OPINION:
Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswamy and the new informal Department of Government Efficiency should help President-elect Donald Trump implement a straightforward reform: Return federal spending to 2019 levels.
Americans lived large just before COVID-19. The U.S. economy boomed on New Year’s Eve 2019. Real annual gross domestic product grew 2.5%. Unemployment was just 3.5% and at or near record depths for Black, Hispanic and Asian Americans. Joblessness among women was at its lowest point since President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
The economy blossomed amid robust federal spending that totaled $5.46 trillion. Uncle Sam was no aloof skinflint then. Paring Washington’s activities to that pace will not starve babies or steer older adults into the streets.
So, as 2025 beckons, America should restore the budget threshold that prevailed before the China virus ruined everything. It sandbagged the U.S. economy, sickened seemingly everyone and killed 1,213,622 Americans between Jan. 11, 2020, and Dec. 14, 2024, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports.
These microbes (most likely from the Chinese Communist Party’s Wuhan Institute of Virology) also triggered some $2.48 trillion in emergency spending to relieve a quarantined national workforce, support padlocked employers, underwrite medical assistance, finance vaccine research and otherwise shake the disease that gripped America and pounded the globe.
This once-in-a-century calamity guaranteed big government. Such federal activity and expenditures were unsurprising and not entirely unjustified, especially after the pandemic crippled the private sector.
The superb news is that COVID-19 has become an unremarkable flu. Its 2020 death toll of 367,209 under then-President Trump rose to 469,966 under President Biden in 2021 before falling to 255,673 in 2022, 75,580 in 2023, and 45,194 this year.
Alas, even today, too many bitter clingers still signal their twisted virtue by wearing masks. Resembling Donald Duck must give them a rush of moral superiority over us Great Unwashed. Aside from this irritating reminder of the recent unpleasantness, COVID-19 has largely vanished into the history books.
So, too, should the tidal wave of pandemic-related spending. It stubbornly refuses to recede.
Typical Washington: Today’s budget ceiling becomes tomorrow’s budget floor. Year One’s fiscal extravagance swiftly morphs into Year Two’s Scrooge-like federal parsimony.
This institutional profligacy goes by the highly arousing technical term “continuing services budgeting.” (Pause now, if you must, for a cold shower.) This practice fuels heavy spending.
Fiscal 2019’s total federal outlays were $5.46 trillion. The next year, COVID-19 costs ballooned to $7.94 trillion — up 45.4%. Mr. Biden entered the White House and spent $7.84 trillion in fiscal 2021. While post-COVID spending slipped to $6.67 trillion in fiscal 2022 and $6.31 trillion in fiscal 2023, it outpaces pre-COVID disbursements.
Among countless necessary improvements, DOGE should chant the equally sexy term “zero-based budgeting.” (If necessary, briefly think about baseball.) Simply put: Federal organizations would no longer ladle fresh gravy atop their previous year’s budgets. Instead, every Cabinet secretary and agency administrator must justify to Congress every annual expenditure.
DOGE should slash overall spending from fiscal 2024’s $6.75 trillion back to fiscal 2019’s $5.46 trillion. That would provide all the government that Americans savored or spurned before COVID-19 wrecked everything.
Afterward, DOGE should use zero-based budgeting to evaluate every federal department, agency, program, military base, civilian building, outpost and payroll. If the corresponding federal official cannot explain why a particular expenditure is both constitutional and vital to national security, prosperity and freedom, it goes onto the ash heap of history.
This will not be easy, and the weeping will make the fainthearted cry, cry, cry. But the rampant federal spending must stop. If not, America will follow the Roman Empire into oblivion in our lifetimes.
Pruning big government to pre-COVID-19 dimensions and challenging every subsequent dollar will give America a fighting chance to deserve our 250th birthday in 2026 and survive until our tricentennial in 2076.
So tonight, we’re gonna party like it’s 2019!
• Deroy Murdock is a Manhattan-based Fox News contributor.
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