By this time, anyone with a heartbeat knows that there is some sort of unique financial rock formation posing a threat to the U.S. economy at year-end and that if President Barack Obama and Congress don't find a way around it - something at which Washington excels - bad things will happen to all of us.
Pardon my verbal gymnastics, but I'm trying to avoid typing "fiscal cliff" even as our government barrels toward it. In case you were under the impression there was a sense of urgency about preventing $500 billion of automatic tax increases and spending cuts from taking effect in the new year, think again.
Ever since the Nov. 6 election, both parties have been focusing on a single, controversial issue: whether the Bush-era tax cuts for individuals making more than $200,000 a year ($250,000 for households) will be allowed to expire. Obama has threatened to veto any legislation that extends the cuts on the top 2 percent "because it's bad economic policy," according to White House spokesman Jay Carney.
The expiration of tax cuts on top earners would increase federal revenue by $824 billion during the next 10 years, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates. If Congress does nothing - if taxes go up across the board, discretionary spending is cut and Medicare payments to doctors are slashed, among other automatic adjustments - the Treasury would take in an additional $5.1 trillion of revenue over 10 years.
That's hardly chump change, but even "big tax increases can't cover the rising cost of entitlements," said Joe Carson, director of global economic research at AllianceBernstein in New York.
Mandatory spending on programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security totaled $2.05 trillion in fiscal 2012, or 58 percent of the federal budget. Based on demographic trends, entitlement spending will reach $3.55 trillion in 2022, consuming almost two-thirds of the entire budget.
In the past, the United States generated enough revenue to cover future costs. During the 1980s and 1990s, for example, the ratio of current revenue to entitlement spending five years out was 1.4, according to Carson. Then the cost curve started bending in the wrong direction. The ratio of revenue to future entitlement costs fluctuated between 1 and 1.1 over the past decade. Tax revenue barely covered the part of the budget that is on automatic pilot. Even with a revenue boost from inaction on the fiscal cliff, the ratio of current revenue to projected entitlement spending never exceeds 1.15 during the rest of the decade, Carson says.
"The future cost of mandatory programs absorbs all of the projected growth in revenue from tax increases and economic expansion over the next decade," he said.
In other words, without reforming entitlements, there will be no money for defense, education and other discretionary programs. That may be fine with Grover Norquist, he of the no- tax pledge, but it isn't practical.
Neither is the notion that the U.S.'s fiscal problems can be fixed by raising revenue, eliminating waste, fraud and abuse (peanuts in the grand scheme) or tinkering with discretionary spending. Congress should heed the advice of Willie Sutton. According to lore, when Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he replied: "That's where the money is." (Sutton denied ever saying that.)
If Congress wants to reduce the deficit, stabilize the debt, put spending and revenue on a sustainable path, or all of the above, it has to go where the money is. And the money, or the growth in spending, is in entitlements. Obama has said he is open to reforming the programs for the sick and elderly. Not that he has put anything on the table just yet. And some members of his party blanch at the idea of cutting even a dime in benefits.
Still, many sensible ideas for reforming entitlements have been floated over time, including gradually raising the eligibility age for Social Security and Medicare; using prices, not wages, to compute a worker's initial Social Security benefit; indexing federal programs to a chained inflation measure that more accurately reflects changes in spending patterns than the consumer price index; and subjecting programs to means testing. None of these long-term options even mentions the word "voucher."
No one expects a short-term fix to avoid the fiscal cliff to include any long-term restructuring of entitlements. My concern is that whatever Obama and Congress come up with next year won't rein in these popular programs. Without that, it isn't a serious solution.
Caroline Baum is a Bloomberg View columnist.
Caroline Baum / The big savings are in entitlements - pressofAtlanticCity.com: Commentary
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Caroline Baum / The big savings are in entitlements
Posted: Wednesday, December 5, 2012 12:01 am
Caroline Baum / The big savings are in entitlements
By this time, anyone with a heartbeat knows that there is some sort of unique financial rock formation posing a threat to the U.S. economy at year-end and that if President Barack Obama and Congress don't find a way around it - something at which Washington excels - bad things will happen to all of us.
Pardon my verbal gymnastics, but I'm trying to avoid typing "fiscal cliff" even as our government barrels toward it. In case you were under the impression there was a sense of urgency about preventing $500 billion of automatic tax increases and spending cuts from taking effect in the new year, think again.
Ever since the Nov. 6 election, both parties have been focusing on a single, controversial issue: whether the Bush-era tax cuts for individuals making more than $200,000 a year ($250,000 for households) will be allowed to expire. Obama has threatened to veto any legislation that extends the cuts on the top 2 percent "because it's bad economic policy," according to White House spokesman Jay Carney.
The expiration of tax cuts on top earners would increase federal revenue by $824 billion during the next 10 years, according to Congressional Budget Office estimates. If Congress does nothing - if taxes go up across the board, discretionary spending is cut and Medicare payments to doctors are slashed, among other automatic adjustments - the Treasury would take in an additional $5.1 trillion of revenue over 10 years.
That's hardly chump change, but even "big tax increases can't cover the rising cost of entitlements," said Joe Carson, director of global economic research at AllianceBernstein in New York.
Mandatory spending on programs such as Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security totaled $2.05 trillion in fiscal 2012, or 58 percent of the federal budget. Based on demographic trends, entitlement spending will reach $3.55 trillion in 2022, consuming almost two-thirds of the entire budget.
In the past, the United States generated enough revenue to cover future costs. During the 1980s and 1990s, for example, the ratio of current revenue to entitlement spending five years out was 1.4, according to Carson. Then the cost curve started bending in the wrong direction. The ratio of revenue to future entitlement costs fluctuated between 1 and 1.1 over the past decade. Tax revenue barely covered the part of the budget that is on automatic pilot. Even with a revenue boost from inaction on the fiscal cliff, the ratio of current revenue to projected entitlement spending never exceeds 1.15 during the rest of the decade, Carson says.
"The future cost of mandatory programs absorbs all of the projected growth in revenue from tax increases and economic expansion over the next decade," he said.
In other words, without reforming entitlements, there will be no money for defense, education and other discretionary programs. That may be fine with Grover Norquist, he of the no- tax pledge, but it isn't practical.
Neither is the notion that the U.S.'s fiscal problems can be fixed by raising revenue, eliminating waste, fraud and abuse (peanuts in the grand scheme) or tinkering with discretionary spending. Congress should heed the advice of Willie Sutton. According to lore, when Sutton was asked why he robbed banks, he replied: "That's where the money is." (Sutton denied ever saying that.)
If Congress wants to reduce the deficit, stabilize the debt, put spending and revenue on a sustainable path, or all of the above, it has to go where the money is. And the money, or the growth in spending, is in entitlements. Obama has said he is open to reforming the programs for the sick and elderly. Not that he has put anything on the table just yet. And some members of his party blanch at the idea of cutting even a dime in benefits.
Still, many sensible ideas for reforming entitlements have been floated over time, including gradually raising the eligibility age for Social Security and Medicare; using prices, not wages, to compute a worker's initial Social Security benefit; indexing federal programs to a chained inflation measure that more accurately reflects changes in spending patterns than the consumer price index; and subjecting programs to means testing. None of these long-term options even mentions the word "voucher."
No one expects a short-term fix to avoid the fiscal cliff to include any long-term restructuring of entitlements. My concern is that whatever Obama and Congress come up with next year won't rein in these popular programs. Without that, it isn't a serious solution.
Caroline Baum is a Bloomberg View columnist.
Posted in Commentary on Wednesday, December 5, 2012 12:01 am.
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