Quote from bugscoe:
Insider, turn off Oprah. Federal spending has increased steadily regardless of congressional leadership. Your chart is a partisan hack job, like you.
Real annual federal spending has more than quintupled since 1965 and more than doubled since 1980. Since 2006, federal spending has increased by nearly $1 trillion.
Total Federal Spending in Inflation-Adjusted Dollars (2008)
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Quote from bigdavediode:
"You know, Paul, Reagan proved deficits don't matter." -- Dick Cheney
<img src="http://zfacts.com/metaPage/lib/National-Debt-GDP.gif"> </img>
We shall see if this experiment in Keynesianism works (so far so good), but it's worth noting the following:
* The twenty years of budgets prepared by Republican presidents increased the national debt by $3,800,000,000,000. The average yearly deficit under Republican budgets was $190 billion.
* The twenty years of budgets prepared by Democratic presidents increased the national debt by $719,500,000,000. The average yearly deficit under Democratic budgets was $36 billion.
Quote from TraderZones:
Adjusted for inflation, this would be far from true. FDR and spending during WW2 was a HUGE part of the budget. But compared to now, it was small.
And how about who ruled Congress during this years? Most of the Republican admins the last few decades had a Dem congressional majority.
Quote from Scataphagos:
If America is to have a future, we need to get rid of the bums in Congress and the Administration... and elect those who will bring deficit spending WAAAYYYY down.
Quote from TGregg:
"... Maybe when this is all over and we are once again debt free, we can build a monument to that acronym.
Quote from TraderZones:
from 1900 to 1999 (they did not have last 10 years):
the average Dem controlled congress (both houses) averaged an annual debt increase of 9.69% (median 5.81%)
the average Dem controlled congress (both houses) yielded an annual debt increase of 7.48% (median 1.52%)
Quote from bigdavediode:
"... Under Reagan, for example, the proposed budgets were only marginally smaller than the ones congress approved. Ie. the budgetary requests came from the president.