Before I touch on this touchy subject...I want to say that I am not sparking a political debate here about which party will do a better job because I think all political parties are only interested in perpetuating their own personal interests. That being said, I want to make the following observations:
When I think about a budget for my own family, I consider the money I have coming in and then fit my spending and saving within that amount. It's just that simple. If I'm overspending my budget, I can't get my DH to run to his boss and say..."Oh hey, I spent more than I made last month so you are just going to have to give me a raise to cover what I've already spent and maybe some so I can spend more next month." What? That would probably get my DH fired.
When gas prices started climbing, I would say that everyone here made some adjustments to the amounts they were spending in other areas or changed their driving habits to compensate. Not just us, but other businesses and organizations with budgets that are impacted by high oil prices (like local school boards - all of those buses).
So far, I think all of that was pretty obvious and makes a lot of sense. Now the part that doesn't....
Why, then, can government be allowed to continue to spend outside their budget, especially when all of us are tightening our belts? We are their bosses and they continue to ask us for more money because they overspend. I'm not suggesting that they eliminate any critical funding right now (welfare programs, social security, health care programs) because with the unemployment rate jumping up lots of people will need that. What I'm suggesting is that they eliminate earmarks, the sugary-feel-good name for spending formerly known as pork-barrel spending. This often comes in the form of pet projects of senators or congresspersons...projects that wouldn't be approved otherwise can be tacked onto an agency's appropriation bill that will be approved. These are projects that cost a couple of a million here a couple hundred thousand there...stuff that might seem small to a senate and congress that regularly spends many times that amount, but as we all know a penny here and there will eventually become a dollar.
If you want to see what I'm talking about so far this year, then Google
earmarks office of management and budget
The first thing that should show up is the website for the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). If you select the "Estimates of FY 2008 Appropriation Earmarks" link, it will take you to the current year earmarks in a chart. If you keep clicking the links in the left hand column (appropriations bill, agency, bureau) to get to the account it will take you to pdf files that give you the list of what the earmarks are. You will be astounded and disgusted at the amounts of money thrown around. I'm not saying that some of these projects aren't good ideas, but I think that in a time of belt-tightening for the average American, are all of these things actually necessary at this time or can we delay them until the FIT IN THE BUDGET?? Come on politicians...let's get it right for once.