President Obama’s Budget Deception
The
following documents a tactic of deception that is being used by President Obama
in his current budget that is illegal in the private sector. The deception tactic is the long known tactic
of deceiving with a financial projection.
The deception is being used by many elected officials. Researching the genesis of the deception
tactic for the projection being referred to below lead me to the Democratic
Policy Committee (DPC) press release on February 7, 2003. Because of the polar reversal on the
reliability of a projection by the Chairman of the DPC, Senator Byron Dorgan
(D-ND), from 2001 to 2003, I believe there is intent to deceive the public by
the DPC. Details associated with the DPC
and the contradictory statements of Senator Dorgan are in the penultimate
paragraph of the following letter.
Normally, deception by a politician cannot be considered newsworthy;
however, I believe intentional deception by a politician using a tactic that is
illegal in the private sector is newsworthy.
The following provides the background to address the question: Is intentional deception by an elected
official using a tactic that is illegal in the private sector a violation of
the Code of Ethics for Government Service?
Watch Speaker
Pelosi use the same tactic on February 26, 2009. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qo-geg9Axlo
February
26, 2009
Today, President Obama
issued his 2010 budget and titled the document: A New Era of
Responsibility - Renewing America’s Promise. Included in the document
is a continuation of his successful tactic to deceive Americans through the use
of a projection. The use of the well
known deception tactic is easily provable.
The only question is where its use falls within the continuum of
immaterial to a violation of a public trust.
For the
background on the tactic of deception with a projection, prior to the stock
market collapse of 1929 there was a practice of deceiving potential securities
investors through the use of projections.
In fact, the practice was so prevalent the tactic became illegal in the
private sector by passage of The
Securities Act of 1933. The penalty
for violation of the Act (Sec. 24) includes prison. To avoid deception The Securities Act of 1933
(Sec. 27A) requires the use of a projection to include meaningful cautionary statements identifying important
factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from the
projection. Therefore, the inclusion of
meaningful cautionary statements identifying important factors that could cause
actual results to differ materially from the projection is the underlining
principle necessary to avoid deception, regardless of whether the projection is
prepared internally or externally, publicly or privately, or by a partisan or
non-partisan group.
Returning to President Obama’s budget I will focus on the President’s continued efforts to deceive using the pre-1929 tactic of deception with a projection. In the budget titled: A New Era of Responsibility - Renewing America’s Promise, the following sentence on page 14 (of the PDF file) references the economic events during and at the end of the Clinton Administration as well as economic activity during the Bush administration:
(President Bush’s decisions have) “helped turn a surplus of $236 billion at the end of the
Clinton Administration, that was projected to grow still larger over time, into
a deficit of more than $1 trillion in 2009.”
Highlighting
the effectiveness of the deception tactic, only a critical and knowledgeable reader
will recognize the obvious deception in this sentence. The deception occurs with the phrase “that
(surplus) was projected to grow still larger over time.” The aforementioned phrase implies that had
President Bush not made any policy changes, the Clinton surpluses would have
continued. The deception occurs because
there is no inclusion of meaningful cautionary
statements identifying important factors that could cause actual results to
differ materially from the projected results.
What is
the basis for the budget surplus projection the President references? In January 2001 the Congressional Budget
Office (CBO) issued The Budget and
Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2002-2011.
This document begins with the following statement:
“In the absence of significant legislative
changes and assuming that the economy follows the path described in this
report, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that the total surplus
will reach $281 billion in 2001. Such surpluses are projected to rise in the
future, approaching $889 billion in 2011 and accumulating to $5.6 trillion over
the 2002-2011 period.”
As
pointed out by the CBO, and also in conformity with the preparation of every
projection, the projected surpluses were based on a series of assumptions. With the CBO document being available on-line
I will only state a few CBO assumptions associated with the surplus budget
projection. The assumptions include the
continuation of the Dotcom Boom, continued reductions in Defense spending and
continuation of the disproportionately higher earning
gains by high income earners. Having
said this, there is no need to reference any specific assumption to prove the
existence of deception by President Obama.
The pertinent issues associated with the assumptions are that they
exist, they are critical in determining the projected results, they are subject
to error and a lay person does not necessarily understand their importance in
the preparation of a projection.
Another
pertinent issue associated with any reference to a projection is the well
documented understanding there is a greater potential to mislead with a
projection than there is in reporting historical results. This point can
be confirmed with the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
To
minimize the potential for deception with the 2001 surplus budget projection the
CBO considered it necessary to include 11 pages of uncertainties associated
with the projection. Deception by
President Obama occurs because he did not reference any uncertainties with his
projection reference.
To
highlight the potential to deceive with a projection, an opportunity seized by
President Obama, and the effort put forth by the CBO to reduce the potential
for deception; I will draw attention to a few CBO comments
included in the 2001 surplus budget projection:
“(T)he U.S. economy
and the federal budget are highly complex and are affected by many economic and
technical factors that are difficult to predict. As a result, actual budgetary
outcomes will almost certainly differ from CBO’s ($5.6 Trillion surplus)
baseline projections.”
“Moreover, projections that are quite
different from the ($5.6 T) baseline also have a significant probability of
coming to pass.”
“Thus, the short-term outlook for the
economy, and hence for the budget, is particularly uncertain when the business
cycle may be approaching a turning point.”
“The longer-term outlook is also unusually
hard to discern at present.”
“Figure 5-1 is intentionally somewhat fuzzy
because the uncertainties are themselves estimates.”
“For example, the figure (5-1) suggests some
probability, albeit small, that the budget might fall into deficit in 2006,
even without policy changes.”
“Since the Deficit Control Act requires CBO
to use those inflation factors and to assume that current policies remain in
place, the baseline projection is not a prediction
of future outcomes.” – Emphasis added
From
these few sentences the CBO believed the USA economy was difficult to predict;
the final outcome would almost certainly differ from the $5.6 trillion surplus
projection; the short-term outlook for the 2001 economy, and hence the $5.6
trillion surplus projection, was uncertain; the longer-term economic outlook
was hard to discern; the uncertainties associated with the projection were
themselves estimates, the budget might return to deficits without any policy
changes from President Bush and the CBO was not making a prediction.
The
above demonstrates the uncertainty of the budget projection, but the following
are explicit statements by the CBO about the future of the USA budget
surpluses.
“The
primary negative risk (to the $5.6 T surplus budget projection) is that the
current (2000) slowdown might turn into a recession. Although forecasters
widely anticipated that economic activity would slow, the deceleration has been
surprisingly rapid. … Although those
developments must be watched carefully, they do not as yet constitute a strong
reason to expect a recession.”
Because
the primary negative risk in January 2001 to the $5.6 trillion projected budget
surplus was the economy going into recession, a risk that became a reality in
March 2001, that single primary negative risk
realization eliminated the possibility of the $5.6 trillion surplus budget
projection becoming a reality, based on the assumptions contained in the 2001
CBO report. The CBO as stated above
concluded there was also a possibility the budget would return to deficits
without any policy changes.
The
CBO included the following statement concerning the budget surplus prospects
for the USA, even with the assumption there was going
to be a $5.6 trillion budget surplus over the next 10 years.
“Over the longer term,
however, budgetary pressures linked to the aging and retirement of the
baby-boom generation threaten to produce record deficits and unsustainable
levels of federal debt.”
Returning
to President Obama’s phrase in his 2010 budget “that
(2000 surplus) was projected to grow still larger over time,” the deception
should now be clear. President Obama is
using a projection and not disclosing any details on the uncertainties
associated with the projected results.
In light of the CBO statement the budgetary pressures associated with
the baby-boom generation retirement threatening to produce unsustainable levels
of federal debt, it is noticeable to me that the President did not include the
time frame over which the surpluses were projected to grow. Because of the ease to deceive with a
projection, President Obama’s statement exemplifies why the Securities Act of
1933 makes it illegal to use a tactic of projection deception in the private
sector.
Senator
Obama also used projection deception tactics during his presidential
campaign. I am specifically referencing
statements he made in North Carolina on June 9, 2008 when he said “George Bush's
policies have taken us from a projected $5.6 trillion dollar surplus at the end
of the Clinton Administration to massive deficits and nearly four trillion
dollars in new debt today.” Senator
Obama made the previous statement and did not include any meaningful cautionary
statements about the use of a projection in his speech. http://www.barackobama.com/2008/06/09/remarks_of_senator_barack_obam_76.php
Why
is a deception that may appear trivial to many actually important? There are numerous reasons. First, it is a known deception tactic that is
effective as evidenced by the need to make it illegal in the private
sector. Second, President Obama used the
deception tactic during the campaign to win the election and thereby become
President. Third, the President is now
using a known tactic of deception to justify his budget. Fourth, many more Democrats are using the
tactic.
The
most interesting points to me in this deception exposure exercise are: 1) when
was the first occurrence and 2) was the first occurrence of the deception,
intentional? Addressing the first
occurrence, I located a Democratic Policy Committee (DPC) opening statement
dated February 7, 2003, approximately two years after the publishing of the CBO
projection. For background, the
expressed purpose of the DPC is to serve “Senate Democrats by developing new
policy proposals, providing research and legislative support, publishing
reports on important legislation and policy issues…” The February 7,
2003 opening statement by Chairman Byron Dorgan (D-ND) included this
statement: "Huge deficits for years to come: Two years ago, the President
inherited a healthy budget surplus, a budget circumstance that predicted a $5.6 Trillion in surpluses over
the next 10 years." - Emphasis added. There
are probably earlier uses of the deception tactic associated with the 2001 CBO
surplus budget projection; however, I found the usage of the word “predicted”
by a committee that explicitly states one of its purposes is “providing
research” to be most interesting. How
much research was performed when the CBO explicitly stated, as
included above, the $5.6 trillion surplus was “not a prediction?” Addressing the second point, I located in the
March 20, 2001 Congressional Record (see “Dorgan March 20, 2001”
tab) the following statements by Senator Dorgan. Less than 23 months prior to Senator Dorgan
saying there was “a budget circumstance that predicted a $5.6 Trillion in surpluses
over the next 10 years,” Senator Dorgan said the following about the same
projection: “The projected 10 year budget surpluses are just that, projections,
and are not at all certain” and “The President's plan assumes we will have
budget surpluses for the next 10 years. I hope that is the case, but with the
current slowdown in our economy, we ought to be cautious. Economic forecasts
are no more reliable than weather forecasts.”
For a single person, especially one in such a powerful position, to make
two clear and unambiguous statements about the uncertainty of a projection and
then 23 months later make a clear and unambiguous statement the same projection
“predicted a $5.6 Trillion in surpluses over the next 10 years” is beyond my
ability to believe to be an innocent oversight.
The
beauty of accounting is that you can prove the existence of deception. The only question is whether the use of a
deception tactic that is illegal in the private sector is either immaterial in
the public sector or a violation of the Code of Ethics for Government Service.
Gregory
R. Brice, CPA
Denver,
CO 80210
References:
DEMOCRATIC
POLICY COMMITTEE HEARING 2-7-2003
Democratic Policy Committee Homepage
Excerpt from
AICPA concerning the potential to mislead with a forecast
Democrat Deception Log
citing specific dates
2010
President Obama Budget
http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy10/pdf/fy10-newera.pdf
Securities
Act of 1933 background:
http://www.wdfi.org/fi/securities/regexemp/history.htm
2001
CBO Budget Projection: http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/27xx/doc2727/entire-report.pdf
I
am: http://www.youtube.com/reportcard2000
http://www.youtube.com/DemocraticDeception
Democrat
Policy Committee Deception