Congress (might) pass a debt deal
this week that would raise the debt ceiling into 2013 and reduce
government spending by $2.5 trillion. After all the debate over who
would be affected—or not—what does the final policy scoreboard say?
In short, it’s a rout of the lower and middle classes by the
wealthiest Americans. Since the deal relies entirely on spending cuts
with no revenues—don’t believe the White House spin
that revenues are possible, because that would require Republicans to
suddenly desire them—the wealthy escape any sacrifice since very few of
them rely on the government services that will be cut.
Rather, as Brookings Institution senior fellow William G. Gale writes ,
“low- and middle-class households have seen stagnating or declining
earnings over the past few decades, and they have been hit hard in the
Great Recession by the housing market collapse and the job market
collapse. Now, they are being asked to shoulder—via spending
reductions—all of the fiscal reduction agreed to so far.” (Yes, that Brookings Institution).
How specific cuts will be determined, and who exactly is affected, is
still hard to know. The deal truly “kicks the can down the road,” in
the overused Washington parlance. The $917 billion in “immediate” cuts
are not really immediate, nor enumerated. Federal spending will operate
under caps over the next ten years equal to $917 billion less than what
was projected, but the exact areas of reduction are unknown and
obviously depend quite a bit on political outcomes. The caps are
relatively modest
until 2013, and a Republican Congress with a budget proposal from
President Rick Perry would make much a different decision about where to
cut than would Obama, Pelosi and Reid.
Then, $1.5 trillion in additional cuts will be determined by a
so-called super committee of 6 Democrats and 6 Republicans. Entitlement
programs like Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security are subject to
“across-the-board” cuts here, and if no agreement is reached by Nov. 23,
a “trigger” will be pulled, with the gun aimed squarely at senior
citizens and the Pentagon.
So there are a lot of permutations for these cuts—but make no mistake
about who is exposed, and who isn’t. Cuts are guaranteed, revenue is
not. Here’s a quick rundown of the larger bill :
Who is exposed:
Veterans: Almost half of the first round of cuts will come from “security spending,” which includes
the Pentagon budget but also the Department of Homeland Security, the
State Department, and notably veterans benefits and compensation. The
White House assured veterans they won’t be harmed if the trigger is pulled, but did not assure them they are safe from any of the preceding cuts. More than 2.2 million veterans have served in Iraq and Afghanistan since Sept. 11, 2001, many of whom have been seriously injured and require extensive care. The Disabled Veterans of America already has said it is “anxious” to see how these spending cuts are assembled.
Students: Graduate students would be the hardest hit, as the
bill proposes an elimination of the interest subsidy on federal student
loans for “almost all ”
of them. This means that beginning July 1, 2012, grad students will be
responsible for the interest on their loans while in school and during
any subsequent deferment period. Also, while the federal government
currently offers subsidies for on-time payments in order to promote
responsible pay-backs, they will be eliminated under the debt ceiling
deal. Also, education accounts for the largest share
of non-defense discretionary spending. It’s nearly inconceivable that
budget-cutters won’t target that juicy budget line in making their cuts.
Seniors: As noted, Medicare is subject to across-the-board
cuts in the super-committee, and if the trigger is pulled, provider
payments will be slashed—though only up to 2 percent. The makeup of the
super-committee and outside-the-Beltway campaigns to protect Medicare
will determine a lot about the degree of cuts, but remember that inside
the Beltway, the “left” side of the debate has been defined by President
Obama and the Gang of Six as raising the eligibility age to 67 and/or $500 billion in cuts. So this probably won’t end well.
The poor: Again, Medicaid will be subject to cuts by the super-committee. The Republican position, articulated
in the Ryan budget, is a devastating 35 percent reduction in the next
ten years, even as health costs rise. (However, Medicaid is protected
from any cuts if the trigger should go off). Beyond that, federal
housing assistance is the fourth largest slice of non-defense
discretionary spending and is thus a likely target for cuts.
The unemployed: Unlike what happened during the December
showdown over the Bush tax cuts, the White House was unable (or
unwilling) to secure any extension of help for the jobless. That
December extension will expire at the end of this year, and this was one of the last best shots to make sure that 3.8 million people won’t lose their benefits at that point.
Who’s protected:
The wealthy: Up until very recently, Obama and most Democrats
were demanding that wealthy Americans pony up for some deficit
reduction. The demands were admittedly narrow, and focused on itemized
deductions on people who owned private jets or multiple homes—but both
groups are exempted from sacrifice under the current deal. The
super-committee could theoretically approve tax increases, including
ending those loopholes, but House Speaker John Boehner has already sworn
that won’t happen, and it’s tough not to believe that. If the
Republicans on the committee refuse to back down on revenues—as they
have in every recent negotiation—Democrats on the committee will be
facing Medicare-slashing trigger unless they acquiesce—as they have in
every recent negotiation.
Wall Street tycoons: In his budget proposal earlier this year, Obama recommended
taxing the profit share of private equity managers, venture
capitalists, and other Wall Street high-rollers at the ordinary personal
income tax rate, instead of at the smaller capital gains rate. No such
deal was struck under the current bill, so these mega-rich traders won’t
spend a penny reducing the deficit—again, unless Boehner undergoes a
religious experience and appoints pro-tax, anti-Wall Street Republicans
to the super-committee. (He’d have to spend a long time looking first).
Oil and gas companies: Obama repeatedly demanded that oil and
gas companies lose their tax breaks, since they are raking in record
profits and enjoy many deductions and subsidies in the tax code. “If we
choose to keep a tax break for oil and gas companies that are making
hundreds of millions of dollars, that means we’ve got to cut some kids
off from getting a college scholarship (and) that means we’ve got to
stop funding grants for medical research,” Obama said in June. Since those tax breaks were preserved, in hindsight that soundbite was of a prediction than a warning.