Are we heading for fiscal apocalypse, or just the usual electioneering?
As our elected leaders head into 2012 campaign mode, it's up to us, the public, to remain the calm ones. And that could be tough in the face of deep challenges such as the national debt and our involvement in Libya.
Are these The Last Days? Must we Repent Because the End is Near? Or heed the warning that The Wages of (Fiscal) Sin is Death?
It may seem that way before we get through this calendar year, but we should be OK if we hold on and keep our nerve. We will need to do that because, regrettably, our nominal leaders will be running off the track on a regular basis, and predictions of disaster will be daily media fare.
Here is how I expect it to turn out.
Reducing debt and deficits: This became Topic A after Tea Partiers grabbed public attention and a piece of power last November. They did not do this in a vacuum. They did so because short-term deficits and long-term debt pose a great threat to our financial/economic stability; voters and taxpayers properly want action to reduce them.
The Tea Partiers' strength became particularly apparent last Thursday (April 14), when enough Republican House members voted against the short-term budget deal, negotiated between Speaker John Boehner and President Obama, that Boehner was forced to round up House Democratic votes to gain the bill's passage. Rep. Steny Hoyer, the No. 2 House Democrat, voted for the package himself and helped Boehner get the additional votes he needed. (Hoyer increasingly is displacing the House Minority Leader, Rep. Nancy Pelosi, as the go-to Democrat in that body).
Tea Partiers were particularly inflamed because, the night before, Obama's presentation of his long-term deficit-reduction proposal — to counter that put forward earlier by Rep. Paul Ryan — had been surprisingly sharp-edged and partisan. They saw it more as an Obama campaign-kickoff speech than a sober presentation of an agenda. (Boehner, Ryan, and other mainstream GOP leaders were put off as well; Obama had invited them to his presentation and, then, blasted them publicly in it rather than offering olive branches).
On the other side of the political spectrum, many liberal groups are angry regarding spending and program cuts proposed by Obama. The AFL-CIO Executive Council, which includes presidents of most major unions, reportedly vented against Obama in its Thursday meeting, objecting in particular to spending cuts and to Obama's embrace, after long delay, of a trade deal with Colombia. Liberals also are restive about continuing U.S. commitments in Iraq and Afghanistan and, now, the new one in Libya.
The turbulence associated wtih the last-minute budget deal will seem modest compared to that which will take place within the next 30 days, as the $14-trillion-plus national debt will hit a place where Congress must act to lift the debt limit. Both Democrats and Republicans in the past have voted at various times against lifting the limit. Obama himself did it as a senator. But, this time, there will be no fooling around. Boehner and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell both would like to lift the limit with a minimum of tumult, keeping the action separate from ongoing deficit-reduction debate. But enough of their GOP flock are demanding fresh deficit reduction — on a larger scale than the $38.5 billion in the recent budget deal — that Boehner and McConnell will have to get such concessions as part of the debt-limit lifting or risk mutiny among their troops.
A so-called "government shutdown," threatened before the recent budget deal, would have been brief and without real effect on the U.S. economy or longer-term provision of government services. A failure to lift the debt limit, however, would have international financial repercussions and raise questions of default.
So, the debt limit will be lifted — but only after confrontations far nastier than preceded the recent budget deal.
Then debate will move to the next fiscal year's budget and the competing Ryan and Obama plans for longer-term deficit reduction.
Dueling plans and visions: The two plans both would reduce federal deficits but make only modest dents in long-term debt — depending on the state of the economy over the next decade. As you might expect, the Ryan Plan stresses spending cuts, the Obama plan tax increases (mainly focused on upper-income taxpayers).
Both plans would address Medicare and Medicaid costs. The Ryan Plan would turn Medicaid, which serves the poor, into a block grant program; money would be sent to the states to be spent as each state decided. Ryan would give Medicare seniors a credit to buy private health insurance; Obama would give new powers to a federal commission which would reduce unnecessary Medicare spending while using federal purchasing power to cut prescription-drug costs. Both punt to a degree on Social Security reform. The Ryan Plan would preserve all the Bush tax cuts extended last December. The Obama Plan would end them for upper-income taxpayers.
Both plans constitute opening offers. Neither Obama nor a Democratic Senate will accept the Ryan notions on Medicaid and Medicare. The Medicaid changes almost surely would result in a net loss of assistance for the needy. In some Southern and Mountain states, the cuts would be drastic. Medicare privatization, in any form, remains a bad idea.
By the same token, Obama's formulas for Medicaid and Medicare reform offer little real prospect of cost saving. The Medicare prescription-drug benefit already has proved far less costly than originally estimated. With both these programs, as eventually with Social Security, it will be necessary to change eligibility rules and benefit levels which have expanded steadily since they were enacted in 1965. Republicans will have to concede some new taxes. Obama will need to spare small-business owners who constitute a large share of the "millionaires and billionaires" whose taxes he pledged to raise last week.
If you look at the various categories of taxing and spending, within both plans, you can see where common ground can be found.
I continue to regret that Obama missed a golden opportunity to address these issues — and to avert the necessity of dueling Ryan and Obama Plans — when he did not specify that a simple majority of his 2010 deficit-reduction commission (the Simpson-Bowles Commission) could approve the commission's recommendations, which then could be passed or rejected by one up-or-down Congressional vote on the whole package.
Had he done that, the Congressional vote could already have put these contentious issues to rest and enacted a balanced bipartisan package of deficit-reduction reforms. Instead, Obama specified that a weighted commission majority, rather than a simple majority, would be necessary to endorse the package of proposals. (When several commission members proposed to Obama that they lobby their peers to reach a weighted majority, he told them not to do so.)
Thus Obama, the Congress, and the American people face what will be a year-by-year ordeal to get federal taxes, spending, and debt service into alignment.
Campaigning for 2012: The climate aleady has been made difficult by the begininng of the 2012 Presidential and Congressional campaigns. Since the 2010 electoral returns, no Democratic or Republican candidate for any major office can afford to be identified with expanding deficits or debt. But, to keep their core constituencies in line, Democrats will demonize the rich and characterize Republicans as heartless toward seniors and the poor. Republicans will paint Democrats as reckless spending addicts more interested in expanding government and pursuing social issues than paying attention to ordinary Americans' daily economic concerns.
Obama, as president, has a policy framework on which he must seek a second term. Moderate Republicans, such as former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney or former Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, would as presidential candidates operate in a slightly-right-of-middle context to counter the slightly-left-of-middle persona which Obama will assume next year.
Like what you just read? Support high quality local journalism. Become a member of Crosscut today!










Twitter
Facebook
RSS Feeds
Comments:
Posted Sun, Apr 17, 9:50 a.m. Inappropriate
To put it succinctly, the sky is not falling. Cable news finds it can attract ratings by running scare stories about the deficit, but as you say, more sober thinking is called for.
There is much more than "deficit reduction" going on in these debates, and I am talking about more than just policy riders related to wolves. The Medicaid block grant plan (with less publicity, a similar block grant proposal is made for food stamps) is a radical remaking of social policy, and at its core a rejection of the concept of a federal safety net. The Cato Institute promotes the idea as a step toward entirely devolving Medicaid to the states.
The President is right to state his unqualified opposition to such a scheme, though he hasn't exactly demonstrated himself to be a champion of his party's values so far in the budget debates. He has a bad habit of developing a compromise in his mind--thinking that as a national leader he has a greater sense of the national interest than any of the parochial members of Congress--and presenting it as his opening bid, rushing to compromise further the moment things get controversial.
It's almost comical, though, how both parties dance around the true elephant in the room. In 1942, Senator Harry Truman led a Senate committee to investigate waste and fraud in military spending. Recall that 1942 was a far more dangerous year for national security than any recent time, and Truman was treated as a hero for helping to conserve vital national resources when they were scarce. Anyone observing today's military spending, whether an isolationist, pacifist, neoconservative, or anything else, who believes that the Pentagon spends its budget in the most efficient manner possible ought to have his head examined.
Posted Sun, Apr 17, 11:15 a.m. Inappropriate
Lots of problems as usual with TVD's domestic issues analysis, though I do thank him for stating flatly that Medicare privatization and Medicaid block grants are bad ideas:
1) Where is the evidence that the short-term federal deficit is dangerous? Most mainstream economists say running a sizable deficit is necessary now to stimulate the economy and there's no immediate danger of crowding out private investment or frightening the bond market. McCain advisor Mark Zandi, the International Monetary Fund, and Goldman Sachs all have warned about how cutting spending now could choke off the economic recovery.
2) If Obama's speech seemed sharp-edged, it's mostly because he flatly rejected Paul Ryan's proposed Medicare privatization and Medicaid block granting, just like TVD does. That was the best part of Obama's speech.
3) Obama didn't just stress tax increases, he stressed big spending cuts, too -- 3 dollars in cuts for every dollar of tax increases, compared to all spending cuts under the Ryan plan.
4) The CBO contradicts TVD. Its analysis of the health reform law shows that the mechanisms of the law will cut Medicare costs and reduce the deficit by more than $100 billion over the next 10 years and by hundreds of billions more over the next 20 years.
5) Contrary to what TVD says is the need to change SS and Medicare eligibility, raising the cap on taxable income for the Social Security payroll tax would solve most of the long-term SS shortfall, without any damaging increase in the SS eligibility age. And a Kaiser Family Foundation analysis shows raising the Medicare age would just shift costs from the federal government to everyone else, including private employers.
5) Studies have shown that a tiny percentage of small business owners earn enough to fall under the higher marginal tax rates proposed by Obama, and most of those "owners" are doctors and lawyers.
6) Much of the deficit reduction ginned up by the Simpson-Bowles commission came from magically holding Medicare costs to 1% over the consumer price index, the so-called magic asterisk. They provided no prescription for how to achieve that miraculous outcome.
7) TVD disapprovingly says Dems will portray Republicans as heartless toward seniors and the poor. But he himself characterizes the House GOP budget as exactly that.
Lots of loose factual and analytic statements, as per usual.
Posted Sun, Apr 17, 5:07 p.m. Inappropriate
Two things could fix the debt problem:
1) let the Bush tax cuts expire. (Easy congress does nothing, which is what they do best)
2) Expand Medicare to cover everybody, thus reducing the health care costs of running Medicare for only the old and the really sick. ie, bring the currently healthy into the payment plans and thus go from paying 14% to 7% of GDP on medical expenses merely by tossing the private health insurance industry.
No the sky isn't falling. But if you are one of the 400 wealthiest individuals who control over 50% of the countries wealth, it's time for your taxes to rise.
Posted Mon, Apr 18, 8:56 a.m. Inappropriate
If anyone would like a clear graph of why we are heading for the abyss, just look at this graph.
http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?get_gallerynr=962
This shows that the GDP has been rising only because of borrowing by the Fed. That's not sustainable. The "real" GDP, is negative because we are directing so much cash to serving the past debt.
and
http://market-ticker.org/akcs-www?get_gallerynr=1465
This second graph shows that the problem began about the time of President Regan, who lowered taxes and increased spending. As you can see the growth is going to kill the economy.
Whether the world is going to give us a pass to get our house in order over the next 30 years is doubtful. Much of the world has had enough of our greedy ways, and our wars.
Posted Mon, Apr 18, 10:39 a.m. Inappropriate
S&P; just issued a fiscal credit warning - heed it at your risk. If we lose AAA rating, interest payments will explode!
Progressives of both parties created the problem. Now its up to adults to fix it.
Posted Mon, Apr 18, 12:47 p.m. Inappropriate
Progressives didn't invade Iraq, deregulate the banks, pass tax cuts for the rich. Those were conservative initiatives. If you are going to point fingers at groups for our troubles, at least give the right groups the blame.
Login or register to add your voice to the conversation.