Then there are pretend budgets. The most egregious
example may be the “Penny Plan” introduced in 2011 by Rep. Connie Mack (R-FL),
which now has more than 70 co-sponsors, including Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY), and is
not really a budget at all. It contains the numbers but not the choices. Worse,
it attempts to conceal from the public the kind of pain it would endure,
particularly in states such as the one Rep. Mack represents, Florida.
Rep. Mack cuts federal spending by 1 percent each
year until it is down to 18 percent of gross domestic product by 2018. He then
keeps it at that level for the indefinite future. That sounds so easy that one
might ask, “Why doesn’t he cut federal spending to 10 percent of GDP, which
would allow us to cut federal taxes by one-third and still have a balanced
budget?” The obvious answer is that we rely too heavily on an array of federal
services to tolerate such a reduction. The same is true of Rep. Mack’s 18
percent.
Let me explain. The Congressional Budget Office
projects that federal spending will total 22.5 percent of GDP 10 years from
now, in 2022. That means that Rep. Mack’s plan would require a 4.4 percent of
GDP cut, which, based on the Congressional Budget Office’s economic
projections, would mean $1.1 trillion or about 20 percent less in federal
spending than the Congressional Budget Office is forecasting we will have under
current policy. Where would that money come from?
Already built into Congressional Budget Office
assumptions is essentially a freeze in all government programs other than
Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and the other entitlements. That means
that the 15 major executive departments and all of the independent agencies
will be spending about 20 percent less after adjusting for inflation and
population growth than they are spending now. As a result, we are already
facing significant cutbacks in government services, ranging from food safety to
law enforcement, air traffic control and national defense—cutbacks on a scale
that I personally don’t think we as a country will ultimately accept.
But let’s assume for the sake of argument that we do
accept them. What further cuts will Rep. Mack’s budget plan require?
Congressional Budget Office projections break down the 22.4 percent of GDP in
the projected 2022 budget as follows: A total of 5.6 percent will go to
discretionary programs; 14.3 percent will go to entitlement programs such as
Social Security and Medicare; and 2.5 percent will go to interest on the debt.
Rep. Mack advocates extending the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts by former President
George W. Bush, so interest on the debt will be just as high under his plan
even with his proposed spending cuts. That means that the 4.4 percent of GDP
that he plans to take out of the federal budget will come either from
discretionary programs or entitlements.
Making cuts of this magnitude in discretionary
programs would be highly problematic for a number of reasons. First, since
there will only be 5.6 percent left in those programs in 2022 (down from 8.4
percent this year) based on Congressional Budget Office projections, taking
Rep. Mack’s 4.4 percent of GDP from those programs would mean an 80 percent cut
in program levels beyond the real per-capita cuts forced by a 10-year freeze.
Further, the majority of that 5.6 percent is defense spending. Does Rep. Mack
really expect to eliminate 8 of the 10 active divisions in the Army or 225 of
the 281 ships in the Navy?
The non-defense side of discretionary spending
simply isn’t big enough to permit such a cut. If the FBI, the federal
judiciary, the Federal Aviation Administration, NASA, the veterans medical
program, the State Department, Customs and Border Patrol, the National Parks,
cancer research, aid to local schools, and every other activity of every other
department and independent agency of the government outside of defense was
eliminated, you would only cut about 2.6 percent of GDP. You would still have
to find another 1.8 percent elsewhere to get to the 4.4 percent needed in Rep.
Mack’s plan.
That is why budget experts in both parties and of
all philosophical persuasions recognize that holding government spending at a
level even close to 18 percent will require huge reductions in entitlement spending
and namely in programs for the elderly. Social Security and Medicare alone
account for more than two-thirds of all entitlement spending. Medicaid may be
thought of as a low-income program, but it is the principal payer of nursing
home services for patients who have exhausted their personal assets—the
situation in which most nursing home residents find themselves after a year or
more as patients. In 2011 the elderly and disabled accounted for two-thirds of
Medicaid payments, and when Medicaid is added to Social Security and Medicare,
you have 85 percent of all entitlement spending.
There are lots of ways you can cut these programs.
You can raise Medicare deductibles. You can give annual cost-of-living
adjustments that are 1 percent or more below the actual increase in the cost of
living. You can limit the drugs, procedures, and tests covered under Medicare.
You could require immediate family members to contribute to the cost of nursing
home care. The list is almost endless, but nearly all of these changes will
have a big impact on the lives of millions—perhaps tens of millions—of real
people. That is not to say that with a looming debt crisis, they should not be
weighed against other options for restoring fiscal well-being. But if they are
going to be on the table, we should know that they are on the table.
The so-called Penny Plan introduced by Rep. Mack is
not a budget at all but simply a clever rhetorical gimmick to force such cuts
while pretending to make only modest adjustments.
If we are going to resolve the current budget
impasse and restore our nation’s fiscal balance, politicians need to level with
the American people and explain the choices—and what they could potentially
mean—to people. The Mack “Penny Plan” does just the opposite. It pretends that
the budget problem can be solved easily and obscures the pain under a shroud of
a simplistic and misleading mathematical formula.
About the author: Scott Lilly is a Senior Fellow at
the Center for American Progress.
This article was published by the Center for
American Progress.
No comments:
Post a Comment