One attention-grabbing quote in Zinsmeister is
The unmistakable current in the U.S. over the last generation has been to reduce centralism and the size of government: When Ronald Reagan swept onto the scene in the early 1980s, U.S. federal spending was 24 percent of Gross Domestic Product. Today it is 19 percent. That is only half or two thirds the level in most E.U. states, where levels have been rising, not falling.
This is a nonsense comparison, since Zinsmeister is comparing Federal spending in the US with total spending in Europe. As CalPundit observes, government spending has been a fairly constant proportion of GDP in the US over the past thirty years – the same is true of most European countries. Of course the proportion in EU countries is higher, but that has been true for a long time, during which European countries have generally grown faster than the US
Interestingly, Calpundit prepared his graph to argue against the claim that “US federal spending is growing out of control”. How many of the people who accepted Zinsmeister’s dubious statistics without question in the context of a piece of US triumphalism would equally unthinkingly accept statistics showing uncontrolled spending growth in the context of domestic advocacy of a small government agenda? Not of course, that this kind of thing is peculiar to any given political viewpoint – there is ample supply of implausible and mutually inconsistent factoids routinely quoted by leftists. But I’ve noted before that purveyors of US triumphalism are increasingly losing contact with reality.
Update Responding to Calpundit, Mindles* Dreck (these American bloggers and their self-deprecating humour!) makes a number of variants on the point that the impact of government on the economy is not simply the ratio of public expenditure to GDP. Many of the apparent differences between the US and Europe reflect a US preference for quasi-private, but government-backed or government-guaranteed institutions to perform functions that would be undertaken directly by government elsewhere. Statistics should always be treated with care, but of course if you don’t get the statistics right in the first place, all the care in the world won’t help you.