Dick Cheney seems to believe he’s in a position to lecture on the importance of fiscal responsibility.
Vice President Dick Cheney urged Americans Thursday to do a better job of saving and challenged policymakers to strengthen pensions and fix Social Security to help people in their golden years.
“The American dream begins with saving money and that should begin on the very first day of work,” Cheney told a conference here exploring how to encourage people to boost savings and be better prepared for retirement.
Too often, workers are living paycheck to paycheck and are not saving sufficiently, Cheney said. Last year, Americans’ personal savings rate dropped to its lowest point since the Great Depression.
There are a couple of ways to consider this. One is to point out that it’s easy for Cheney to say this; he’s a millionaire. Another is to note that wages since Bush took office haven’t grown in a way that makes it possible for the typical family to save as much as they’d like.
But for me, I like the irony angle. Right around the time the Vice President urged the nation to budget responsibly and plan ahead through savings, Congress heard a slightly different take on national savings from the Bush administration.
Treasury officials told Congress that the government needed to increase the $8.2-trillion national debt by another $781 billion to meet expenses.
“During this administration, America’s debt, that is the total of the deficits, has increased by $3 trillion,” said Sen. Max Baucus of Montana, the top Democrat on the Finance Committee. “That’s a 40% increase in the entire federal debt accrued by our country in its entire history.”
And Dick “deficits don’t matter” Cheney believes he has the credibility to tell Americans they’re not saving enough?