http://www.thenation.com/article/171266/grand-bargain-fiscal-cliff-could-be-grand-betrayal

The Nation

A 'Grand Bargain' on the Fiscal Cliff Could Be a Grand Betrayal
Robert L. Borosage | November 14, 2012


President Barack Obama gestures as he answers a question during a news 
conference in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Wednesday, 
Nov. 14, 2012. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak)
 
With the election behind us, President Obama and the lame-duck Congress 
return to Washington to face a fiscal showdown, occasioned by automatic 
tax hikes and spending cuts scheduled to kick in after the first of the 
year. Most economists, including the nonpartisan Congressional Budget 
Office, agree that if nothing is done, this arbitrary, 
Washington-created “fiscal cliff,” as Federal Reserve chair Ben Bernanke 
dubbed it, will likely drive the economy back into recession.

It is probably already contributing to slower growth. The New York Times 
reports that manufacturers are delaying capital improvements and 
postponing hiring for fear that no deal will be made. More than a third 
of the nation’s school districts have reduced programs and hiring in 
anticipation. If there’s no deal, domestic agencies face an 8 percent 
cut across the board in fiscal year 2013.  Middle-class families will 
see an income tax hike of about $1,500, a cut in child tax credits by 
about $500 per kid, a cut in tuition tax credits by $700 a year, and a 
hike in the payroll tax of $1,000 a year. Lower-income families will 
suffer cuts in the earned-income tax credit. The result is renewed 
discussion of a “grand bargain” to avoid that self-destructive course.

But the “cliff,” with its misleading metaphor of an imminent, 
irreversible fall, has been misconstrued by the media. These changes are 
not irrevocable; it’s not as if they can’t be fixed after January 1 
(more on this later). But in true shock doctrine fashion, the ersatz 
crisis is being used to demand changes that would otherwise be 
politically impossible: cuts in Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, 
along with deep cuts in basic government services, combined with tax 
increases. Wall Street billionaire Pete Peterson has enlisted bankers 
and CEOs in a multimillion-dollar campaign spearheaded by the hysterical 
Cassandras of debt, Alan Simpson and Erskine Bowles, former co-chairs of 
President Obama’s deficit commission, to demand action now. Editorial 
opinion and much of the punditry, along with a claque of supposedly 
bipartisan or nonpartisan lobbying groups, have dutifully echoed the 
call. Gaggles of senatorial aides have been meeting to explore what a 
deal might look like.

In an initially off-the-record campaign interview in late October with 
The Des Moines Register, Obama indicated that he intended to offer 
Republicans a deal similar to the one he offered House Speaker John 
Boehner in the summer of 2011: meeting the Simpson-Bowles target of $4 
trillion in deficit reductions over ten years, with a ratio of $2.50 in 
spending cuts for every $1 in new revenue as well as “working to reduce 
the costs of our health care programs.” Since the election, Boehner and 
Senate Republicans have indicated they would support an agreement that 
reduces deficits by cutting Medicare and Social Security in exchange for 
tax reform that lowers rates but raises more revenue through closing 
loopholes.

Virtually every aspect of this hysteria is wrong. The United States does 
not have a short-term deficit problem, and the fundamental long-term 
problem isn’t one of soaring debt; rather, it is the lack of a 
foundation for sustainable growth that includes working people. Without 
a political movement to achieve the latter, very little progress will be 
made on the former.

The grand bargain being discussed in Washington reflects an elite 
consensus far removed from what voters want. Americans want action on 
jobs, and most support the president’s call to raise taxes on the rich. 
Overwhelmingly, they want basic family security programs protected. Any 
deal that cuts Medicare and Social Security, slows growth and increases 
unemployment will look a lot more like a grand betrayal than a grand 
bargain. And virtually the entire organized base of the Democratic 
Party, from unions to civil rights and women’s groups, is mobilizing in 
opposition.

Austerity Bites

There are still more than 20 million people in need of full-time work. 
Mass unemployment guarantees stagnant or falling wages and sputtering 
growth. Long-term unemployment—40 percent of those out of work have been 
jobless for more than twenty-seven weeks—erodes skills, confidence and 
lives. The Federal Reserve, understanding the danger, has used monetary 
policy to keep interest rates low and pump money into the economy. Yet 
Americans are still strapped, given declining real wages, the collapse 
of the value of their homes and the rising cost of necessities, from gas 
to college education to healthcare. Companies are sitting on trillions 
in profits, waiting for demand to pick up for their products. The Fed 
can’t generate the growth we need through monetary policy alone. In this 
situation, the federal government should be acting to boost the economy.

Washington’s obsession with deficits is illogical for two reasons: 
first, there is no sign of accelerating inflation; interest rates are 
near record lows, as global investors seek shelter in US securities from 
economic turmoil abroad. We will never have a better opportunity to 
rebuild our decrepit infrastructure, so there’s no reason for Washington 
to focus on belt tightening now.

Second, austerity is, paradoxically, likely to undermine the stated goal 
of deficit reduction. Cutting spending and raising taxes in a weak 
economy destroys jobs and slows growth. The increased unemployment leads 
to declining tax revenue as well as increased demands on government 
services, all of which adds to the deficit. This is the famous “debt 
trap” recently experienced in much of Europe, where premature and harsh 
austerity drove many EU countries into recession. Spain, Portugal and 
Greece have piled up worse debt burdens as their economies collapsed.

American CEOs, fearful of the recession that would ensue from the fiscal 
cliff, have been clamoring for a deal to avoid it. But given the 
faltering recovery, the same logic applies to the less harsh grand 
bargain now under discussion. Job creation is barely able to keep up 
with new people coming into the workforce. Federal government purchases 
were down last year, as spending from Obama’s 2009 stimulus bill 
declined, and they are declining again this year. State and local 
expenditures continue to fall off. The results are felt all over the 
country as teachers are laid off, aging sewers collapse and Head Start 
programs close. Streets grow unsafe as police forces are reduced. Adding 
to the drag on the economy are the budget caps passed by Congress—as 
part of the 2011 debt ceiling deal—that will reduce discretionary 
spending by $1.5 trillion over the next ten years. Any new deal would 
only add to the drag on the economy in a world where Europe is in 
recession and emerging nations like China, India and Brazil are struggling.

The hysteria about deficits ignores both their source and their 
solution. Publicly held debt was only about 36 percent of GDP in 2007, 
before the crash. When the housing bubble exploded, the economic 
collapse meant falling revenue and rising spending (particularly on 
unemployment insurance, food stamps and other programs for the jobless). 
The result just about doubled the debt burden, to 73 percent of GDP. 
Spending from the president’s recovery act temporarily contributed to 
the deficits, but that has already petered out. As a result, deficits 
are coming down; they are currently three-quarters of what they were in 
2009, relative to the size of the economy.

Putting people back to work does more to reduce deficits than any other 
factor. That requires more federal spending now, preferably in areas 
vital to the economy, like modernizing our infrastructure and keeping 
teachers on the job. Once the economy is growing and people are working, 
the deficit will come down. Additional steps can be taken, if necessary, 
to reduce remaining imbalances and address our long-term debt problem.

It is the long-term, seventy-five-year debt projections—illustrated in 
the lavish charts that Pete Peterson’s various front groups have 
plastered across the country—that have terrified so many people. But 
those long-term deficits come almost entirely from one source: our 
broken healthcare system. The projected increase in healthcare 
costs—through Medicare, Medicaid, children’s and veterans’ 
healthcare—drive long-term deficits. The costs of Medicare and other 
public healthcare programs are rising more slowly than private 
healthcare, but even so, in the long term they are unaffordable. As 
economist Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research has 
pointed out, if per capita US healthcare spending were comparable to 
what other industrialized countries spend (with better results), we 
would be projecting budget surpluses as far as the eye could see. The 
solution requires challenging the predatory oligopolies—the insurance 
companies, drug companies and hospital complexes—that profit from high 
costs. Obamacare began that process; Medicare costs have begun to rise 
more slowly. The sensible solution to our long-term debt problem is 
continued healthcare reform, not cuts in basic security for Americans.

Other than our broken healthcare system, our structural problem is not 
so much deficits and debt as that the United States does not have a 
stable foundation for growth. In 2007, before the recession hit, annual 
deficits were down to less than 3 percent of GDP, a level that could 
easily be sustained indefinitely. This was despite the Bush 
administration’s two unfunded wars, tax cuts and a prescription drug 
benefit that wasn’t paid for (indeed, the Bush excesses and the Bush 
economic crash have contributed far more to the current national debt 
than anything Obama has done). But the low deficits reflected the 
growth, employment and consumption generated by the housing bubble. We 
can’t reinflate that bubble, and we shouldn’t want to. As discussed 
below, we need a different basis for growth.

The most damaging implication behind the call to balance our books now 
rather than get the economy moving is that it assumes the current 
recovery is adequate and that mass unemployment is the new normal. We 
will probably see a flood of articles by economists explaining that high 
unemployment is structural, and that workers don’t have the skills 
needed for the twenty-first-century economy. As New York Times columnist 
and economist Paul Krugman has written, this callous assumption is not 
only wrong; it condemns millions of people to joblessness and despair.

This election was fought over which candidate and which party would do 
better at producing jobs and growth. To turn to deficit reduction now 
would be a great betrayal. But it would not be the only one.

Chump Change

The grand bargain not only offers the wrong answer; it poses the wrong 
question. In Washington, the bargainers intone the same mantra: It is a 
time for shared sacrifice. Everything must be on the table, from 
Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security to tax hikes. We must all do our 
part.

The call for shared sacrifice makes no sense given that in recent 
decades, the rewards have not been shared. The middle class lost ground 
even before the Great Recession, while the wealthiest 1 percent pocketed 
about two-thirds of the rewards of growth. In the first year after the 
recession, the top 1 percent pocketed a staggering 93 percent of income 
growth, as the stock market roared back but housing values and wages did 
not. The pious summons to shared sacrifice violates both fairness and 
common sense. Worse, the focus is on programs for ordinary Americans and 
the vulnerable, not on the people who have made out like bandits. For 
example: our debt burden nearly doubled because Wall Street’s excesses 
blew up the economy and drove us into the deepest recession in 
seventy-five years. So you would think any discussion of how to reduce 
the deficit would start by demanding that Wall Street pay for the damage 
it caused. You would be wrong.

We are witnessing the worst inequality since the Gilded Age. The top 1 
percent of taxpayers pocket more income each year than the bottom 40 
percent, and they own more wealth than 90 percent of Americans. Yet 
their tax rates are near the lowest in post–World War II history. As 
billionaire investor Warren Buffett has noted—and as Mitt Romney has 
demonstrated with his 13.9 percent tax rate on $20 million in income—the 
richest Americans are often paying lower tax rates than their 
secretaries. You would think that any discussion of reducing deficits 
would begin with the assumption that there must be higher tax rates on 
millionaires and billionaires. You would be wrong.

Multinational corporations based in the United States pay among the 
lowest effective tax rates in the industrialized world. Many, like 
General Electric, earn billions in profits and pay nothing. Lower rates, 
corporate loopholes, offshore tax havens and transfer pricing have 
reduced the corporate share of federal tax revenues consistently since 
the 1950s. You would think that any discussion of reducing deficits 
would begin with a call for higher taxes on corporations and a clampdown 
on overseas tax havens. You would be wrong.

The military budget has doubled over the past decade, now exceeding what 
it was, in comparable dollars, at the height of the cold war. The United 
States and its NATO allies spend more on their militaries than the rest 
of the world combined. At the same time, domestic spending—with the 
temporary exception of Obama’s 2009 stimulus bill—has declined as a 
portion of the economy, despite a growing population and spreading 
poverty. The president brags that nonsecurity discretionary 
spending—everything outside the military and guaranteed programs like 
Social Security and Medicare—is projected to decline to levels not seen 
since the Eisenhower era. The result is a continued decline in public 
provision: decrepit sewers, airports and bridges; an outmoded electric 
grid; inadequate research and development; national parks in decline; 
infants without adequate nutrition; families without affordable shelter; 
glaringly inadequate investment in public education from pre-K to 
college. You would think the focus of any spending cuts would be on the 
military, not on domestic spending. You would be wrong.

Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, the pillars on which family 
security rests, are not generous. The average annual Social Security 
benefit is $14,800, sufficient only to put a minimal floor under 
seniors. The average 65-year-old couple on Medicare will spend an 
average of $230,000 out of pocket on healthcare over the course of their 
retirement years. Without Social Security, 14 million more elderly 
Americans would live in poverty; without Medicare, few would be able to 
afford medical expenses.

Americans want these programs protected. They are so popular that 
politicians in both parties vied during the election to show who would 
protect them the most. Republicans strafed Obama and the Democrats by 
falsely claiming that they cut $716 billion from Medicare to pay for 
Obamacare. Joe Biden guaranteed absolutely that an Obama presidency 
would not allow cuts in Social Security. In an election night poll by 
the Campaign for America’s Future with Democracy Corps, fully 79 percent 
of Americans—from across the political spectrum—stated that they would 
find unacceptable any deal that cut Medicare benefits; 62 percent 
opposed an agreement that would cut Social Security over time. You would 
think those programs would be off the table in any discussion. You would 
be wrong.

The Sting

The general frame for the grand bargain violates almost all these 
common-sense priorities. In Obama’s 2011 talks with Boehner, the 
president offered to trade cuts in Medicare and Social Security for a 
tax reform that lowered rates on the rich and corporations while closing 
loopholes and exemptions to generate more revenue. Any tax proposal to 
raise revenue that begins with cutting top rates deserves only scorn. As 
Romney demonstrated with his mathematically impossible tax proposal 
during the campaign, raising significant revenue by cutting rates and 
then closing loopholes isn’t easy. To gain enough revenue, popular 
middle-class deductions—for home mortgages or employer-provided 
healthcare—are likely to get hit. And of course, as we saw with the 
Reagan-era tax law, such reforms eliminate loopholes but not lobbies. 
Pretty soon, new loopholes are slipped in, while rates remain at the 
lower level. The overall result: a more regressive, unjust tax system.

How did politicians arrive at this bad bargain? The essential dynamic is 
that Democrats reward Republican intransigence with concessions. 
Republicans refuse to hike taxes, so to entice them, Democrats offer the 
crown jewels: Medicare and Social Security. Republicans still resist tax 
hikes, so the austerity crowd suggests “reform” that will in theory 
bring in more revenue while lowering tax rates. Behind this are the big 
money lobbies that rig the rules: the Wall Street bankers, CEOs and 
private equity vultures who want to protect the scandalously low tax 
rates they now enjoy. The result is the outline of a deal that betrays 
promises made on the campaign trail and compromises the historic 
legacies of the New Deal and the Great Society. And it does all this 
while addressing the wrong problem.

No Home to Go Back To

Last fall, as part of his comeback from the disastrous negotiations over 
the debt ceiling, President Obama put forth the American Jobs Act, 
calling for a $447 billion program that included $65 billion to rebuild 
schools and keep teachers on the job, $50 billion in infrastructure 
spending, an extension of the payroll tax cut and other measures. Senate 
majority leader Harry Reid offered to pay for it with a surtax on 
millionaires. This was a no-brainer, estimated to create another 1.9 
million jobs by 2013. Republicans blocked all but a few minor parts. 
Mysteriously, Obama walked away from his own plan, choosing not to make 
an issue of it during the campaign.

Many assume that the White House will seek to add some money for jobs in 
the coming grand bargain, as a sweetener for Democrats. But this economy 
needs far more than a short-term spending jolt. Although austerity and 
stimulus head in opposite directions, they share one assumption: that 
there will be a healthy economy to return to one day. Austerians would 
cut deficits and regulations. Stimularians would spend money and put 
people back to work. But the economy was not working for most Americans 
even before the Great Recession. The Bush years witnessed the first 
“recovery” in which most American households lost ground. Most real 
incomes went down, not up. The wealthiest few captured most of the 
rewards of growth. The middle class took on greater and greater debt 
simply to stay afloat.

The Excluded Alternative

The debate we should be having is about how to make the economy work for 
working people again, how to revive a broad middle class and make the 
American Dream more than a nostalgic fantasy. That would require both 
investments now in areas vital to our future and a fundamental change of 
course. It would include a strategy to revive domestic manufacturing and 
thus reduce the destabilizing trade deficits that have contributed to 
the global crisis. It would include an industrial policy designed to 
help the United States lead the new global green revolution. A serious 
long-term commitment to rebuild America would renovate our 
infrastructure to withstand the extreme weather that is already upon us. 
It would break up the big banks and shackle finance so that it serves, 
rather than threatens, the real economy. Measures to transform corporate 
governance, curb excessive executive compensation, and empower workers 
to organize and bargain collectively would help counter extreme inequality.

The new foundation would also require doing at least the basics in 
public education: universal preschool, small classes in the early years, 
greater rewards and respect for teachers, after-school programs, 
affordable college and advanced training. And of course it would feature 
progressive tax reform, compelling the wealthy and corporations to pay 
their fair share. It would continue healthcare reform and guarantee 
affordable care as a right for every citizen, not a privilege allowed 
only to those who can afford it. This requires taking on the most 
powerful and entrenched interests: multinationals that drive trade 
policy, Big Oil’s hold on energy policy, Wall Street’s grip on financial 
regulation, the military-industrial complex, the medical-industrial 
complex and more.

In the salad days of his presidency, Obama called for rebuilding the 
economy on a new foundation, not on the shifting sands of debt and 
bubbles. His recovery act, healthcare reform, Wall Street reforms and 
energy bill were first steps in that effort. But just as his premature 
turn to deficit reduction sabotaged the need to expand the initial 
recovery act, his turn now to a grand bargain will squelch any serious 
discussion of fundamental reforms.

Will Democratic legislators join Republicans in a danse macabre of 
austerity, accepting mass unemployment as the new normal? Will Democrats 
support a deal that cuts Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security while 
lowering tax rates on the rich and corporations? Will they embrace an 
austerity that makes vital public investments impossible? We’ve just 
completed a money-drenched election, and many Democratic officeholders 
will be tempted to curry favor with the deep pockets once more. But no 
one should be misled. Obama doesn’t have to run for 
re-election—legislators do. Voters want Medicare and Social Security 
protected, not cut. They want jobs and growth, not deficit reduction at 
the price of higher unemployment. Politicians who embrace such a deal 
may reap the whirlwind.

The battle lines are being drawn. The AFL-CIO, SEIU and AFSCME have 
announced labor’s opposition to cuts in entitlement programs and to 
continued tax cuts for the rich. Groups representing the base of the 
Democratic Party—from African-Americans to Latinos, women and the 
young—are lining up around a four-point program calling for jobs first; 
protecting Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security; letting the top-end 
Bush tax cuts expire; and protecting programs for the vulnerable.

Reaching no deal is preferable to a bad one that cuts entitlements. 
Going over the so-called fiscal cliff is perilous, but probably 
preferable to a bargain under the terms currently in play. With no 
agreement, the Bush tax cuts would expire. In January the Senate would 
immediately push to revive the lower rates for everyone but the top 2 
percent. Republicans could vote for tax cuts, but rates at the top would 
rise. The automatic spending cuts would not kick in immediately 
(although the stock market might feel the hit quickly). But the thing to 
remember about failure to reach a deal before January is that Medicare, 
Social Security and many programs for the most vulnerable are shielded 
from the cuts. And the new Congress would likely act rapidly to reverse 
the cuts to military and domestic spending. The already faltering 
recovery would surely weaken, threatening the loss of more jobs. But 
that might force Congress to address the real crisis—jobs and 
growth—rather than court a ruinous austerity.

Whatever the outcome, the battle is likely to be only the first skirmish 
of a defining struggle over the future of the Democratic Party and the 
progressive movement. We’ve just had what might be called the first of a 
new era of class-warfare elections. The plutocracy ran one of their own, 
on their agenda and with their money. The American people’s rejection of 
Mitt Romney, despite the lousy economy, demonstrated the declining 
appeal of the conservative, trickle-down agenda. The budget debate will 
draw battle lines within the Democratic Party, between the Wall 
Street–dominated New Democratic wing and the progressive wing fighting 
for the change this country desperately needs.

We are headed into a new era of upheaval. Our money-soaked politics may 
suffocate growing demands for change. But if Democratic legislators join 
the president in a grand betrayal, they may witness a powerful Tea Party 
movement from the left, as Republican legislators have from the right.

In our June 25 issue, Katrina vanden Heuvel joined Robert L. Borosage in 
laying out the principles of “A Politics for the 99 Percent [1].”
TAKE ACTION: Speak out against the Grand Bargain [2]

Links:
[1] http://www.thenation.com/article/168264/politics-99-percent
[2] http://www.thenation.com/blog/171278/no-grand-bargain
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