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Thirty
Problems with the “Gang of Six”
Proposal
Posted by Michael Hammond
Wednesday, July 20th
Analyzing
the six-page “Gang of Six”
proposal for rewriting the federal budget is like measuring a bucket of
water
by holding the water in your hands.
Having
said this, it looks like
Coburn, Crapo, and Chambliss got their clocks cleaned.
TAXES
First,
by crafting the tax increases
in the Senate Finance Committee, the Gang of Six proposal allows
Democrats
(plus Olympia Snowe) to determine their parameters. And, incidentally,
Democrats’ notions of how you “stimulate economic growth,” as the plan
requires, are fundamentally different from ours.
Second,
although creating flatter tax
rates might have a “dynamic” impact which stimulates the economy and
produces
more revenue, there is no indication that this “dynamic” impact would
initially
be considered in determining whether the trillion dollars of revenue
increases
had been met, and it also would not be considered under the 1974 Budget
Act.
Third,
therefore, virtually all of the
revenue increases in the proposal will come from massive “loophole
closings”
which will make the private jet issue look tiny in comparison.
Fourth,
using a sunset of the
Alternative Minimum Tax as a bargaining chip is a huge, huge mistake.
EVERYONE
agrees that the AMT can’t be allowed to go into effect. Therefore, by
trading
its abolition as a chit, you’re only unnecessarily offering up another
$1.7
trillion of “loophole closings” which you need to find in order to
offset it.
And this is above and beyond any “loophole closings” necessary to
achieve the
$1 trillion and offset any loss from flattening rates.
Fifth,
the plan adopts the liberal
economic supposition that allowing people to keep their own money is a
“tax
expenditure.”
Sixth,
the plan specifically envisions
curtailment of popular deductions like the mortgage interest deduction
and the
charitable giving deduction.
Seventh,
the plan specifically
mandates the continuation of tax provisions liberals like, such as the
Earned
Income Tax Credit –- which, since it is “refundable” and goes to people
who
don’t pay taxes — is actually a spending program, rather than a tax cut.
DISCRETIONARY
SPENDING CUTS
First,
although the Gang of Six plan
is an improvement over the phony cuts proposed by the Biden group,
about
$260,000,000,000 of the initial discretionary spending cuts would come
from the
military, if it is an across-the-board spending cap, as the drafters
may
envision.
Second,
therefore, at most, only about
$240,000,000,000 in cuts would come from discretionary domestic caps –-
and it
looks like this figure would include cuts through fiscal 2015, or only
about
$60 billion a year.
Third,
this figure could be even lower
if it includes both the reductions in actual spending and the
reductions in
interest due to the reductions in spending –- and even lower yet if it
includes
“chained CPI” and CLASS Act (see below).
Fourth,
some of the spending “cuts”
which are being considered include $60 billion for hiring additional
federal
employees, supposedly to ferret out “waste, fraud, & abuse.” If
there are
many more “cuts” like this, you have blown through the $240 billion
without
really cutting domestic spending.
Fifth,
the proposal to recalculate the
Consumer Price Index (the “chained CPI” proposal) isn’t just a spending
cut, as
it is billed. It’s also a big tax increase, because deductions,
exemptions,
etc., would rise a lot more slowly.
Sixth,
although I am not a fan of
ObamaCare, I think it is a HUGE mistake to repeal its foolish and
unpopular,
but peripheral, aspects piece-by-piece, thereby making it harder to
repeal in
its totality. Therefore, I don’t think they’re doing us a real favor by
repealing the CLASS Act. If any part of this very-out-year program is
being
counted against the $500 billion, then this makes that figure even more
pitiful.
Seventh,
it is constitutionally
impossible to impose a “statutory” cap on discretionary spending in
out-years,
as the proposal envisions. These are illusory.
Eighth,
therefore, the Gang of Six
would have to rely on Gramm-Rudman-type rules changes. I worked under
Gramm-Rudman, and Crapo, Coburn, and Chambliss did not. And I can say
that, in
case of significant spending programs, the budget will be busted by 60
votes.
Ninth,
there are a lot of tricks for
getting around process reform, including, for instance, approving the
unpopular
programs first, and then busting the budget with 60 votes in order to
continue
the popular ones.
Tenth,
therefore, you’re trading $2.7
trillion of tax increases (if you consider the AMT a “given” and even
if you
don’t have to offset rate-flattening) for less than $60 billion a year
in
domestic discretionary cuts -– and they could be phony cuts. That’s $45
of tax
increases for every one dollar of spending cuts.
THE
TEN-YEAR PLAN/ENTITLEMENTS
First,
the thrust of this plan is that
the Democratic committees would come up with roughly $743 billion in
long-term
savings. We saw, with ObamaCare, how easy it is to concoct this
magnitude of
fraudulent “cuts.”
Second,
$500 billion of this amount
(over two-thirds) would come from “fixing” the unfixable “doc fix” and
from
“additional … health savings” –- which would “maintain the essential
health
care services that the poor and elderly rely on.” We went through
exactly this
same fraud scheme from this same committee dealing with these same
issues less
than two years ago. Does anyone think the fraudulent ObamaCare “cuts”
give us
any reason to give Senate Finance another blank check?
Third,
another $145 billion of the
remaining $243 billion (after health “cuts”) would come from defense
and
anti-terrorism, and $11 billion would come from farm subsidies. This
leaves
only $70 billion in “cuts” from the bloated Departments of Health and
Human
Services, Housing and Urban Development, and so forth. And it’s not
even clear
whether there would be any enforcement mechanism to implement these,
given that
they’re not necessarily “entitlement cuts” or “across-the-board cuts”
which
would trigger Budget Committee action (see below).
Fourth,
the proposal mandates that the
Judiciary Committee come up with “an unspecified amount [of cuts]
through
medical malpractice reform.” Anyone who expects Chairman Pat Leahy to
slap the
trial lawyers needs to have his head examined. In a comparable exercise
with
respect to ObamaCare, what we got was funds to study the issue –-
channeled to
the liberal states which had not enacted tort reform.
PROCESS
First,
the Budget Committee is
mandated by the Gang of Six proposal to “ensure Congressional action to
reduce
the deficit if the debt-to-GDP ratio after 2015 has not stabilized.”
But the
mandate does not specify how balance would be achieved, and may well be
a giant
non-filibusterable unamendable tax increase (see below).
Second,
the one thing we know about
the budget process, as it currently operates, is that it was the engine
behind
the passage of ObamaCare and has also been the mechanism for large
numbers of
tax increases, without having any significant impact on reducing
spending.
Third,
the Budget Committee is
mandated by the proposal to review long-term “federal health care
spending.”
Does anyone want to hear more on “health care spending” from the
committee that
gave us the reconciliation instructions on ObamaCare -– and which
assumed
ObamaCare would make premiums go down?
Fourth,
the Budget Committee is
mandated to “achieve program integrity savings of $26 billion in
entitlement
programs to curb fraud, abuse, and other wasteful spending
government-wide.”
This sounds a lot like the $60 billion proposal to “cut waste, fraud,
&
abuse” by hiring a lot more federal employees.
Fifth,
there seems to be a complete
exemption from budget processes for “across the board cuts for those
most in
need.”
Sixth,
there is potentially “expedited
consideration” (i.e., no filibuster) for legislation responding to a
“committee
[that completely] fails to report entitlement program savings” or a
committee
which fails to “impose across the board cuts.” First of all, it’s not
clear
that, with the exception of the health/”doc fix” debacle and the
“waste, fraud,
& abuse” issue, that any committee is required to make either
entitlement
cuts or across-the-board cuts. To the contrary, it appears that
across-the-board cuts affecting poverty programs are outlawed.
Seventh,
but, assuming the Budget
Committee is required to report possibly unfilibusterable, possibly
unamendable
legislation, what limits are there to what can be included in it (e.g.,
tax
increases)?
Eighth
–- and this is where the
filibusterability and amendability come in — McConnell and Reid would
be
authorized to limit debate and amendments in any way they chose.
Conservatives
should be outraged at any proposal which would give McConnell the
ability to
silence Jim DeMint and Rand Paul.
Ninth,
Social Security reform need not
be considered and CANNOT be considered until the larger Reid/McConnell
potentially unfilibusterable and unamendable bill moves. If the Finance
Committee sits on reform, even if larger deficit reduction reaches the
Senate floor,
the ONLY way it can move is if five senators from each party to come up
with a
proposal that solves every Social Security problem for 75 years.
Read
it at Redstate
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