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Pursuing the Economic Policy Agenda


Article # : 15842 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 1 / 1989  1,670 Words
Author : Murray Weidenbaum
Murray Weidenbaum director of the Center for the Study of American Business at Washington University in St. Louis and a former chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advisers.

       George Bush will face key economic policy challenges early in his administration. How he deals with them will strongly influence the success of his presidency.
       
        The most immediate challenge will be to convince financial markets, at home and abroad, that he is serious about reducing the budget deficit and that he will follow through with the needed painful remedies. Such actions, be they on tax or spending sides--or both--will be individually unpopular. But in the aggregate, they will show that the United States can get its own fiscal house in order.
       
        Doing so will be especially difficult because both presidential candidates omitted details in promising to reduce the federal tide of red ink. What the electorate did hear was mainly wishful thinking: A growing economy would simultaneously produce more revenue and lower interest rates; or the IRS could collect more of the taxes due. That just does not add up to bringing federal spending under control.
       
        Avoiding a tax increase is extremely desirable from the viewpoint of promoting economic growth, but to do so responsibly means enacting a truly comprehensive set of budget cuts. Substantial progress can be made in controlling the spending side of the budget. But that will mean stepping on the toes of many powerful interest groups. For example, the federal government could save $10 billion a year just by postponing military retirement pay to age 55. Many able-bodied veterans of the armed forces now start collecting their pensions at 40, 39, or even 38.
       
        Another potentially large budget saving is ... (2000 of 10083 Characters)
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