By Brian M. Carney
Wall Street Journal
March 5, 2011
London             
In his best-selling history of the  20th century, "Modern Times," British historian Paul Johnson describes  "a significant turning-point in American history: the first time the  Great Republic, the richest nation on earth, came up against the limits  of its financial resources." Until the 1960s, he writes in a chapter  titled "America's Suicide Attempt," "public finance was run in all  essentials on conventional lines"—that is to say, with budgets more or  less in balance outside of exceptional circumstances.
"The big change in principle came under  Kennedy," Mr. Johnson writes. "In the autumn of 1962 the Administration  committed itself to a new and radical principle of creating budgetary  deficits even when there was no economic emergency." Removing this  constraint on government spending allowed Kennedy to introduce "a new  concept of 'big government': the 'problem-eliminator.' Every area of  human misery could be classified as a 'problem'; then the Federal  government could be armed to 'eliminate' it."

 
 
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