Hospitals & Asylums
Public Health Documents (PHD)
4
December 2004, January2005,
February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January 2006, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January 2007, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January2008, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January 2009, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December, January 2010, February, March
Federal Budget in
Balance FY 2011: Comparison of Bush and Obama HA-28-2-10
The agency financial reports have
been reviewed and the budget deficit can be reigned in to an acceptable 2.8% of
GDP in FY 2011 and 1.1% of GDP in FY 2012 but the rights to this Statement must
be purchased for the reasonable fee of $1,000 that can be recouped selling $100
cognizance bonds to the agencies. The
$1.4, $1.5 and $1.2 trillion budget deficits of FY 2009-2011 are the largest on
record in numerical value and second largest as a percentage of GDP after WWII,
not including the costs of the Confederacy during the Civil War. Tabulating
the entire cost of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act in FY 2009 did
increase the FY 2009 deficit from $1.4 trillion to $1.6 trillion, 9.8% of GDP
to 11.3% of GDP, even higher than the President dared to go, but it did account
for the debt that had already been financed and enabled the federal government
to make a Recovery from not one but two massively subversive bailout fail outs,
the actual cost of FY 2009, never to be born again. With Recovery Act capital to soften
hardship agencies enjoy financial stability under reasonable 1-5% growth rates
using 2008 as a base year. Many agencies
did this themselves, other like OPM with no FY 2011
budget, has been over-reported by OMB for years, the Department of Labor has
been over-reported during this crisis, not to begrudge much needed unemployment
benefits, others like SSA and DHS are limited to OMB appropriation levels. DOE needs to pay for the Low Income Energy
Program to control energy prices. The entire column Defense – Civil is a
duplicate of VA benefits. Congress is
punished with 2007 levels of revenue until they produce a deficit less than 3%
of GDP. The social health insurance
agenda is censured until its cost would not cause more than a 3% deficit, FY
2012, NHI is okay. HHS spending growth
is limited to an annual 2.5% from 2008 and health industry inflation limited to
3% by law. The Judiciary and Justice are
punished with 1% levels of growth. The
$200 billion annual DoD
lending estimate is forfeit to the General Fund and the OCO is terminated at
the end of FY 2011 for a DoD budget of $400 billion,
world peace and a $214 billion deficit, 1.2% of the GDP, in FY 2012. An estimated $200 billion TARP proceeds shall
be returned in the beginning of FY 2011 when a disciplined administration could
enjoy a $427 billion deficit, 2.8% of GDP, not quite enough for social health
insurance, but much better off than the year on the books with a $1.067
trillion deficit, 6.9% of GDP despite $200 billion in TARP funds. In other words, this document can liberate
the United States to enjoy the entire second half of the President’s first term
in prosperity - the ideal of a balanced budget and world peace.
Quarterly
Hospitals & Asylums has been published equinox & solstice since 2001 and monthly since the website in December 2004. Random articles published by Associated Content. Quarterly publications follow,
Vol. 9, Is. 4, Vol. 9 Is. 3, Vol. 9 Is. 2, Vol.9 Is 1, Vol. 8 Is. 4, Vol. 8 Ia. 3, Vol. 8 Is. 2, Vol. 8 Is. 1, Vol. 7 Is. 4, Vol. 7 Is. 3, Vol. 7 Is. 2, Vol. 7 Is. 1, Vol. 6 Is. 4, Vol. 6 Is. 3, Vol. 6 Is. 2, Vol. 6 Is. 1, Vol. 5 Is. 4, Vol. 5 Is. 3, Vol. 5 Is. 2, Vol. 5 Is. 1, Vol. 4 Is. 4, Vol. 4 Is. 3, Vol. 4 Is. 2, Vol. 4 Is. 1, Vol. 3 Is. 4, Vol. 3 Is. 2, Vol. 3 Is. 1, Vol. 2 Is. 4, Vol.. 2 Is. 1
Send Hospitals & Asylums stories to Tony J. Sanders at sanderstony@live.com