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PLANK DECEMBER 21, 2012

Boehner’s Plan B Didn’t Fix Our Budget's Biggest Problem—But Neither Will Obama’s

As I write, House Speaker John Boehner is holding a press conference to put the best face on the collapse of his ill-starred Plan B.  This is the kind of drama that Washington pretends to deplore but actually loves. The breathless blow-by-blow coverage of the fiscal cliff negotiations is obscuring the larger significance of the budget debate for the country. Some argue that we risk a Greek-style debt crisis unless we change course. Not so: We’re not like Greece, and we never will be. The real threat is that we’ll end up like Japan—a prosperous but debt-ridden, economically stagnant, politically gridlocked country seemingly condemned to a slow decline.

Two lines of analysis underscore this danger. Writing in Wednesday’s New York Times, Eduardo Porter showed that on either the Obama administration’s proposal or the House Republican alternative, the portion of the federal budget devoted to domestic discretionary spending will shrink by nearly half, to its lowest level since the Eisenhower administration. That part of the budget does two things above all: it assists the most vulnerable Americans, and it funds the public investments that help build a better future for all Americans. Radical cuts in the domestic discretionary budget mean a society that is less decent and an economy that is less dynamic.

Concerning the impact that huge discretionary cuts will have on social decency, I have nothing to add to the analysis that Bob Greenstein and the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities have offered, so I’ll focus on economic dynamism. Public investment is a thread woven through the tapestry of American history: roads, bridges, canals, railroads, and land-grant colleges in the nineteenth century; rural electrification, the Interstate Highway system, the National Science Foundation, the National Institutes of Health, students loans and grants, and high-tech spinoffs from space and defense programs in the twentieth. Intelligent public investment has been and will remain an important source of economic growth. We need more of it, but we’re on track to get much less.

The Urban Institute’s Eugene Steuerle and several colleagues have analyzed a parallel trend pointing in the same direction—the decline of what they call fiscal democracy. From the early 1980s through the first years of the current century, an average of about 30 percent of federal revenues remained after mandatory programs claimed their share and we paid the interest on the debt. During the Great Recession, we got a glimpse of our future: mandatory programs and interest payments consumed more than 100 percent of federal revenues, and the equivalent of the entire discretionary budget had to be funded through borrowing. Even if we return to Clinton-era levels of taxation, substantially higher than President Obama has proposed, spending on Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense, and interest will consume all of federal revenues and then some, leaving domestic spending out in the cold. The part of the budget that allows us to respond to changing needs by making regular choices is getting relentlessly squeezed, with no end in sight.

So when Republicans work to minimize revenue increases and Democrats resist cuts in Social Security and the large health programs, in effect they join forces to threaten the key to our future—the investments in ideas, infrastructure, and people needed to fuel innovation and growth in the coming decades. That’s not the world I want my just-born grandson to live in.

Forget about the historical averages; they are irrelevant to the present, let alone the future. Over the next decade, the federal government’s revenue needs will amount to about 21 percent of GDP. That’s the reality that Republicans will have to acknowledge. But if we don’t act soon to make the kinds of changes in Social Security and Medicare that will reduce the pressure on the federal budget while allowing Americans a decade or more from retirement to adjust, these programs will eat up all the revenue increases, forcing huge cuts in discretionary spending. That’s the reality that Democrats will have to acknowledge.
We should make these programmatic changes as progressively as possible, with strong protections for the most vulnerable beneficiaries. But, to take one example, there’s no reason why upper-middle class retirees should receive subsidies under Medicare. People like me should pay for our benefits; that is, our premiums should close the gap between the payroll taxes we’ve paid and the value of what we receive. For us, unlike our less fortunate fellow citizens, the benefit should be guaranteed participation in the program regardless of our medical status—period. That’s the only way we can begin to free up public funds for public investments.

For me and many others, the fiscal debate has less to do with making the numbers add up than it does about making adequate provision for the future. I want a country in which all students who can profit from a college education are able to afford it; in which the young scientists who can make the next generation’s discoveries can get funding for their research; in which people get to work and goods get to market efficiently; in which our communications systems are world-class and open to all; in which we build the protections we need against the forces of nature we cannot control. The private sector can help, of course. But the country I want won’t exist without a level of public investment far higher than we’ll have—unless we change course.

So no, I don’t want to throw grandma under the bus. But I care just as much about my grandson. If that means asking 50 year olds who make twice or three times the median income to pay more in taxes and accept somewhat lower benefits when they retire, I know where I stand. If it requires a carbon tax, or a VAT, or means-testing for Social Security and Medicare, or an end to tax subsidies for McMansions in Potomac, so be it.

A country that stops providing for its future won’t have one. That’s what’s at stake in the fiscal debate—not who’s up and who’s down, not whether Republicans can stymie the President or Democrats can smash the Tea Party. Along with the majority of Americans, I’m tired of the Washington game. But when will our political leaders realize that this is serious?

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8 comments

I agree that significant cuts to discretionary spending is bad. But I'm heartened by the Plan B failure, because that was a road to nowhere, and its success would have emboldened Republicans who want far less investment in our future than Obama. Indeed, Obama has been the one who has consistently argued that additional revenue is needed to keep making those investments, both in things like infrastructure and in targeted tax cuts to help stimulate the economy (which is ultimately the long-term driver of our ability to make investments).

- polcereal

December 21, 2012 at 12:56pm

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Galston is correct-- as far as he goes. What is going unsaid is that four four years the Repubs have advocated insane economic and other policies, while BHO and Senate Dems have advocated inadequate economic and other policies, touted as just right. And Galston and most tnr-written pieces-- and tnr bloggers-- have gone along, with at best minor carping. No one has honestly analyzed what was really needed-- and advocated policies that would accomplish thoise goals. Yes-- such policies might never have passed... but at least there would be a set of adequate policies advocated to provide a real choice.. And until that happens, you all are really mostly re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic. The re-arrangement helps, but it's not going to solve the real problems. Churchill is alleged to have said the US always does the right thing --after it has exhausted everything else first. Let's hope everything else has been exhausted and some Dem(s) start to step forward and advocate the right thing. Those are the Dems Progressives need lo0ok to support now and in 2016.

- drofnats1

December 21, 2012 at 1:08pm

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"So when Republicans work to minimize revenue increases and Democrats resist cuts in Social Security and the large health programs, in effect they join forces to threaten the key to our future" What a complete and utter lie. Jon Chait put it so well, the GOP plays "Calvinball", the Democrats give ground and compromise. When do deficit scolds like Galston get it through their dense skulls the GOP is the problem?

- tmmats

December 21, 2012 at 1:15pm

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"Galston is correct" Considering that Galston proved himself wrong on every aspect of Obama's reelection campaign, why does it not surprise me that drof things Galston is correct? Unfortunately, to get to the truly fatuous line of the article - as opposed to the merely fatuous, which is a Galston trademark - I had to get to the very end. "Along with the majority of Americans, I’m tired of the Washington game. But when will our political leaders realize that this is serious?" Yeah. Our political leaders don't "realise" that this is serious. Not at all. That insight is left to Galston and, presumably, the majority of Americans who are "tired" of "the Washington game". Oy.

- icarus-r

December 21, 2012 at 1:18pm

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This morning on Diane Reame, a guest noted that gerrymandering has made Republicans vulnerable only on primary challenges. If so, then the Senate option is most likely because those fearful tea party House members don't need to vote.

- Nusholtz

December 21, 2012 at 1:44pm

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Well Mr. Galston if you don't want to throw grandma under the bus, don't. Come up with rational ideas to strengthen our social insurance programs, not weaken them! Don't forget, Social Security helps young as well as old. That glorious scion of the House, Paul Ryan, went to school on SS survivor's benefits. Disability can strike at any age. So, stop writing as though SS affects on old people. It doesn't. It helps everybody. The GOP position seems to be that we should be left to fend for ourselves, tooth and claw. And if you're poor, disabled, unemployed, old, working for Walmart, a public employee whose union is under attack - you deserve your dire fate.

- Sophia

December 21, 2012 at 2:45pm

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Only one thing I'll trade for a two-year continuation of the Bush tax cuts: a trillion dollar stimulus. There's no reason we need to be fixing our budgetary problems right now, and if twenty Republicans sign onto it, this will be the most elegant natural experiment testing the notion that exogenous spending while monetary policy is constrained is actually what will save us. Ideally, we would also reverse pernicious cuts to domestic discretionary spending, but that's part of what the stimulus is for. The rest is noise. And Galston is an unsurprisingly noisy man.

- chaitless

December 21, 2012 at 2:58pm

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Dr. Galston -- Imagine it's a few months down the road we've gone over the cliff. Who will be under more pressure from their constituents and benefactors to make a deal ? The Dems will have pressure from all the groups hurt by the large reductions in domestic discretionary spending, including many people who may literally become homeless or starving due to reduction in payouts from programs such as food stamps and unemployment benefits. They will also may be hearing from furloughed Federal workers and their unions. I suspect that all of these groups will be anxious, maybe desperate, for a deal. The GOP will be hearing from the rich and not-so-rich who will pay more taxes, the businesses that will be hurt by the prospect or occurrence of an economic downturn, and military contractors who will see their income fall. It strikes me that the GOP's constituents may be less desperate for an immediate deal than the Dems'. What do you think? I think it would make a good column from someone with your political knowledge and analytic skills. I may not cheer your conclusions, but I'd like to know what they are.

- mrose6709

December 22, 2012 at 1:19pm

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