Andrew Rudalevige

Executive Policymaking


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effect, suspended” to achieve “rubber stamp approval” of Reagan budget priorities.37

      The Reagan era of the 1980s began the breakdown of the regular budgetary process, with record deficits, the use of accounting gimmicks, continual partisan bickering, and an unwillingness to face the structural problems that produced large deficits. President Reagan’s political success in cutting taxes marked the change from traditional Republican fiscal conservatism to uncritically embracing tax cuts regardless of their fiscal consequences. The tax increases in 1982 and 1983 were, thereafter, forgotten as part of the Reagan legacy. Cutting taxes without “paying for them” with corresponding spending cuts were priorities of the George W. Bush and Trump administrations.

      1990s: Bush 41, Clinton, and Balanced Budgets

      The compromise in the fall of 1990 resulted in the Budget Enforcement Act, which repealed GRH and its sequestrations. The constraints in the act were intended to control spending and tax cuts rather than deficits, which were subject to economic fluctuations and emergencies. Spending caps were set on discretionary spending and PAYGO applied to mandatory spending and tax changes. That is, if new legislation increased spending, it had to be offset by decreases elsewhere or revenue had to be increased. Similarly, any tax cuts had to be offset by decreased spending or other revenue increases. The PAYGO requirements lasted until the expiration of the act in 2002. Bush’s courageous deficit reduction package, despite denunciations from Republican conservatives, helped make possible the balanced budgets at the end of the 1990s.

      Nevertheless, Clinton vetoed a continuing resolution, triggering a six-day shutdown of most of the government, involving 800,000 federal workers. A new continuing resolution was passed, and several appropriations bills were passed and signed. But the continuing resolution ran out on December 15, and 280,000 government workers were furloughed. Finally, presidential candidate Robert Dole announced to Republicans in Congress that “enough is enough” and Congress passed a continuing resolution on January 6 to end a twenty-one-day shutdown. Clinton and the Republicans finally came to agree on a budget that was calculated to eliminate the deficit within seven years. The booming economy of the 1990s and the deficit reduction packages of 1990 and 1993 led to balanced budgets from 1998 to 2001, the longest string of balanced budgets since the 1920s (table 2-2).

      Both Bush and Clinton were hurt politically by their deficit reducing measures, but they were acts of political courage that enabled the government to produce balanced budgets at the turn of the century. Ironically, one of the issues in the presidential campaign of 2000 was about how to deal with the budget surpluses.

      Bush 43, Obama, and the Great Recession

      Budget Surplus and National Debt as % of GDP

Year Surplus as % GDP Debt as % GDP
1998 0.8 41.6
1999 1.3 38.2
2000 2.3 33.6
2001 1.2 31.4

      Source: Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2018–2028 (April 2018), Appendix E-1, p. 145.