The flexible freeze is just as realistic today as it was in 1978 - perhaps more so.
And today, our calculations show, it would still take about four years for a flexible freeze to eliminate the deficit.
But in today's economy a flexible freeze would not yield meaningful results for at least a year or two.
But for precisely those reasons, the flexible freeze makes sense.
George Bush's "flexible freeze" is less a budget proposal than a political tactic.
Yet his plan for a flexible freeze on spending sounds sensible.
He won with a campaign commitment to use a flexible freeze and no new taxes to narrow the deficit.
Then he said a flexible freeze might be "one part of the solution," but that it probably would not be enough.
The flexible freeze would only cut the deficit a little more rapidly.
The catch is that the "flexible freeze" probably wouldn't work even if Congress were to swallow it whole.