The Senate Democrats, writing their first budget resolution
since winning control in Congress last fall, have produced a budget
blueprint that:
- Raises taxes by $900 billion over five years and a projected
$3.3 trillion over ten years;
- Translates into a tax increase of $2,641 per household annually
over the next decade;
- Includes 22 reserve funds that could be used to raise taxes by
hundreds of billions more;
- Increases discretionary spending by nearly 9 percent in FY 2008
and does not terminate a single program;
- Completely ignores the impending tsunami of Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid costs;
- Creates rules that bias the budget toward tax increases;
and
- Employs the same gimmicks that Congress criticized the
President for using in his budget proposal.
The House budget resolution projects nearly the same 2008-2012
tax revenue as the Senate and would increase discretionary spending
by an additional $69 billion. This paper focuses on the Senate's
irresponsible budget blueprint.
$2,641 Per Household Tax Increase
The Senate budget projects 2008-2012 tax revenues of $15,007
billion-$899 billion higher than the $14,108 that would be
collected under today's tax rates. The Senate Budget Committee does
not specify the source of these higher revenues. However, the total
almost exactly matches the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
estimate of 2008-2012 tax revenues if the Bush tax cuts expire, all
other temporary tax cuts expire, and the alternative minimum tax
(AMT) is not fixed ($15,002 billion).[1]
Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-ND) has stated
that his budget would allow some of the current tax cuts to be
extended as long as they are offset (specifically, fixing the AMT
through 2008). However, increasing some tax rates as the price of
keeping other tax policies unchanged is still a tax increase. And
while Senator Conrad has also asserted that large amounts of
revenue could be found by closing the tax gap, anything more than a
few billion dollars annually seems overly optimistic considering
the harsh methods needed to increase compliance. Either way, the
Senate budget would seize $899 billion more from Americans than is
taken under today's tax rates.
That's just the five-year total. Projected over the ten-year
period, the expiration (or required offset) of all existing tax
cuts would raise projected revenues by $3,268 billion[2]-easily the
largest peacetime tax increase in American history.[3] Over the ten-year period, the
average household's taxes would increase by $2,641 annually, or 12
percent above current tax levels. Tax revenues would spike from
18.5 percent of GDP today to 19.8 percent by 2012 and then 20.1
percent in 2017-the second highest level since World War II.
And even that may not be all. The Senate budget contains 22
"reserve funds" that would give Congress virtually unlimited
authority to raise taxes further if Members decide to increase
spending above the budget resolution's spending targets. By the
time Congress is finished, the tax increase could easily top $1
trillion over five years and $4 trillion over ten years.
Of course, lawmakers have denied that their budget raises taxes,
arguing that its revenue projections are tied to "current law." But
current law assumes that tax rates will increase in 2011 and that
the AMT will catch 19 million more Americans this year alone. That
these future tax increases are already scheduled as part of current
law does not make them even less of a tax increase. Even Senator
Conrad once said that "a tax increase to me is when you increase
the taxes that people are paying now."[4] By his own standard, the
Senate budget will raise taxes.
Lest any Senator try to avert these tax increases, the budget
contains a multitude of new rules designed to make sure that they
occur. Any Senator offering legislation to extend current tax rates
would be "violating" four different Senate budget rules, each of
which would require 60 votes to overcome before the Senate would
even be allowed to vote on the legislation itself. These obstacles
would apply to merely keeping current tax rates in place. By
contrast, current entitlement spending formulas, which are forcing
entitlement spending up by 6 percent to 7 percent annually, would
continue automatically without any restraints.
Ignoring the Entitlement Crisis
The coming collision of 77 million retiring baby boomers with
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid represents the greatest
economic challenge of our era. What Federal Reserve Chairman Ben
Bernanke has recently called the "calm before the storm" will end
abruptly on January 1, 2008-less than one year from now-when the
first baby boomers become eligible for early Social Security
benefits.[5]
Three years later, they will become eligible for Medicare. Over the
following decades, the cost of these programs will leap from 8.7
percent of GDP to 19.0 percent. Without reform, this 10.3 percent
of GDP cost increase would require either raising taxes by the
current equivalent of $11,651 per household or eliminating every
other government program. Even these changes would not solve the
problem over the long term as Social Security, Medicare, and
Medicaid spending continues to grow.[6]
Senator Conrad acknowledged this crisis recently on CBS's "60
Minutes." He said, "They know in large measure here, Republicans
and Democrats, that we are on a course that doesn't add up" but
that Congress does not address the issue "[b]ecause it's always
easier not to. [I]t's always easier to defer, to kick the can down
the road to avoid making choices. You know, you get in trouble in
politics when you make choices."[7]
Yet kicking the can down the road and avoiding choices is
exactly what the Senate budget blueprint does. Specifically, it
fails to offer a single reform to pare the $39 trillion in unfunded
Social Security and Medicare costs over the next 75 years. Worse,
the Senate rejects the President's commonsense proposal to shave $8
trillion off this obligation by reducing Medicare Part B and D
subsidies for the wealthiest seniors and tweaking payment formulas.
By delaying the inevitable reforms, the Senate budget will drive up
ultimate costs by hundreds of billions of dollars and give
near-retirees less time to adjust their retirement strategies to
the coming fiscal realities.
Spending Increases
While ignoring the entitlement crisis, the Senate budget would
increase FY 2008 non-emergency discretionary spending by $18
billion over the President's proposal of $932 billion-a nearly 9
percent increase in discretionary spending over the FY 2007
level.[8] Over
five years, the Senate would increase spending by $193 billion over
the President's proposed level. That does not even include the $21
billion in additional FY 2007 spending the Senate is proposing to
add to the national security emergency bill that was intended to
fund the troops serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.[9]
Most of the increase would be in domestic discretionary
spending, but these programs have hardly been starved for funding.
From 2001 trough 2006, non-security discretionary spending
increased by 40 percent (21 percent after inflation). In fact,
since 1990, non-security discretionary spending has increased three
times as fast as defense and homeland security spending.[10] In
particular, recent discretionary spending increases for education
and health have been among the largest ever. Furthermore, Congress
continues to appropriate money for wasteful and unnecessary
programs like the Advanced Technology Program, which spends much of
its $150 million budget subsidizing Fortune 500 companies.[11] The
combination of recent spending increases and wasteful spending
means that Congress should be able to work within the President's
proposed discretionary spending total.
Gimmicks
In January, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV), House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), House Budget Committee Chairman John
Spratt (D-SC) and Senator Conrad send a letter to President Bush
urging him to resist the use of gimmicks in his budget request.[12] The letter
called on the President to "reasonably account...for...predictable
costs that have been omitted in past budgets," likely referring to
the costs in Iraq and Afghanistan as well as fixing the AMT. The
group also urged that the President's budget "realistically
project" budget deficit levels and "be based on fiscal discipline
that is sustained over the long-term." When the President released
his budget proposal, these lawmakers criticized the President for
failing these standards and relying on "deception" to balance the
budget by 2012.[13]
Yet the Senate Democrats' budget employs the same sort of
gimmicks the Democrats decried. It balances the budget by 2012,
assuming no Iraq and Afghanistan spending after 2009. Nor does the
Senate budget account for fixing the AMT after 2008. Thus, the
Senate budget relies on the same gimmicks they earlier opposed. In
regard to the group's call for long-term fiscal discipline, the
Senate budget ignores the issue completely. By the Congress's own
standards, the Senate budget proposal is fiscally
irresponsible.
Conclusion
The Senate budget relies on massive tax increases while
ignoring the coming tsunami in Social Security, Medicare, and
Medicaid spending.This classic tax-and-spend budget would likely
assure the expiration of the tax cuts that have helped to create
jobs and promote economic growth.[14] The result of the Senate budget would
likely be higher tax rates on families and businesses, slower
economic growth, and a nation woefully unprepared to fund the
coming retirement benefits of 77 million baby boomers. Lawmakers
should go back and write a budget that deals realistically with
coming entitlement costs and does not raise taxes to fund more
government spending.
Brian M.
Riedl is Grover M. Hermann Fellow in Federal Budgetary Affairs
in the Thomas A. Roe Institute for Economic Policy Studies at The
Heritage Foundation.
[1] The revenue
that would be collected without raising tax rates is calculated by
taking the Congressional Budget Office's January 2007 revenue
projection for 2008 through 2017 and then netting out the revenue
raisers from scheduled tax rate increases. See Congressional Budget
Office, "The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2008 to
2017," January 2007, Tables 1.3 and 1.5, at .
[2] This is the
ten-year revenue increase if all tax cuts expired. The Senate
budget roughly matches those annual numbers over its five-year
window. See Congressional Budget Office, "The Budget and Economic
Outlook: Fiscal Years 2008 to 2017," Tables 1.3 and 1.5. Projected
revenues would rise by approximately 2.5 percent of GDP by
2017.
[3] For a
historical perspective, see Jerry Tempalski, "Revenues Effects of
Major Tax Bills," U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Tax
Analysis Working Paper No. 81, revised September 2006, at .
[4] Bud Newman,
"Conrad Leaning Toward Including Tax Cut Trigger in Budget
Resolution," BNA Daily Report for Executives, February 7,
2002.
[5] Ben
Bernanke, Chairman, Federal Reserve, "Long-Term Fiscal
Challenges Facing the United States," Testimony before the Senate
Budget Committee, January 18, 2007, at .
[7] "U.S.
Heading For Financial Trouble?" CBSnews.com, March 4, 2007, at
.
[8] The Senate
would add $16 billion in regular discretionary spending, plus $2
billion in advanced appropriations.
[10] Riedl,
"Federal Spending by the Numbers."
[12] Jonathan
Nicholson, "Democratic Leaders Beseech Bush to Send Realistic
Budget Estimates," BNA Daily Report for Executives, January
29, 2007.
[13] Michael
Abramowitz and Lori Montgomery, "Bush Plan Reins in Domestic
Spending," The Washington Post, February 6, 2007.