I think this article is dead on.

  From the NY Times, free registration required.

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/05/opinion/05KRUG.html?todaysheadlines

Bush's Aggressive Accounting
By PAUL KRUGMAN

Senator Kent Conrad actually got it wrong yesterday when he
criticized the Bush administration's new budget for its Enron-like
accounting. Last year's budget, the one that included that big tax
cut, was the one with a strong touch of Enron
about it. This year's budget involves a different, though equally
pernicious, kind of aggressive accounting.

Enron's illusion of profitability rested largely on "mark to market"
accounting. The company entered into contracts that would yield
profits, if at all, only over a number of years. But Enron jumped
the gun: it treated the capitalized value of those hypothetical
future gains as a current profit, which could then be used to
justify high stock prices, big bonuses for executives, and so on.

And that's more or less what happened in last year's budget. The
Bush administration took a bullish 10-year surplus projection -- a
projection that had a built-in upward bias, and in any case should
have been regarded as no more than a guess -- and treated it as if it
were hard fact. On the basis of those surplus fantasies the
administration -- aided by an audit committee, otherwise known as the
U.S. Congress, that failed to exercise due diligence -- gave itself a
big bonus in the form of a huge tax cut.

A year later the wrongness of the assumptions behind last year's
budget is there for all to see, and in a rational world the
administration would be called to account for misleading the
American public. But instead the Bush administration has turned to
the political equivalent of another increasingly common accounting
trick: the "one-time charge."

According to Investopedia.com, one-time charges are "used to bury
unfavorable expenses or investments that went wrong." That is,
instead of admitting that it has been doing a bad job, management
claims that bad results are caused by extraordinary, unpredictable
events: "We're making lots of money, but we had $1 billion in
special expenses associated with our takeover of XYZ Corporation."
And of course extraordinary events do happen; the trick is to make
the most of them, as a way of evading responsibility. (Some
companies, such as Cisco, have a habit of incurring "one-time
charges" over and over again.)

The events of Sept. 11 shocked and horrified the nation; they also
presented the Bush administration with a golden opportunity to bury
its previous misdeeds. Has more than $4 trillion of projected
surplus suddenly evaporated into thin air? Pay no attention to the
tax cut: it's all because of the war on terrorism.

In short, the administration's strategy is to prevent criticism of
what amounts to a fiscal debacle by wrapping its budget in the flag.
And I mean that literally: the budget report released yesterday came
wrapped in a red, white and blue cover depicting the American flag.

But why am I so cynical? Isn't the war on terrorism a big deal?

The answer is that emotionally, morally, it is indeed a big deal;
but fiscally it's very nearly a rounding error.

It's true that the administration is using the terrorist threat to
justify a huge military buildup. But there are a couple of funny
things about that buildup. First, if we really have to give up
butter in order to pay for all those guns, shouldn't we reconsider
future tax cuts that were conceived in a time of abundance? "Not
over my dead body" isn't really an answer. And it's particularly
hard to take all the grim war talk seriously when the administration
is, at the very same time, proposing an additional $600 billion in
tax cuts.

Second, the military buildup seems to have little to do with the
actual threat, unless you think that Al Qaeda's next move will be a
frontal assault by several heavy armored divisions. We non-defense
experts are a bit puzzled about why an attack by maniacs armed with
box cutters justifies spending $15 billion on 70-ton artillery
pieces, or developing three different advanced fighters (before
Sept. 11 even administration officials suggested that this was too
many). No politician hoping for re- election will dare to say it,
but the administration's new motto seems to be "Leave no defense
contractor behind."

I could go on, but you get the point. The administration insists,
and may even believe, that the war on terror has become a mission.
But as far as the budget goes, it's not a mission; it's an excuse.

-- 
Doug

email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.zo.com/~brighto

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Living for Today"

John Lennon

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