File:The U.S. government is still going bankrupt.webm

Original file(WebM audio/video file, VP9/Opus, length 1 min 58 s, 1,920 × 1,080 pixels, 1.08 Mbps overall, file size: 15.22 MB)

Captions

Captions

Add a one-line explanation of what this file represents

Summary edit

Description
English: When President Joe Biden took office, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that the federal government was on pace to run a $12.1 trillion deficit over the following 10 years.

https://reason.com/video/2022/08/18/the-inflation-reduction-act-barely-puts-a-dent-in-the-deficit/


But thanks to a boatload of new spending passed by Congress and signed by Biden during his first 16 months in the White House, that figure has climbed to about $14.5 trillion. In short, Biden has overseen a $2.4 trillion increase in America's long-term budget deficit.

One way or another, that shortfall has to be accounted for by cutting spending, raising taxes, or printing money. So what does the new Inflation Reduction Act do to address the problem?

It doesn't cut unnecessary spending or wasteful government programs. Instead, it raises taxes. And those tax increases will only reduce the deficit by about $300 billion. That's just 2 percent of what the government is forecasted to borrow over the decade after Biden took office.

In other words, even if you assume Congress won't further hike spending, we'd still need about 50 more bills just like the Inflation Reduction Act to avoid adding more debt in the next decade. And that doesn't even address the $30 trillion in debt the country has already accumulated. 

Even that small deficit reduction requires a massive corporate tax increase that will hurt the economy. There's also a plan to squeeze more money out of taxpayers by hiring 87,000 new IRS agents and beefing up the agency's audit powers.

This bill is indeed the first major piece of legislation to move through congress that would have even a slightly positive impact on future federal deficits since at least the middle of the Obama years. But it's not a serious attempt to grapple with our coming fiscal nightmare.

The actual drivers of future deficits are entitlement programs. President Biden and Congress are doing nothing to reform the programs that account for about half of the long-term budget deficit: Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. Thirty-six trillion of the 72 trillion dollars the federal government is expected to spend over the next 10 years goes to pay for these programs. Social Security and Medicare, in particular, are expected to ring up massive budget deficits over the next decade because they're structured like a Ponzi scheme in which current workers are paying the benefits of today's beneficiaries. A massive wave of older Americans are retiring and beginning to receive benefits, and there aren't enough working-age Americans to cover what they're owed. The system is starting to collapse.

Yes, $300 billion might sound like a lot of money, but in the context of government spending under Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden—as well as the exploding costs of eldercare entitlements—it's not very much at all.

Written and narrated by Eric Boehm; edited by Regan Taylor.
Date
Source YouTube: The U.S. government is still going bankrupt – View/save archived versions on archive.org and archive.today
Author ReasonTV

Licensing edit

This video, screenshot or audio excerpt was originally uploaded on YouTube under a CC license.
Their website states: "YouTube allows users to mark their videos with a Creative Commons CC BY license."
To the uploader: You must provide a link (URL) to the original file and the authorship information if available.
w:en:Creative Commons
attribution
This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported license.
Attribution: ReasonTV
You are free:
  • to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work
  • to remix – to adapt the work
Under the following conditions:
  • attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use.
This file, which was originally posted to an external website, has not yet been reviewed by an administrator or reviewer to confirm that the above license is valid. See Category:License review needed for further instructions.

File history

Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.

Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current16:51, 20 February 20241 min 58 s, 1,920 × 1,080 (15.22 MB)Grandmaster Huon (talk | contribs)Imported media from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sIyaAELdrR4

The following page uses this file:

Transcode status

Update transcode status
Format Bitrate Download Status Encode time
VP9 1080P 2.01 Mbps Completed 23:30, 27 February 2024 10 min 58 s
Streaming 1080p (VP9) 1.92 Mbps Completed 01:29, 29 March 2024 2.0 s
VP9 720P 1.21 Mbps Completed 23:25, 27 February 2024 5 min 33 s
Streaming 720p (VP9) 1.11 Mbps Completed 01:28, 29 March 2024 2.0 s
VP9 480P 656 kbps Completed 23:24, 27 February 2024 3 min 40 s
Streaming 480p (VP9) 561 kbps Completed 01:29, 29 March 2024 1.0 s
VP9 360P 416 kbps Completed 23:23, 27 February 2024 3 min 38 s
Streaming 360p (VP9) 321 kbps Completed 01:28, 29 March 2024 2.0 s
VP9 240P 273 kbps Completed 23:21, 27 February 2024 1 min 45 s
Streaming 240p (VP9) 179 kbps Completed 01:28, 29 March 2024 1.0 s
WebM 360P 716 kbps Completed 04:23, 27 February 2024 1 min 29 s
Streaming 144p (MJPEG) 796 kbps Completed 01:28, 29 March 2024 8.0 s
Stereo (Opus) 94 kbps Completed 16:54, 20 February 2024 4.0 s
Stereo (MP3) 128 kbps Completed 16:54, 20 February 2024 5.0 s

Metadata