Tbh, Carson shows the same aptitude for government leadership that Sanders does for economics.
This is an interesting push-back that I keep seeing from Conservatives, a bald assertion that Sanders doesn't know anything about economics.
This is totally weird to me. The universal conservative platform at the moment is:
a) we have unacceptable deficit levels
b) we cut taxes now (generally skewed towards the top end to varying degrees)
c) this reduces government revenues
d) ???
e) Economic Growth
No one really has an explanation for d outside of vague allusions to the Laffer curve. The closest we get is Rand Paul who outright says that he would essentially cut all spending (even the popular stuff) down to virtually nothing.
Brief aside: when I watch GOP debates I always find myself at least a little sympathetic to Rand Paul. Everyone else strikes me as spouting bad ideas because they are cynical and believe they will get elected. Rand Paul has bad ideas but I do believe they intellectually all hang together and that he honestly believes them. He is truly unafraid of saying unpopular things and taking positions that are somewhat out of line with conventional GOP thinking. He certainly came off as the adult in the room when everyone was talking about Russia at the most recent debate. I would never vote for Rand, but I like to think if I knew him I'd be his friend. /Brief Aside
On the other hand, Bernie is open about increasing the size of government. I think his total comes down to an additional $18 trillion over ten years spread out across eight programs (despite what I constantly see about "free college," that's only the fourth most expensive plank. The lion's share is the single-payer medicare for all provision).
Bernie also proposes a more than proportionate rise in revenue through $36.8 trillion in projected cost savings and tax increases. Those savings boil down to five categories:
1. "Ending Regressive Health Care": $32 trillion
2. Taxes on latency arbitrage and other stock market volatility measures: $3.5 trillion
3. Closing corporate loopholes regarding storage of wealth overseas: $900 billion
4. Restoring the Estate Tax for the top 0.3%: $319 billion
5. Ending fossil fuel subsidies: $135 billion
We can play with the numbers all we want, but he's actually projecting/proposing revenue increases that are more than double the cost of his proposed expenditures. That appears, on face, to be a viable method of not simply "giving things away" and it doesn't play in the same "I will make the economy grow by X% and that alone will save us" logic.
That said, Bernie's stuff obviously isn't foolproof. Slightly under 90% of the savings side is one item titled "End Regressive Health Care" which is undefined and I'm not certain what ending Regressive Health Care looks like. I think it might be referring to deductions to taxable income from employer sponsored health plans. That's a mixed bag when it comes to what the "cash savings" actually are because it assumes a) that the cost of health care in pre-tax dollars will then be given to workers in post-tax dollars and b) that workers will be sophisticated enough to understand that the increase in taxation is more than offset by increased earnings.
If what actually happens is that you commit to paying for medicare for all and employers respond by simply cutting the benefit without increasing employee pay by the amount previously represented by the benefit then the $32 trillion in increased revenue doesn't materialize. That would actually be on your employer, but Bernie would be pretty easily blamable politically and it doesn't get us out of the hole.
In any event, can anyone break down the exact path to budget neutrality for any of the GOP plans that I can provide for Bernie? Even with the proviso I just mentioned? I really doubt it. I'm not even 100% for Bernie by the way, but I do think he actually means well and isn't a lunatic or a cynic. And those go a long way with me for the same reason that I have sympathy for Rand Paul.