There's lots to hate, but that's why it is admirable: at least he puts out a 
stake in the ground that mostly achieves his goals. 

I would love to see a liberal response as honest about how much taxes and debt 
they'd accept to achieve their goals...

E

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Ryan Reprise: House Budget Committee Chairman Releases New Budget

March 20, 2012
Fiscal Plans
House of Representatives

This morning, House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) presented the 
House Republican budget, one that is similar to last year’s budget resolution 
but contains some key differences. In an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal, Rep. 
Ryan billed his plan as “reforming and modernizing government to prevent an 
explosion of debt from crippling our nation and robbing our children of their 
future.” In a press release today, CRFB agreed that in terms of overall fiscal 
impact, it was “an impressive achivement.”

Overall, according to the budget, debt as a percent of GDP would fall to 62 
percent of GDP in 2022 (compared to 85 percent in the CRFB Realistic baseline). 
Spending would come down to 20 percent of GDP in that year, while revenue would 
remain on its current (2001/2003 tax cuts-extended) path at 18.7 percent of GDP.

 
The most visible and controversial component of last year’s budget — turning 
Medicare into a premium support system—returns in an altered form. As expected, 
the plan is more similar to the Ryan-Wyden or Coburn-Burr premium support 
proposals than last year’s plan. In this budget, traditional Medicare is kept 
as an option to compete with private plans and Medicare spending per 
beneficiary growth is held to GDP plus 0.5 percent instead of inflation. Also, 
the start date is pushed back to 2023 to ensure that people over age 55 would 
not be affected. In the op-ed, Rep. Ryan contrasts his plan with the 
Independent Payment Advisory Board, the 15-member board that is charged with 
making recommendations to hold Medicare spending growth to GDP plus one percent 
— a board that the House (and the budget) is looking to repeal.

Fiscal Parameters in the Ryan Budget (Billions)   2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2013-2022 Spending $3,624 $3,530 $3,476 $3,536 $3,690 
$3,824 $3,977 $4,199 $4,409 $4,605 $4,888 $40,135 Revenue $2,444 $2,734 $2,980 
$3,232 $3,449 $3,642 $3,811 $3,986 $4,184 $4,388 $4,601 $37,008 Deficits $1,180 
$797 $496 $304 $241 $182 $166 $213 $225 $217 $187 $3,127                        
   Debt (% GDP) 73.2% 77.0% 77.6% 75.3% 72.7% 70.4% 68.4% 66.7% 65.1% 63.5% 
62.3% N/A
 

One intriguing part of the budget was speculation about what level they would 
set for discretionary spending and how they would deal with the sequester. On 
the second question, they would replace one year of the sequester ($78 billion) 
with reconciliation instructions to the committees to save $260 billion over 
ten years. On the first question, they would replace the BCA caps with new caps 
that would have lower spending levels.

On tax reform, the budget reduces tax rates to 10 and 25 percent, down from the 
six brackets with a top rate of 35 percent today. The plan would also repeal 
the AMT, reduce the corporate tax rate from 35 to 25 percent, and switch to a 
territorial system. Although the document states that the reform plan would be 
revenue-neutral, no specific base-broadening measures have been named; at first 
look, it would seem that reform with these parameters would require eliminating 
virtually all tax expenditures.

In terms of other spending measures, the budget would block grant Medicaid, 
SNAP (food stamps), and other low-income programs and limit their growth. Also, 
it would enact medical malpractice reform, increase Medicare Part B and D 
premiums for high earners, reduce and reform Pell Grants, consolidate the many 
job training programs that currently exist, privatize Fannie Mae and Freddie 
Mac, reduce farm subsidies, reduce federal workforce costs, and repeal the 
Dodd-Frank Act. The budget repeals the Affordable Care Act’s coverage 
provisions, but it keeps the Medicare cuts (besides IPAB) and appears to keep 
the tax increases as well.

CBO’s report on the long-term impact of Rep. Ryan’s proposal—which essentially 
takes the spending and revenue levels that he and his staff have 
specified—shows that his plan would halt spending growth, especially in health 
care programs, and it would put debt on a path to be paid off around 2050. 
Revenue would be capped at 19 percent of GDP while spending would be projected 
to fall to about 15.5 percent by mid-century.

Although the plan contains many constructive proposals, it also appears to 
contain some gimmicks or magic asterisks. First, it looks as if it would repeal 
the sequester for only one year, leaving it in place for the remaining years 
despite their intention to repeal it entirely. Second, it either assumes no doc 
fix (which would result in a Medicare physician payments by 27 percent at the 
end of the year) or assumes it is offset. Adding in the rest of the sequester 
repeal and the doc fix would add (including interest) about $1.4 trillion to 
ten-year deficits.

Adjustments to the Numbers in the Ryan Budget (billions)   2013 2014 2015 2016 
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2013-2022 Old Deficits $797 $496 $304 $241 $182 
$166 $213 $225 $217 $287 $3,127 Sequester $21 $72 $93 $101 $104 $106 $105 $105 
$105 $94 $904 Doc Fix $11 $18 $21 $24 $26 $28 $31 $34 $37 $41 $271 Interest $0 
$2 $4 $8 $14 $21 $29 $37 $45 $53 $214 New Deficits $828 $588 $422 $375 $327 
$321 $378 $401 $404 $475 $4,520                         Old Debt (% GDP) 77.0% 
77.6% 75.3% 72.7% 70.4% 68.4% 66.7% 65.1% 63.5% 62.3% N/A New Debt (% GDP) 
77.2% 78.3% 76.6% 74.7% 73.0% 71.6% 70.6% 69.6% 68.6% 68.0% N/A
 

As with last year’s budget, Chairman Ryan deserves a lot of credit for his 
proposals to get spending under control over the long-term. Even taking out any 
claimed savings from no doc fixes and leaving in the sequester, the House 
Republican budget still looks better than most other prominent plans out there 
by putting debt on a clear downward path — a very encouraging element of the 
plan.

(via Instapaper)



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