Awesome.  This is the kind of data-driven debate our country needs...

> Thus, nearly all of the deficit reduction in the CPC plan can be considered 
> to stem from a heavy dose of additional revenues, the vast majority of which 
> would be collected from high-income taxpayers and corporations.

You like this better, Billy? 

-- Ernie P.


http://www.bipartisanpolicy.org/blog/2012/03/congressional-progressive-caucus-fiscal-year-2013-budget-details

Congressional Progressive Caucus Fiscal Year 2013 Budget: The Details

Posted Mar. 26, 2012

How the CPC budget compares to that of Paul Ryan, President Obama & BPC's Debt 
Reduction Task Force

By Loren Adler and Shai Akabas

Today, the Congressional Progressive Caucus (CPC) released its vision for 
fiscal policy over the next ten years. This plan is the latest in a string of 
budget proposals for fiscal year (FY) 2013, and on this blog, we will continue 
to produce objective analyses as additional plans are put forward.

The CPC budget is entitled the Budget for All, and represents the ideas of a 
progressive Democratic coalition in the House of Representatives. The release 
follows President Obama’s budget submission and House Budget Committee Chairman 
Paul Ryan’s The Path to Prosperity, which has passed through his committee.

All three plans would stabilize the debt over the ten-year budget window 
(albeit at different levels), but they offer starkly different visions for 
federal taxing and spending policy. There are substantial ideological divides 
among the plans over the proper role for the federal government in society.

Although the CPC budget includes some spending cuts – primarily in the area of 
defense – they would be more than offset by additional deficit spending (i.e., 
tax cuts and spending increases that are intended to strengthen the sluggish 
economic recovery and repair the national infrastructure). Thus, nearly all of 
the deficit reduction in the CPC plan can be considered to stem from a heavy 
dose of additional revenues, the vast majority of which would be collected from 
high-income taxpayers and corporations.

As detailed in our explanation of Ryan’s budget, that plan takes the opposite 
approach. There is no deficit spending proposed for the near term. 
Additionally, since the budget specifies that revenues should remain at or near 
historic averages, the Ryan plan achieves all of its deficit reduction over the 
decade through aggressive spending cuts and reforms, with particular focus on 
Medicaid, low-income support programs, and annually appropriated domestic 
spending.

President Obama, House Republicans and the CPC should be commended for 
releasing proposals that seriously attempt to address the nation’s debt problem 
over the coming decade. Elements of each will be necessary to reach a grand 
bargain that places the country back on a sustainable fiscal track.

Below is an objective analysis of the CPC’s proposed budget. As with our 
analysis of Chairman Ryan’s budget, this post will focus heavily on the 
ten-year budget window. Although it is critical to understand the long-term 
effects of major policies included in any debt reduction plan, significant 
uncertainty in projections and lack of specificity in policies make concrete 
scoring beyond the first decade extremely difficult for these packages.

Debt, Spending, and Revenues

The CPC’s budget, in a similar manner to Ryan’s, would reduce the size of the 
debt as a percentage of our economy, or gross domestic product (GDP), to 62 
percent by 2022. Notably, this is lower than the debt levels achieved by either 
the Bipartisan Policy Center’s (BPC) Domenici-Rivlin or the Bowles-Simpson 
commissions (both of which reduce the debt to 67 percent of GDP by 2022), and 
significantly lower than the debt level in 2022 under the president’s budget 
proposal for FY 2013 (76 percent) or the BPC Plausible Baseline* (86 percent).

The chart below illustrates the revenue and spending levels achieved in 2022 by 
each major budget plan.


To view and share a larger version of the graph above, click here.


To view and share a larger version of the graph above, click here.

Debt Ceiling

The CPC budget would necessitate an increase of the debt ceiling by roughly 
$5.5 trillion through 2022 – an identical amount to that required by the Ryan 
budget. The president’s plan includes a somewhat higher level of overall debt 
in the year 2022, and so the requisite increase would be roughly $3 trillion 
greater for his proposal over the same horizon.

Growth Initiatives through Deficit Spending

The CPC proposes to allocate substantial funds to initiatives intended to grow 
the economy and increase domestic investment. Some of these proposals have been 
circulating for the past few years, and President Obama included many of them 
in his American Jobs Act (and subsequently, in his FY 2013 budget). They 
include both targeted tax cuts and spending increases, totaling roughly $450 
billion over the decade, according to the CPC. Below is a sample of the 
proposals:

        • Create an infrastructure bank to attract private investment and 
facilitate private-public partnerships (details unspecified).
        • Extend the Making Work Pay tax credit through 2015.
        • Implement the Emergency Jobs to Restore the American Dream Act, which 
includes (among other proposals) the School and Park Improvement Corps for 
rehabilitation projects, the Student Jobs Corps for college students seeking 
part-time work-study positions, and the Neighborhood Heroes Corps to employ 
teachers, firefighters, and police officers.
        • Enact a temporary 10-percent tax credit for new jobs and wage 
increases.
        • Enact tax credits for investment in advanced energy manufacturing, 
for the production of advanced technology vehicles and alternative-fuel 
commercial vehicles, and for investment in American manufacturing communities.
        • Double the allowed amount of expensed start-up expenditures.
        • Expand capital access for entrepreneurs and small businesses.
Health Care

One significant health care proposal from the CPC is to add a public option for 
the under-65 insurance market. Many progressives had been pushing to include 
this in the Affordable Care Act (ACA), but it was not in the final version of 
the bill. The public option is projected by the Congressional Budget Office to 
save $104 billion over the decade.

In addition, a number of other health policies are recommended in the budget:

        • Give the federal government the ability to negotiate drug prices for 
Medicare Part D with pharmaceutical manufacturers, as is already done in the 
Department of Veterans Affairs. This is projected to save the federal 
government $157 billion in the 10-year window, and also may have the effect of 
lowering drug costs for seniors.
        • Grant states waivers to set up single payer health programs.
        • Adopt policies from President Obama’s budget to increase the 
accessibility and affordability of generic prescription drugs.
        • Reduce Medicaid waste, fraud, and abuse, and close a provision in the 
tax code that allows some self-employed individuals to avoid paying full 
Medicare payroll taxes by routing their income through an S corporation.
        • End the tax deductability of marketing junk food and fast food to 
children.
Finally, the CPC budget would prevent the 27-percent cut to physicians’ 
payments under Medicare that is scheduled to be imposed in calendar year 2013. 
This automatic cut resulting from the sustainable growth rate (SGR) mechanism 
installed in the 1990s has been avoided in recent years by providing offsetting 
deficit reduction – referred to as the “doc fix.” CPC includes and fully pays 
for this “doc fix” over 10 years, preventing the physician payment cut.


To view and share a larger version of the graph above, click here.

Social Security

Over five years, the CPC budget would phase out the cap (or taxable maximum) 
for employees and employers on Social Security payroll taxes. This means that 
instead of current law, under which each party pays 6.2 percent only on income 
up to $110,100, both employees and employers would pay the 6.2 percent on all 
taxable income. Due to the Social Security benefit calculation formula, those 
who pay additional taxes under this proposal would receive higher benefits upon 
retirement. This policy is projected to raise $1.4 trillion for the Trust Fund 
over 10 years, and would extend the solvency of the program.

Revenue Policies

The CPC budget proposes significant changes to the individual income tax code 
that would markedly increase progressivity. The wealthy would be asked to pay 
significantly more than they do today. The Caucus also would make adjustments 
to the corporate tax and institute additional revenue-raising measures, 
detailed below.

One unquestionably positive aspect to the proposal is the specific and detailed 
listing of the particular policies that CPC supports. In addition to provisions 
that would cost money, such as rate cuts and increases in credits or subsides, 
the budget enumerates the (potentially less popular) changes that would raise 
revenues.

On the other hand – regardless of one’s views on the total revenue take for the 
federal government and how the tax burden should be distributed – because much 
of the complexity in the individual income tax code would remain in place and 
the corporate rate would remain uncompetitively high, many observers would not 
consider it to be a comprehensive tax reform plan.

The following are some of the revenue proposals in the budget. For a complete 
list, please refer to the document itself (pp. 5-8):

Individual

        • Allow the upper-income (often referred to as the “Bush”) tax cuts to 
expire at the end of this year, raising the top two individual rates from 33 
and 35 percent to 36 and 39.6 percent, respectively. The current reduced rates 
are extended for all other taxpayers until 2017, when the 28-percent rate is 
returned to 31 percent. Lastly, in 2019, the 25-percent bracket would sunset, 
and those income levels would be subject to the 28-percent rate.
        • Maintain a number of the smaller provisions (mostly credits) from the 
2001, 2003, and 2010 tax cut laws, as well as the boosted refundable credits 
currently in place from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA, or 
the “stimulus”), including the American Opportunity Tax Credit for college 
expenses.
        • Keep the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT), but “patch” it for inflation. 
The patch is fully paid for over the decade at a cost of roughly $1 trillion.
        • Tax individual income over $1 million at significantly increased 
rates, ranging from 45 percent for income up to $10 million to 49 percent for 
income over $1 billion.
        • Adopt a 0.5-percent surcharge on income over $10 million, phased in 
over the next five years.
        • Tax capital gains and qualified dividends as ordinary income. With 
top tax rates being raised to nearly 50 percent, this represents a substantial 
change from current preferential tax treatment (both are taxed uniformly at 15 
percent). Under President Reagan’s 1986 tax reform, however, investment income 
was similarly taxed as ordinary income, albeit at a top rate of 28 percent. The 
step-up basis of capital gains at death would be eliminated, as well.
        • Set exemption level for the estate tax at $2.5 million (or $5 million 
for couples) and tax assets above that at progressive rates up to 65 percent. 
For context, the estate tax has a $5 million exemption in 2012 with a top rate 
for taxing assets above that set at 35 percent, and under current law for 2013, 
the exemption will revert back to $1 million with a top rate of 55 percent – a 
significant increase in the estate tax. The CPC proposal would exempt more 
taxpayers than under 2013 current law (i.e., those with assets between $1 
million and $2.5 million), but impose higher rates on estates above the 
exemption level.
        • Cap the benefit of itemized deductions at 28 percent, as President 
Obama has proposed previously. This would be accompanied by eliminating the 
mortgage interest deduction for second homes and yachts. Combined, these 
policies are projected to save nearly $500 billion over 10 years.
        • Replace the tax exclusion for interest on state and local bonds with 
a direct subsidy to the issuer of 15 percent for the interest paid on those 
bonds. This would remove the advantage from the taxpayer/investor, but save 
money for all levels of government (including close to $200 billion projected 
for the federal government over the decade). At the same time, behavioral 
impacts from this change could reduce the demand for municipal bonds, making it 
more difficult for state and local governments to finance operations.
Corporate

        • Eliminate preferences in the code for oil, gas, and coal companies. 
This is projected to save $25 billion over the decade.
        • Levy a “Financial Crisis Responsibility Fee” – a small tax – on large 
banks with more than $50 billion in assets to collect $90 billion over the 
10-year budget window.
        • Enact a “Wall Street Gaming Tax” on derivatives, credit default 
swaps, and other types of transactions. (See the CPC budget for rates and 
additional details.) The tax is projected to raise $850 billion over the decade.
        • Institute a carbon tax on polluters at $20 per ton, and increasing by 
5.6 percent annually. One quarter of the revenues would be rebated to hold low- 
and middle-income families harmless. Post rebate, the tax is projected to raise 
nearly $900 billion over the decade.
        • Close additional corporate tax loopholes and preferences.
        • Enhance and make permanent the research and experimentation tax 
credit.
        • Adopt the international tax reforms in President Obama’s FY 2013 
budget. (For specific proposals, see pp. 203-204 of Analytical Perspectives 
from the Office of Management and Budget.)
Discretionary Spending

First, the CPC budget reverses all of the cuts enacted in the Budget Control 
Act (BCA) for both defense and non-defense spending. Both the automatic 
sequester cuts and the original caps on discretionary spending are waived.

On top of reversing those cuts, the CPC’s budget proposes substantial increases 
to domestic and international affairs spending, totaling $1.75 trillion over 
the next 10 years. However, exactly how much of the increase is dedicated to 
annually appropriated budget programs versus mandatory spending is unclear. 
Some of this would come in the form of short-term stimulus spending, as 
described in the Growth Initiatives section above, but the large majority would 
serve to increase the government’s commitment to low-income support programs, 
education, international development, veterans’ benefits and services, 
community development and housing assistance, and research on energy, health 
care, science, and the environment.


To view and share a larger version of the graph above, click here.

Alternatively, defense spending would be cut even deeper than it is scheduled 
to be under the BCA’s sequester, predominantly through a large reduction in 
force structure, private contractors, and the procurement and updating of 
weapons systems. Moreover, the CPC’s budget would eliminate all funding for any 
operation in Iraq or Afghanistan after FY 2013. For reference, the president’s 
budget, BPC’s Domenici-Rivlin, and Bowles-Simpson budget for spending of 
roughly $40 billion annually on these operations through the latter half of the 
decade.

Other Mandatory Spending

        • The CPC’s budget, similar to the president’s, proposes to move 
transportation funding from the discretionary (annually appropriated) pot to 
the mandatory side of the ledger. Additionally, the CPC would enact Obama’s FY 
2012 $556 billion six-year surface transportation reauthorization proposal, 
which would increase transportation funding by $241 billion over ten years. 
This proposal includes $50 billion of “up-front” spending aimed at boosting the 
sluggish economy, and $71 billion directed to the Federal Highway 
Administration to rebuild roads and bridges.
        • The plan would increase funds for many mandatory spending programs, 
such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP, or food stamps), 
Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF), and the Food and Nutrition 
Service. The total amount (for mandatory programs, as opposed to annually 
appropriated ones) and the amounts of the individual increases are unspecified.
        • The CPC budget calls for a reduction in agriculture subsides through 
adoption of the relevant proposals in President Obama’s FY 2013 budget.
        • The CPC proposes to reform unemployment insurance to make the program 
solvent and more robust. (A detailed description and rationale for the proposal 
can be found here.)
Miscellaneous

        • The plan lends support for comprehensive immigration reform (details 
unspecified).
        • The CPC would establish public financing of elections (details 
unspecified).
        • The CPC budget endorses write-downs on mortgage principal amounts for 
struggling homeowners (details unspecified).
* BPC’s Plausible Baseline assumes:

        • The 2001, 2003, and 2010 tax cuts are extended permanently.
        • The AMT is indexed to inflation.
        • Medicare physician payment rates are frozen at 2012 levels (the “doc 
fix”).
        • The Budget Control Act’s sequester does not take effect.
        • The number of troops deployed for overseas contingency operations is 
reduced to 45,000 by 2015.
Related Posts

        • Chairman Ryan’s Fiscal Year 2013 Budget: The Details, March 21, 2012
        • The Debt Ceiling Slouches Toward 2012, February 24, 2012
        • The Twelve Takeaways from CBO’s 2012 Budget and Economic Outlook, 
February 10, 2012
Debt Reduction Task Force


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