Monday, March 9, 2026
National debt
Since 1950 prices have increased by 3.5% each year while government spending has increased by 7% resulting in a $37 trillion-dollar national debt. Public assistance programs including federal and state have increased by 6%. Raising taxes to reduce debt doesn’t work because when the government gets new income it spends the money on new programs. People believe that tax increases can lower the debt but polls show that people do not want their taxes raised. 70% favor taxing the rich. It is the old story, don’t tax you, don’t tax me, tax the man behind the tree. The US currently has the most progressive tax system in the world and most people want to tax the rich even more. History has shown that just increasing taxes will not reduce the debt. The answer is to reduce spending but that is very unpopular especially among people who receive public assistance. Politicians know this so it is just about impossible to stop the increase in benefits. Benefits include not only welfare (public assistance) to the poor but tax breaks for the rich, things like the home mortgage interest deduction. Once in a great while a politician will campaign on raising taxes but they do not get elected. The most famous case is the Mondale campaign against Reagan in 1984.
During his 1984 presidential campaign, Democratic nominee Walter Mondale famously pledged to raise taxes to reduce the federal budget deficit, stating, Mr. Reagan will raise taxes and so will I. He won’t tell you. I just did. His plan aimed to raise $85 billion, primarily targeting corporations and wealthy Americans.
Reagan won 49 states and 525 electoral votes, the most in history. He barely squeaked out a victory in his home state of MN by 3,761 votes….1,036,364 to 1,032,603. Reagan dramatically lowered taxes but he increased spending by far more and the debt ballooned from 33% of GDP to 53%. Today it is 120%.
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