@Aargh:, after all Khan's misdirection, thanks for at least trying to address my comments specifically.
Am I right that Brownback had no control over the 2011 budget? Did he have as much control over 2012 as more recent years? Was 2012 partially set and he only had partial control? Am I totally wrong about all of this and there is something I'm missing? I'd love to know more if anyone else does.
With that said, assuming he had no say in 2011 and full say starting in 2012, sure, 2012 was a big jump. Very true. However, 2011 to 2015 was a change from $5.88 bil to $5.97 bil. If the criticism is that he overspent in 2012, then the tag along must be that he has significantly corrected and spending has barely risen in total. 5.88 to 5.97 is less than 1/2% growth per year for the 4 years as a whole. Once again, if someone has better numbers, please do tell. I'm simply working with what I found so far.
Correct. Based on these numbers, the cuts don't fully eliminate all of the increases of 2012. However, they do clearly result in a very reduced rate of growth over 4 years. 1/2% per year is tiny, relatively speaking. Overall, yes, spending has not been cut, merely the rate of growth slowed. In individual areas, actual cuts have occurred, and I have yet to hear of any area that Brownback has increased the rate of growth. The combination of cuts in some areas with very small growth overall is extremely rare in American politics today. Brownback may be doing it in the worst ways possible (that's a much tougher debate to settle), but just the mere fact he is doing it at all is intriguing.
Am I right that Brownback had no control over the 2011 budget? Did he have as much control over 2012 as more recent years? Was 2012 partially set and he only had partial control? Am I totally wrong about all of this and there is something I'm missing? I'd love to know more if anyone else does.
With that said, assuming he had no say in 2011 and full say starting in 2012, sure, 2012 was a big jump. Very true. However, 2011 to 2015 was a change from $5.88 bil to $5.97 bil. If the criticism is that he overspent in 2012, then the tag along must be that he has significantly corrected and spending has barely risen in total. 5.88 to 5.97 is less than 1/2% growth per year for the 4 years as a whole. Once again, if someone has better numbers, please do tell. I'm simply working with what I found so far.
Originally posted by Aargh
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