Mail
Magazine 24
House
vs. Senate Budget: What a
Balanced Budget Looks Like
by Romina Boccia
This
week, the budget committees of
both chambers of Congress released their budgets ahead of President
Obama’s
budget—marking the first time in 92 years that Congress kicked off the
budget
process instead of the President.
The
House budget, under the helm of
Chairman Paul Ryan (R–WI), delivers a balanced budget in 10 years by
slowing
the annual growth in federal spending from a projected 5 percent to 3.4
percent. The budget focuses on reducing spending by addressing the
government’s
health care cost problem with reforms to Medicare and Medicaid and,
importantly, repeal of Obamacare. According to Heritage economic policy
director Alison Fraser:
Ryan
continues to be a strong
leader [on entitlements], tackling Medicare’s abject failures head on.
His
signature solution of a premium support model for Medicare is the
hallmark of
his budget. Moving to a patient-centered model would free retirees from
relying
on the unstable and unsustainable government-run Medicare program and
restrain
costs through the competition rather than price-fixing. The sooner this
transition is made, the better.
The
Ryan budget’s main weaknesses
are a lack of Social Security reforms—the biggest federal spending
program—and
maintaining Obama’s tax hikes.
The
Senate budget, under the helm
of Senate Budget Chairwoman Patty Murray (D–WA), makes no attempt at
balancing
the budget—ever. Instead, the Senate budget would ramp up spending
immediately
and raise taxes yet higher while continuing chronic deficits that rise
higher
in later years. The Senate budget would leave the nation even worse off
beyond
the 10-year budget window by failing to curb the growth in entitlement
spending.
Medicare
is the fastest-growing
entitlement program, and Obamacare’s newest entitlements—the Medicaid
expansion
and health care subsidies—dramatically worsen federal health care
spending,
increasing it by now $1.8 trillion over a decade. And yet the Senate
budget
does nothing to correct course.
Both
the House and Senate budgets
have their weaknesses. However, the House budget would shrink deficits
quickly
and then eliminate deficits completely by balancing the budget in 10
years.
Despite its shortcomings, the House budget undertakes important
entitlement
reforms in Medicare and Medicaid and rolls back other spending. The
Senate
budget, on the other hand, would spend more and tax more and still
would not
come even close to balancing the budget.
The
Senate’s failure in addressing
the growth in entitlement spending means U.S. spending and debt would
continue
growing and threaten a debt crisis in the future that would make all
Americans
worse off—especially the poor and the middle class.
Neither
budget comes close to
proposing as comprehensive a plan as The Heritage Foundation does in
Saving the
American Dream, but the House budget certainly moves much closer in the
right
direction.
Source:
blog.heritage.org
Read
the article and see the charts at Mail Magazine
24
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