海角大神

A deficit supercommittee progress report

Is the Congress鈥 deficit super committee making progress?

|
J. Scott Applewhite/AP
Rep. James Clyburn, D-S.C., left, confers with fellow supercommittee panelist Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., right, as the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction holds a hearing on Capitol Hill in Washington. Gleckman argues that the supercommitte has made a few positive steps forward, but nothing to get too excited about

Is the Congress鈥 deficit super committee making progress? That depends on your definition of progress, I suppose. 聽

The good news is that Republicans are increasingly uttering the 鈥渢鈥 word, suggesting聽they might be willing to include in a deficit reduction plan. The other good news is that Democrats reportedly are getting more specific about聽.

But before you start doing backflips of joy, keep a few things in mind:

To start, few outside of the committee (including me) have actually seen these proposals. Instead, we have mostly been shown other people鈥檚 characterizations of what they say. It is hard to make many judgments based on what some guy says about what some guy said.

Based on what we do know, however, both sides are playing big time budget baseline games. When they talk taxes, Republicans聽start by assuming the will all be extended indefinitely. From there, they talk about聽cutting rates across the board and reducing tax preferences (perhaps with some cap on these breaks). All of this, it is reported, would boost revenue by a few hundred billion dollars over 10 years.

Sounds promising. But by starting by extending the Bush era tax cuts, the Rs would reduce revenues by $4 trillion compared to what would happen if Congress simply lets them expire as scheduled a year from now. So, Republicans would add $4 trillion to the deficit before cutting a paltry $200-$300 billion. In anyplace but Washington this would add up to another $3.7 or $3.8 trillion in red ink. Here, it counts as deficit reduction. Worse, even those dollars appear to result from presumed economic growth rather than policy changes. The wonders of dynamic scoring!

Democrats are playing their own games. While Politico this morning that they are proposing $400 billion in Medicare and Medicaid cuts (most of which would come out of the hides of doctors, hospitals, nursing homes, and other providers), the Dems also start by assuming a fix to the ongoing battle over Medicare reimbursements to physicians. 聽Straightening out this mess could cost as much as $300 billion over the next 10 years. The Ds do say they鈥檇 pay for the fix鈥攂ut with money from the drawdown of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan. This money is fiscal pixie dust, since the troops are already coming home and those funds were never going to be spent.

Budget experts tell me the committee has maximum flexibility to play with these baselines. It can mix and match or even make up its own. 鈥淭hey have all the flexibility in the world,鈥 聽says Jim Horney, a long-time senior Senate Budget Committee aide.

So far, then, what we have is posturing. With public confidence in Congress sunk to the single digits, most lawmakers of both parties want to make it look like they are bargaining in good faith. Thus, Democrats propose mostly vaporous spending cuts knowing full well Republicans won鈥檛 accept their offer. And Rs offer fantasy tax increases, fully confident in the knowledge that Democrats won鈥檛 take their deal either.

This performance will go on a while longer. After all, today is only Nov. 10th and the super committee鈥檚 deadline for action is not until at least Thanksgiving. Do not believe lawmakers when they say they must have a deal this week in order to finish by Turkey Day. This is a bit like saying that in order to have dinner for the family in two weeks, you must buy your bird today. One thing about turkeys鈥攜ou can always find one when you need it. 聽

聽If lawmakers are aiming for Nov. 24th, there will be no plan until Nov. 23rd (and keep in mind that even that date is squishy鈥搕he only meaningful聽 deadline requires Congress to vote on a deficit plan by Dec. 23).

The only real good news from all of this is that the pols are still talking. But don鈥檛 get too wound up about the specific proposals that are changing hands these days. It is still early.

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to A deficit supercommittee progress report
Read this article in
/Business/Tax-VOX/2011/1110/A-deficit-supercommittee-progress-report
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe