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Running on Empty

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Running on Empty

How the Democratic and Republican Parties are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It

FSG,

15 min read
10 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Unlimited spending and big tax cuts promise a crushing deficit future generations will blame on both political parties.

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Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

Few authors have former U.S. Treasury official Peter G. Peterson’s credibility, so few others can demand the attention this book deserves and is receiving. Released in an election year, this vitally important, clearly presented treatise commands bipartisan action. Peterson demands explanations from the professional politicians who are largely responsible for jeopardizing America’s future growth and standard of living. With a firm grasp of complex economic, political and demographic relationships, buttressed by facts from political and economic think tanks, Peterson, an experienced official in former Republican administrations, lambastes both parties. He explains how they have neglected their fiscal stewardship in order to pacify special interest groups and constituencies at the expense of the entire nation. Both parties are guilty, Peterson charges, of violating the public trust. getAbstract.com thinks this excellent example of political economic writing should be essential reading for anyone interested in America’s future.

Summary

Shifting to the Supply Side

The Republican Party, long considered the best representative of individual rights and self-determination, has pushed for fiscal responsibility and financial stewardship since its origins in the 1850s. However, as America matured and became more internationalist, Republicans gradually abandoned advocating balanced federal budgets. They have come to view deficit spending as a political elixir that can invigorate the nation.

Ronald Reagan pushed "supply side" policies using tax cuts and spending to beat "stagflation." This temporary fix soon morphed into binge spending. Reagan spent more than Roosevelt did during all of World War II. The resulting federal indebtedness began to affect the capital markets, including foreign exchange rates and equity performance.

George Bush senior continued the break with tradition by adopting new taxes, but tax cuts soon became a key plank in the Republican Party platform. In 2001, when George W. Bush became president and had a Republican Congressional majority, national indebtedness exploded. Recession eroded a projected 10-year budget surplus of $5.6 trillion. The demise of technology ...

About the Author

Peter G. Peterson is the chairman of the Blackstone Group, chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations, and former chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He is founding president of the Concord Coalition. He has written four other books, including Gray Dawn: How the Coming Age Will Transform America - and the World.


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