海角大神

The Paul Ryan budget: 5 go-to sources for understanding it

The federal budget plan crafted by Rep. Paul Ryan, the Republican vice-presidential nominee, is the talk of the town 鈥 and of towns far outside Washington. His  is the model for legislation that the Republican-led US House of Representatives approved in late March 鈥 and that the Democratic-controlled Senate rejected 57 to 40 on May 23.

With both parties clamoring about its merits and demerits, with journalists generalizing about Mr. Ryan, 鈥渢he deficit hawk,鈥 and with all the speculation on what Ayn Rand would really think of his proposal, it can be hard to tell where partisan slants end and real analysis begins. D.C. Decoder has compiled a list of groups offering some of the clearest, most comprehensive explanations of Ryan's controversial plan 鈥 including some with real digging. Here are five go-to sources.

Carolyn Kaster/AP/File
House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin attends at a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington in April 2011. Since Mitt Romney selected Congressman Ryan as his running mate, Ryan's budget plan, which calls for transforming Medicare and steep spending cuts, has been front and center in the presidential campaign.

1. The Bipartisan Policy Center

J. Scott Applewhite/AP
In this April 2008 file photo, Rep. Paul Ryan (R) of Wisconsin, ranking Republican on the House Budget Committee, talks to the media about an alternative Republican budget plan, 'The Path to American Prosperity.'

The Bipartisan Policy Center has , with several illustrative charts and graphs, including a bar graph that compares several different budget plans on their revenue and spending.  

The BPC analysis of the Ryan plan covers many topics, but it goes into detail on how government health-care programs would be affected. Not only does it address funding for Medicare (health insurance for seniors) and Medicaid (health insurance for the poor), but it also gives special attention to the Children鈥檚 Health Insurance Program. It also outlines specific consequences that would result if the Affordable Care Act were to be repealed, as called for in Ryan's budget plan.

The BPC analysis quotes extensively from and compares the Ryan plan with other debt-reduction plans, the CBO's January 2011 defense projections, and historic levels of spending.

The BPC also provides links to its analyses of other budget plans: , , and the .

A nonprofit lobbying organization ,  celebrates and encourages bipartisan discourse. Its main focuses are health care, energy, national and homeland security, transportation, and the economy.

1 of 5
You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.