This Is More Like It

Filed in National by on November 17, 2010

I have absolutely no idea why Democrats let Republicans control the conversation about spending, debt and deficit. Republicans talk a lot about debt, but spend their administrations increase it. Republicans have spent the last two years beating their chests about the deficit (but silent about jobs). The Simpson-Bowles deficit report only aggravated the situation more. It was a document buying into almost all rightwing ideas. That’s why I’m glad to see that Democratic Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky has released her own deficit reduction plan.

“The President’s Fiscal Commission has been given a concrete goal: to achieve primary budget balance in 2015, ensuring that all spending is paid for except for interest on the national debt. Last week, co-chairs Erskine Bowles and Alan Simpson laid out their plan, which they presented to the Commission and to the public. Their proposal would have serious consequences for lower and middle class Americans, and that is why I cannot support it.

“I am releasing my own plan today because I believe that there is a better way to achieve our goal – one that protects the poor and the middle-class.

“Lower and middle class Americans did not cause the deficit.

“Just ten years ago the federal budget was generating a surplus as far as the eye could see. That surplus was turned into a deficit due to massive tax cuts – mainly to wealthy Americans; two wars paid for by borrowed money; and a major recession caused by the recklessness of the big Wall Street banks.

“Over the last decade the incomes of middle class Americans have actually shrunk, while those of the wealthiest two percent of the population have exploded.

“The middle class did not benefit from the Republican economic policies that led to the current deficit – they were the victims – they should not be called upon to pick up the tab.

“Fixing the Federal deficit is not an end in itself. The goal of budget policy should be to assure long-term, widely shared economic growth. Economic growth is not just good for businesses and families – it will reduce the deficit. Sustained, long-term economic growth requires that we end the trend of concentrating more and more wealth in the hands of the rich and less and less in the hands of a middle class that can then afford to buy the products and services that will sustain economic growth.

“The proposals included in this plan are aimed at bringing the federal deficit under control using policies that will put Americans back to work and strengthen middle class incomes: the foundation of long-term economic growth.

The Schakowsky plan is based on five key elements:

1) Increased economic stimulus to spur growth in the immediate term

    • Provide $200 billion to invest over the next two years in measures to create jobs and spur economic growth, including passing the Local Jobs for America Act; and funding for education and law enforcement; Unemployment Insurance, Federal Medical Assistance Percentages (FMAP) and Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program extensions; and infrastructure.
    • Adopt the President’s proposals to eliminate overseas tax havens and incentives for outsourcing
  • 2) Smart, targeted spending cuts

    • Non-Defense Discretionary – $7.55 billion in savings through increased efficiency and cuts to programs that benefit large corporations that don’t need assistance.
    • Defense Discretionary – $110.7 billion in cuts from the 2015 defense budget, including efficiency savings, reducing our troop levels, cutting weapons systems we don’t need, and scaling back the wartime increases in the size of the military.
  • 3) Mandatory spending cuts

    • Health Care – at least $17.2 billion in savings by implementing measures to bring down the cost of health care to the federal government and lower health care inflation overall.
    • Other – $7.7 billion in savings by cutting agriculture subsidies in half, and redistributing federal support to offer greater benefits to small family farms reduce subsidies to large corporate agribusiness.
  • 4) Reductions in tax expenditures

    • Raise $132.2 billion by closing tax subsidies for companies that ship American jobs overseas.
  • 5) Increases in revenues

    • Raise $144.6 billion in revenue through progressive reforms to the estate tax, treating capital gains and dividends as regular income, and enacting a cap and trade proposal that includes protections for lower-income people.
    • Enact President Obama’s budget proposal to let the Bush tax cuts for the top 2 brackets expire and return to 2009 estate tax levels.
    • Non-tax revenue – raise $7 billion by addressing places where the private sector is currently under-paying.
  • Thank you, Rep. Schakowsky. Hopefully more Democrats will think about this problem and come up with solutions. Stop letting Republicans dominate the conversation.

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    Opinionated chemist, troublemaker, blogger on national and Delaware politics.

    Comments (2)

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    1. anon says:

      treating capital gains and dividends as regular income

      OK for dividends which are paid same year, but there should be preferential rates on long term capital gains. The 25% Clinton boom rate should do it (Clinton lowered it to 20% in 1998, turning the boom into a bubble).

      Everybody keeps forgetting about closing the carried interest loophole, which was one of Obama’s promises.

      The carried interest loophole means that compensation for fund managers is taxed at capital gains rates, not at PIT rates. (although in Schakowsky’s proposal it is moot since everything is taxed as regular income).

      Not only is the loophole a big chunk of revenue in itself, it provides an incentive for bad economic behavior by those same fund managers.

    2. cassandra_m says:

      Rep. Schakowsky is interviewed by Ezra Klein on her plan.

      And my NPR jihad yesterday was a series of email letters to a number of programs talking about the many deficit reduction plans out there, not ONE of which talked about Rep. Schakowsky’s plan. Go figure.