Brad Carson on Budget & EconomyFormer Democratic Rep (OK-2); 2004 former Senate challenger |
A: First, we have to keep the problem in perspective. As a percentage of our GDP, the budget deficit this year is not what it was in the 1980s and early 1990s. We’ve had some extraordinary events happen in the recent years, but that’s not to say we shouldn’t get ourselves back on a path toward fiscal solvency. I release a detailed plan to do just this. We have about $50 billion in various forms of waste, fraud and abuse that prudent management from the Senate and the House and its oversight could eliminate. There are corporate loopholes that are exploited every day to avoid lawful taxation about $250 billion a year. I’ve also proposed eliminating unnecessary and outdated government agencies, things like the Council on Environmental Quality, the Export-Import Bank. Those proposals, combined with the amount you would save on interest on the national debt with that, would move us probably close to fiscal balance.