The Bush cuts in tax rates caused the deficit. Some economists argue that Bush Administration policies taken as a whole, including costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, caused much of the borrowing beyond what the U.S. economy can sustain. More often, though, the blame is focused specifically on the cuts in tax rates. Those rate reductions, however, account for only about a fifth of last year’s $1.1 trillion deficit.
Major misconception #1: The nature of "the deficit". TIME readers are apparently too stupid to understand that the deficit is the difference between expenditures and revenues
in each fiscal year. Effective 1 Oct 2009, George W. Bush had
nothing to do with the Federal deficit.
Major misconception #2: "Reducing the deficit" = a surplus. The Federal government will still spend more money than it takes in, expanding the Federal debt.
Major misconception #3: The "fiscal cliff" is something our economy will fall off, like Wile E. Coyote. The so-called "cliff" is a reduction in the rate of spending beyond revenues. It's more like running upstairs two at a time, as opposed to three at a time.
Two words to the Feds: spend less.