| The Deficit and the Public Interest |
| List of Acronyms and Abbreviations |
| Preface The Era of the Budget |
| Acknowledgments |
| One Madisonian Budgeting, or Why the Process is so Complicated |
| • | Types of Budget Commitments |
| • | A Madisonian Budget System |
| • | The Executive Budget |
| • | Appropriations: The Old Congressional Budget Process |
| • | Creating a New Budget Process |
| • | The Budget Act of 1974 |
| • | How the New Process Worked |
| • | Coda: A Budget Is Many Things and One of Them Is a Performance |
| Two Democrats in a Budget Trap |
| • | The Budgeting Dilemma |
| • | The Politics of Recession |
| • | The Economics of Recession |
| Economists and Budgets |
| • | The Keynesian Orthodoxy |
| • | The Supply-Side Challenge |
| • | Money and Monetarism |
| • | The Neoclassicists |
| • | Economists and the Economy |
| • | Bonds and the Budget |
| Three "The Worst of All Worlds" |
| • | Defense Spending |
| • | The House Divided |
| • | The Senate United Means the Congress Divided |
| • | A Procedural Revolution |
| • | More Economic Pressures |
| • | From Bad to Worse |
| • | The Election, the Economy, and a Fragmented Budget |
| • | Lame Ducks |
| • | There They Go Again |
| Four Preparing for the Reagan Revolution |
| Not a Mandate But an Opportunity |
| • | Ideology and Reaganism |
| The President and His Advisers |
| • | Round One, the Campaign |
| • | Making Policy |
| • | Stockman |
| Tactical Considerations |
| • | The Democrats |
| Five The President's Program |
| • | Reagan's Attack Takes Shape |
| • | Who's on First? Taxing or Spending? |
| • | The Rosy Scenario |
| • | Contemplating Cuts |
| • | "Fairness" |
| • | The Defense Buildup |
| • | Stockman Proposes and Reagan Disposes: The President's Program |
| Six Gramm-Latta 1 |
| • | A Pause for Public Opinion |
| • | The Republicans: Some Victories, Some Doubts |
| • | Republicans Shot Down |
| Moths, Weevils, and the Unexpected |
| • | Numbers and Priorities |
| • | Social Security |
| Seven Party Responsibility Comes to Congress |
| • | The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1981 (OBRA, aka Gramm-Latta 2) |
| • | Conciliatory Name, Hostile Process |
| Eight Starving the Public Sector: The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 |
| • | The Die Is Cast: June 3–9, 1981 |
| • | The Democrats Respond |
| • | Senate Finance Moves |
| • | The Bidding War |
| • | Christmas in July |
| • | Mobilizing the Public |
| • | Meanings |
| Nine Return of the Deficit |
| • | The Markets Say No |
| • | Stockman versus Weinberger |
| • | Reagan Loses Control |
| • | Bye, Bye, Balanced Budget |
| • | Into the Heart of Budget Darkness |
| Ten A Government Divided |
| • | The Initiative Shifts toward Senate Republicans |
| • | Lots of Attitudes Mean Little Latitude |
| • | Groupings |
| • | Farmers |
| • | The Party of Responsibility |
| Eleven Fake Budgets and a Real Tax Hike |
| • | A Stillborn Budget |
| • | The President Retreats |
| • | Musical Chairs |
| • | The Gang of 17 |
| • | Passing a Budget: The Senate |
| • | Passing a Budget: The House |
| • | The Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA) |
| Twelve Economics as Moral Theory: Volckernomics, Reaganomics, and the Balanced Budget Amendment |
| • | The Stock Market |
| • | The Federal Reserve and the Banks |
| • | Volckernomics |
| • | Reaganomics as a Moral Economy |
| • | Should Spending Be Limited by Constitutional Amendment? |
| Thirteen Guerrilla Warfare: Spending Politics, 1982 |
| • | Supplemental Appropriations |
| • | Getting Through the Election |
| • | The Election of 1982 |
| • | A Lame Duck Takes Wing, Sputtering |
| • | Back to the Senate |
| • | The 97th Congress |
| Fourteen A Triumph of Governance: Social Security |
| Fifteen Causes and Consequences of the Deficit |
| • | The Deficit Dilemma |
| • | The Economy and the Deficit |
| • | "Consequences" of the Deficit |
| Sixteen The Budget Process Collapses |
| • | Reagan Hangs Tough |
| • | Another Dead Budget |
| • | An Interlude of Normal Politics |
| • | The First (and Last) Resolution or, Wanted: a Budget, Dead or Alive |
| • | Packages and Formulas |
| • | Failure in the House |
| • | No Go in the Senate |
| Seventeen Budgeting Without Rules |
| • | The Three-Ring Circus |
| • | A (White) House Divided: Reagan |
| • | A Down Payment |
| • | To the Rose Garden |
| • | A Thicket of Thorns |
| • | Who Wants a Budget? |
| • | Passing DEFRA |
| • | Life Without a Budget |
| Eighteen The Deficit in Public and Elite Opinion |
| • | Democrats and the Deficit |
| • | In Search of a Program |
| • | The Deficit and the Election |
| • | The Deficit and Elite Opinion |
| Nineteen Gramm-Rudman-Hollings, or the Institutionalization of Stalemate |
| • | Politicians under Pressure |
| • | The Road to Gramm-Rudman-Hollings |
| Haven't I Met You Before? |
| • | Budget Diary, Part 1 |
| • | A Bad Idea Whose Time Has Come |
| • | Gramm in Congress |
| How the Balanced Budget and Deficit Reduction Act of 1985 (GRH) Was Supposed to Work |
| • | The Deficit Reduction Timetable |
| • | The Importance of Considering Others |
| Doing the Same and Feeling Worse |
| • | Budget Diary, Part 2 |
| Twenty Counterpoint: The Improbable Triumph of Tax Reform |
| • | Preferences as Policy |
| • | The Origins of Tax Reform |
| • | The Politicians Try Tax Reform |
| • | Rostenkowski Delivers |
| • | Packwood's Conversion |
| • | Life and Death |
| • | An Integrative Solution |
| • | Who Wins and Who Loses: Tax Preferences |
| • | Spending and Tax Reform: Two Radical Changes Compared |
| Twenty-One Budgeting with Gramm-Rudman-Hollings, or "Help Me Make It Through the Night" |
| • | The Supreme Court and the Separation of Powers: The Comptroller General's Role in Sequestration Ruled Unconstitutional |
| • | Congress Copes with the Court Decision |
| • | Rigging the Numbers |
| • | The Continuing, Continuing Resolution |
| • | What Hath Gramm-Rudman Wrought? |
| • | Black Monday |
| • | Confronting Budget Reality |
| Twenty-Two The Deficit and the Public Interest |
| • | Who Rules? |
| • | Capitalism, Democracy, and the Budget |
| • | The Dis-United State |
| • | The Congressional State |
| • | The Political Stratum |
| • | The Public Sphere |
| • | The State as a State of Mind |
| • | Pluralism and the Dilemma of Public Authority |
| • | Every Government Would Bribe Business to Bring Prosperity, If Only It Knew How |
| • | Interest Group Liberalism |
| • | Public Interests |
| • | An Immune System out of Control |
| Twenty-Three Nobody's Darling, but No One's Disaster Either: A Moderate Proposal on the Deficit |
| • | The Two Elderly Irishmen and Other Misleading Explanations |
| • | Sliding By |
| • | What Would We Do? |
| • | Redefining the Deficit |
| • | Transforming a Futile Budget Politics |
| Postscript: The Budget Truce of 1990 |
| • | A Five-Year Budget Package |
| • | Getting There |
| • | What Does It Mean? |
| Notes |
| • | One Madisonian Budgeting, or Why the Process is so Complicated |
| • | Two Democrats in a Budget Trap |
| • | Three "The Worst of All Worlds" |
| • | Four Preparing for the Reagan Revolution |
| • | Five The President's Program |
| • | Six Gramm-Latta 1 |
| • | Seven Party Responsibility Comes to Congress |
| • | Eight Starving the Public Sector: The Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 |
| • | Nine Return of the Deficit |
| • | Ten A Government Divided |
| • | Eleven Fake Budgets and a Real Tax Hike |
| • | Twelve Economics as Moral Theory: Volckernomics, Reaganomics, and the Balanced Budget Amendment |
| • | Thirteen Guerrilla Warfare: Spending Politics, 1982 |
| • | Fourteen A Triumph of Governance: Social Security |
| • | Fifteen Causes and Consequences of the Deficit |
| • | Sixteen The Budget Process Collapses |
| • | Seventeen Budgeting Without Rules |
| • | Eighteen The Deficit in Public and Elite Opinion |
| • | Nineteen Gramm-Rudman-Hollings, or the Institutionalization of Stalemate |
| • | Twenty Counterpoint: The Improbable Triumph of Tax Reform |
| • | Twenty-One Budgeting with Gramm-Rudman-Hollings, or "Help Me Make It Through the Night" |
| • | Twenty-Two The Deficit and the Public Interest |
| • | Twenty-Three Nobody's Darling, but No One's Disaster Either: A Moderate Proposal on the Deficit |
| • | Postscript: The Budget Truce of 1990 |
| Index |
| • | A |
| • | B |
| • | C |
| • | D |
| • | E |
| • | F |
| • | G |
| • | H |
| • | I |
| • | J |
| • | K |
| • | L |
| • | M |
| • | N |
| • | O |
| • | P |
| • | Q |
| • | R |
| • | S |
| • | T |
| • | U |
| • | V |
| • | W |
| • | Y |
| • | Z |