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Managing a national debt addiction

While congressional negotiators build a federal budget for 2009, a group of bipartisan budget experts are launching a campaign to wean the government off what they call a debt addiction. John Dimsdale reports.

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Renita Jablonski: In Washington today, House and Senate negotiators will try to sketch out a federal budget for 2009. At the same time, across town, a group of bipartisan budget experts will launch a campaign to wean the government from what they say is a debt addiction. John Dimsdale reports.


John Dimsdale: Ever spend money you haven’t got? The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget says the government does it all the time. Today, the nonprofit group issues a 12-step program to help politicians deal with their addiction to spending money the government doesn’t have.

Maya MacGuineas is the group’s president. She says politicians are to blame for deepening deficits — but they aren’t the only ones.

Maya MacGuineas: We also have to ask voters to pay attention to these issues and not be kind of hoodwinked that you can have it all. Nobody really believes that we can have big tax cuts, new spending initiatives, and somehow we’re not going to have to pay the price sooner or later.

The bipartisan committee’s political stars include former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and former Fed Chief Paul Volcker. They’re asking the presidential candidates to make “living within our means” a priority. That includes fixing Social Security and health care, paying for any new spending, and using honest numbers.

In Washington, I’m John Dimsdale for Marketplace.

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