With A Bipartisan Commission At His Side, President Obama Will Avoid Seriously Addressing Solve the Nation's Deficit Problem
At Tuesday's House Budget Committee meeting, Congressman Paul Ryan got White House budget-maestro Peter Orszag to admit that the administration's new budget only kinda-sorta meets the deficit reduction standard it set for itself (the relevant exchange occurs about 29 minutes in). The administration's self-set goal—which Orszag talked up last fall—is to get the deficit down to about three percent of GDP. The administration's budget puts forth proposals to get part of the way there, but then whiffs on the rest: Rather than propose specific cuts for the final leg, it sets up a bipartisan debt and deficit commission to make suggestions about how the country might achieve its deficit goals.
A commission! To make suggestions! How could it possibly fail?
Of course, failure is in the eye of the beholder. As former Bush economic adviser Keith Hennessey notes, there are several reasons to form a commission, arguably the most productive of which is provide cover to make politically difficult decisions (the key example here is BRAC, the military base-closing commission). Obama seems to be hoping that with this commission, that's what it will look like he's trying to do.
But the more likely explanation is that he's trying to duck the deficit issue while creating the appearance that he's doing something about it. As Hennessey argues, the commission is so weak and so poorly designed that it's unlikely to achieve the desired results:
The President's commission would duplicate his budget proposal from last year. The goal of the rumored new Presidential commission would be to reduce the federal budget deficit to 3% by 2015. But last year the President budget included specific policy proposals to hit that same goal! The President's budget, proposed February 26, 2009, claimed to reduce the budget deficit to 3.0% by 2015 (Table S-1). (CBO says it misses this mark and would result in a 2015 deficit of 4.3%, but I'm focusing now on the Administration's claim.) The Mid-Session Review, published August 25, 2009, falls back to only trying to reduce the deficit to 3.9% by 2015 (Table S-1). So the President would now propose a 12-6 commission to meet a goal that he argued his budget met 11 months ago with specific proposals?!? That makes no sense.
The President's commission would address the wrong timeframe. The commission's goal is to focus on the next six years, rather than the even bigger long-term fiscal problem. Since I arrived in Washington in 1994 there has been a consensus that the hard fiscal policy problem is the long-term one, not the short-term one.
The President's commission does not create any binding fast-track process. Leader Reid cannot unilaterally bind 100 Senators to an up-or-down vote and no amendments. Even if a commission were to produce unanimous recommendations, Republicans should fear that a Democratic Senate majority would use those recommendations as a starting point, substitute even more tax increases for whatever spending cuts are in the recommendations, and then pass the bill. Scott Brown's election as the 41st vote has little effect on this dynamic, since the changes would probably happen in committee. Any commission created by Executive Order has this weakness: it cannot bind Congress. Only Congress can tie itself to the mast.
Moreover, as Hennessey notes in a separate post, "the President does not commit himself to proposing the policies recommended by the Commission. The Commission is charged only with 'identifying policies to improve the fiscal situation.' The President is still retaining the right to ignore those recommendations, come up with different ones, or redefine his goal after the Commission has reported."
So the solution to our deficit problem is a non-binding commission with repeat goals that doesn't address the long-term system problem and that the White House is free to ignore. This will definitely work, right?
Previously, I noted the impending budgepocalypse. Veronique de Rugy examined the president's overly rosy budget assumptions here.
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tax hikes for all!
Seems apropos
or are those some other subterranean mutants?
All opitions are on the table, except addressing the issue of "entitlement" reform and reducing overall government spending.
Keith Hennessey
Is that a real name?
Cristal: The name's Cristal, you know like the Champagne.
Huey Freeman: Cristal, that sounds like a stripper name. Might you be a stripper, Cristal like the champagne?
Cristal: And what would you know about strippers little man?
Huey Freeman: Not much, but I do know they're usually named after liquor.
The Commission at work.
Just admit it, these decisions will be made by a Chinese bankruptcy judge.
+1
"Gentlemen, please. Rest your sphincters."
And the commission shall be made up of 3 from the religious caste, 3 from the warrior caste and 3 from the worker caste...
I'm kinda sad that I don't even know why he posted Minbari pictures. I figured if there was going to be a B5 reference on the site, I'd at least get it.
My runner-up caption was: "Just some random aliens."
But the reason I posted the picture is because I could find a good screengrab of the B5 governmental council thing - that room on the station where all the different species send their reps.
So they're no kind of subterranean mutant at all?
Okay, whew, I was beginning to doubt my small reserve of geek cred.
I couldn't find a good picture of that either, but how about this:
http://www.midwinter.com/b5/Pictures/Scenes/gcouncil.gif
I'd watch CSPAN more if they had lighting like that.
There we go:
http://www.notentirelystable.com/screenshots/B5 season 1/league.jpg
The internet claims another 15 minutes of my time.
Well, we got transparency.
A transparently false 'effort' at bipartisanship, carrying no authority at all.
'See, I asked!'
The administration's self-set goal?which Orszag talked up last fall?is to get the deficit down to about three percent of GDP.
Why don't they just claim we'll be in the black by Christmas? When it becomes obvious we're not, they can blame Coolidge.
The Commission is charged only with 'identifying policies to improve the fiscal situation.'
Maybe somebody at the library of Congress has a copy of the Grace Commission Report they could loan to the White House.
Or even the esteemed Al Gore's seamanal instruction booklet, Reinventing Government!
Or (dare I say it?) ... the Constitution?!
The conclusion will whip up human-hatred to distract us from the lug nut shortage, right?
IT CAME FROM PLANET EARTH
"There might be a few shreds of moldy old robot porn."
Big fan of this Soma.com chick, yowza!
The Pulp Fiction pic would have more fitting than the B5 one.
BABYLON 5!!!!!!!!!!!!
Has anyone noticed how the Dow Jones is tanking? Could it perhaps have something to do with the fact that some nations in the European Union are right there on the edge of insolvency?
The next time some liberal idiot like Alfred E. Krugman or Chad tells you that unlimited gigantic deficits are wonderful, just point to the markets.
because only someone who is really *serious* about cutting the defcicit can manage to hold it down to only *slightly* more than the year of TARP and the Stimulus package.
I mean, without Obama, we'd probably be having $5 trillion deficits, right? RIGHT?
Put down the pipe. BRAC did not save any money. Take for example Fort Monmouth, original estimates said it would take 25 years for the ROI. As it get closer to moving to Maryland the cost have more than doubled. BRAC is just as political as any other government body.
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