the pressure at their command to
prevent its receiving a two-thirds majority.
It is no surprise, either, that when the amendment did come to a vote in the
House, a substantial majority voted for it. After all, in repeated opinion
polls, more than three quarters of the public have favored such an amendment.
Their representatives do not find it easy to disregard that sentiment in an
open vote--which is why Democratic leaders tried to prevent the amendment from
coming to a vote. When their hand was forced, they quickly introduced a
meaningless substitute that was overwhelmingly defeated (346 to 77) but gave
some representatives an opportunity to cast a recorded vote for a token
budget-balancing amendment while at the same time voting against the real
thing.
I have been much more surprised, and dismayed, by the criticism that has been
expressed by persons who share my basic outlook about the importance of
limiting government in order to preserve and expand individual freedom--for
example, the editors of The Wall Street Journal and a former editor and current
columnist, Vermont Royster. They do not question the objectives of the
amendment, but they doubt its necessity and potential effectiveness.
Those doubts are presumably shared by many other thoughtful citizens of all
shades of political opinion who are united by concern about the growth of
government spending and deficits. Here, for their consideration, are my answers
to the principal objections to the proposed amendment that I have come across,
other than those that arise from a desire to have a still-bigger government:
**1. The amendment is unnecessary. Congress and the President have the power to
limit spending and balance the budget.**
Taken seriously, this is an argument for scrapping most of the Constitution.
Congress and the President have the power to preserve freedom of the press and
of speech without the First Amendment. Does that make the First Amendment
unnecessary? Not surprisingly, I know of no one who has criticized the
balanced-budget amendment as unnecessary--however caustic his comments on
congressional hypocrisy--who would draw the conclusion that the First Amendment
should be scrapped.
It is essential to look not only at the power of Congress but at the incentives
of its members--to act in such a way as to be re-elected. As Phil Gramm, a
Democratic congressman from Texas, has said: Every time you vote on every
issue, all the people who want the program are looking over your right shoulder
and nobody's looking over your left shoulder....In being fiscally responsible
under such circumstances, we're asking more of people than the Lord asks."
Under present arrangements, Congress will not in fact balance the budget.
Similarly, a President will not produce a balanced budget by using the kind of
vetoes that would be required. The function of the amendment is to remedy the
defect in our legislative procedure that distorts the will of the people as it
is filtered through their representatives. The amendment process is the only
effective way the public can treat the budget as a whole. That is the function
of the First Amendment, as well--it treats free speech as a bundle. In its
absence, Congress would consider each case "on its merits." It is not hard to
envisage the way unpopular groups and views would fare.
**2. The President and Congress are guilty of hypocrisy in voting
simultaneously for a large current deficit and for a constitutional amendment
to prevent future deficits.**
Of course, I have long believed that congressional hypocrisy and
shortsightedness are the only reasons there is a ghost of a chance of getting
Congress to pass an amendment limiting itself. Most members of Congress will do
anything to postpone the problems they face by a couple of years--only Wall
Street has a shorter perspective. If the hypocrisy did not exist, if Congress
behaved "responsibly," there would be no need for the amendment. Congress's
irresponsibility is the reason we need an amendment and at the same time the
reason that there is a chance of getting one.
Hypocrisy may eventually lead to the passing of the amendment. But hypocrisy
will not prevent the amendment from having important effects three or four
years down the line--and from casting its shadow on events even earlier.
Congress will not violate the Constitution lightly. Members of Congress will
wriggle and squirm; they will seek, and no doubt find, subterfuges and
evasions. But their actions will be significantly affected by the existence of
the amendment. The experience of several states that have passed similar
tax-limitation amendments provides ample evidence of that.
**3. The amendment is substantive, not procedural and the Constitution should
be limited to procedural matters. The fate of the Prohibition amendment is a
cautionary tale that should give us pause in enacting substantive
amendments.**
If this amendment is substantive, so is the income-tax (sixteenth) amendment
and so are many specific provisions of the Constitution. The income-tax
amendment does not specify the rate of tax. It leaves that to Congress.
Similarly, this amendment does not specify the size of the budget. It simply
outlines a procedure for approving it: the same as now exists if total
legislated outlays do not exceed an amount determined by prior events (the
prior budget and the prior growth in national income); and by a majority of 60
percent if total legislated outlays do exceed that amount. The requirement of a
supernormal majority is neither substantive nor undemocratic nor unprecedented.
Witness the two-thirds majority necessary to override a presidential veto or to
approve a treaty.
The prohibition amendment was incompatible with the basic aim of the
Constitution, because it was not directed at limiting government. On the
contrary, it limited the people and freed government to control them. The
balanced-budget-tax-limitation amendment is thoroughly compatible with the
basic role of the Constitution, because it seeks to improve the ability of the
public to limit government.
**4. The amendment is unduly rigid because it requires an annually balanced
budget.**
This is a misconception. Section 1 of the amendment prohibits a planned budget
deficit unless it is explicitly approved by three fifths of the members of the
House and Senate. It further requires the Congress and the President to "ensure
that actual outlays do not exceed the outlays set forth in [the budget]
statement." But it does not require that actual receipts equal or exceed
statement receipts. A deficit that emerged because a recession produced a
reduction in tax receipts would not be in violation of the amendment, provided
that outlays were no greater than statement outlays. This is a sensible
arrangement: outlays can be controlled more readily over short periods than
receipts.
I have never been willing to support an amendment calling for an annually
balanced budget. I do support this one, because it has the necessary
flexibility.
**5. The amendment will be ineffective because (a) it requires estimates of
receipts and outlays which can be fudged; (b) its language is fuzzy; (c) the
Congress can find loopholes to evade it; (d) it contains no specific provisions
for enforcement.**
(a) It will be possible to evade the amendment by overestimating receipts--but
only once, for the first year the amendment is effective. Thereafter, section 2
of the amendment limits each year's statement receipts to the prior year's
statement receipts plus the prior rate of increase of national income. No
further estimates of budget receipts are called for. This is one of the
overlooked subtleties in the amendment.
Any further fudging would have to be of the national-income estimates. That is
possible but both unlikely and not easy. What matters is not the level of
national income but the percentage change in national income. Alterations of
the definition of national income that affect levels are likely to have far
less effect on percentage changes. Moreover, making the change in income
artificially high in one year will tend to make it artificially low the next.
All in all, I do not believe that this is a serious problem.
(b) The language is not fuzzy. The only undefined technical term is "national
income." The amendment also refers to "receipts" and "outlays," terms of
long-standing usage in government accounting; in section 4, total receipts and
total outlays are defined explicitly.
Nor is the amendment a hastily drawn gimmick designed to provide a fig leaf to
hide Congress's sins. On the contrary, it is a sophisticated product, developed
over a period of years, that reflects the combined wisdom of the many persons
who participated in its development.
(c) Loopholes are a more serious problem. One obvious loophole--off-budget
outlays--has been closed by phrasing the amendment in terms of total outlays
and defining them to include "all outlays of the United States except those for
repayment of debt principal." But other, less obvious, loopholes have not been
closed. Two are particularly worrisome: government credit guarantees, and
mandating private expenditures for public purposes (e. g., antipollution
devices on automobiles). These loopholes now exist and are now being resorted
to. I wish there were some way to close them. No doubt the amendment would
provide an incentive to make greater use of them. Yet I find it hard to believe
that they are such attractive alternatives to direct government spending that
they would render the amendment useless.
(d) No constitutional provision will be enforced unless it has widespread
public support. That has certainly been demonstrated. However, if a provision
does have widespread support--as public-opinion polls have clearly shown that
this one does--legislators are not likely to flout it, which brings us back to
the loopholes.
Equally important, legislators will find it in their own interest to confer an
aura of inviolability on the amendment. This point has been impressed on me by
the experience of legislators in states that have adopted amendments limiting
state spending. Prior to the amendments, they had no effective defense against
lobbyists urging spending programs--all of them, of course, for good purposes.
Now they do. They can say: Your program is an excellent one; I would like to
support it, but the total amount we can spend is fixed. To get funds for your
program, we shall have to cut elsewhere. Where should we cut?" The effect is to
force lobbyists to compete against one another rather than form a coalition
against the general taxpayer.
That is the purpose of constitutional rules: to establish arrangements under
which private interest coincides with the public interest. This amendment
passes that test with flying colors.
**6. The key problem is not deficits but the size of government spending.**
My sentiments exactly. Which is why I have never supported an amendment
directed solely at a balanced budget. I have written repeatedly that while I
would prefer that the budget be balanced, I would rather have government spend
$500 billion and run a deficit of $100 billion than have it spend $800 billion
with a balanced budget. It matters greatly how the budget is balanced, whether
by cutting spending or by raising taxes.
In my eyes, the chief merit of the amendment recommended by the Senate
Judiciary Committee is precisely that it does limit spending. Section 1
requires that statement outlays be no greater than statement receipts; section
2 limits the maximum increase in statement receipts; the two together
effectively limit statement outlays. Moreover, if in any year Congress manages
to keep statement receipts and outlays below the maximum level, the effect is
to lower the maximum level for future years, thus fostering a gradual
ratcheting down of spending relative to national income.
A further strength of the amendment is the provision for approving an
exceptional increase in statement receipts (hence in statement outlays). The
spending-limitation amendment that was drafted by the National Tax Limitation
Committee required a two-thirds majority of both houses in order to justify an
exceptional increase in outlays. The amendment passed by the Senate requires
only "a majority of the whole number of both houses of Congress." However, the
majority must vote for an explicit tax increase. I submit that it is far easier
to get a two-thirds majority of Congress to approve an exceptional increase in
spending than to get a simple majority to approve an explicit increase in
taxes. So this is a stronger, not a weaker, amendment.
Section 6 proposed by Senator Armstrong in the course of Senate debate, makes
the debt ceiling permanent and requires a supermajority vote to raise it. That
provision was approved by a narrow majority composed of a coalition of
right-wing Republicans and left-wing Democrats--the one group demonstrating its
hardcore conservatism, the other seeking to reduce the chances of adoption of
the basic amendment.
I do not favor the debt-limit provision. Its objective--to strengthen pressure
on Congress to balance the budget--is fine, and it may be that it would do
little harm. But it seems to me both unnecessary and potentially harmful. I
trust that it will be eliminated if and when the amendment is finally approved
by Congress. I shall favor the amendment even if the debt-limit provision is
left in, but less enthusiastically.
**7. The amendment introduces a near economic theory into the Constitution.**
It does nothing of the kind--unless the idea that there should be some
connection between receipts and outlays is a new economic theory. The amendment
does not even change the present budget process, if Congress enacts a balanced
budget that rises by no greater a percentage than does national income. But it
does significantly stiffen the requirement for passing a budget that is in
deficit or for raising the fraction of our income spent on our behalf by the
government.
The amendment recommended by the Senate Judiciary Committee deserves the
wholehearted backing of every believer in a limited government and maximum
freedom for the individual.
Copyright © 1983 by Milton Friedman. All rights reserved.