podesta-emails
[big campaign] New Huff Post from Creamer- Deficit Hawks Have Amnesia
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“Deficit Hawks” Have Amnesia
Yesterday, the Co-Chairs of the Bi-Partisan Commission on the Deficit
proposed a package of dramatic cuts in government expenditures and changes in
the tax code that they said were meant as “shock therapy” to force
attention onto the growing Federal deficit.
The implication is that putting the Federal Deficit represents a massive,
intractable crisis – a national emergency that requires all of us to
sacrifice. For many “deficit hawks” the federal deficit has morphed into an
enemy that threatens the nation like a foreign army. They claim that victory
in their war on the deficit requires “shared sacrifice” -- that “we”
simply cannot afford to continue on the current path to fiscal perdition.
These people have lost their memories. They seem to have forgotten what
caused the deficit. And they have certainly forgotten that we know how to
eliminate the deficit without making the middle class pay the bill.
Recall that just ten years ago, at the end of the Clinton Administration,
the Federal budget was generating a long-term surplus. It was in the
black as far as the eye could see. The big question of the day was, “what do
we do with the surplus?”
Then George Bush and the Republicans in Congress systematically eliminated
the surplus and replaced it with budgets that generated more debt in eight
years than all of the debt generated by all of the Presidents before him.
How?
· They passed the Bush tax cuts, with the lion’s share of benefit
going to millionaires and billionaires. Who wouldn’t gladly pay the tax
rates of the 1990’s today and experience the benefit of the economy of the
late 1990’s?
· They initiated two wars that were paid for entirely with borrowed
money. These two wars alone account for 25% of the accumulated deficit
since 2000.
· They allowed Wall Street to wreck the economy and cause the
greatest economic disaster since the Great Depression. That caused tax revenue
to the Government to collapse, and required massive federal spending to
prevent the economy from going into free fall.
Please note that none of the factors that caused the Federal deficit
involved profligate spending by middle class Americans – or senior citizens.
In fact, during this same period the incomes of middle class Americans
shrunk and those of the very wealthy continued to soar.
In fact, earlier in the week it was announced that many of the big Wall
Street Banks will give record bonuses to their traders and CEO’s. Yet,
yesterday the Chairs of the Bi-Partisan Deficit Commission proposed that to deal
with our “fiscal problems” we should reduce the incomes of seniors
citizens on Social Security, make cuts in Medicare, cut veteran’s health care and
take innumerable other steps to reduce the living standards of the middle
class.
Then you hear some of the network commentators – all of whom make very
comfortable incomes (some in the multi-million dollar range) pontificating
about how seniors with an average income of $15,000 to $18,000 a year should
take a twenty or thirty percent cut in Social Security to solve our
long-term deficit crisis. How outrageous.
Time for us to remember seven key facts about the deficit debate:
Social Security has nothing to do with the deficit. The Social Security
program generates a surplus and will do so for many decades to come. To
assure its long-term solvency, all that is needed is to require that the
wealthy are subject to the same Social Security tax on all of their income –
like most everyday Americans.
The budget deficit debate is not mainly about numbers and budgets – it’s
about who gets what. For two decades the incomes of middle class Americans
have stagnated. The share of income and wealth in the hands of the top
two percent of the population is at its highest levels since 1928. Federal
budgets should be aimed at increasing the share of national income that goes
to the middle class and reducing the share going to millionaires and
billionaires.
The budget debate is not just about policies and programs. It’s about
right and wrong. Fixing the budget does not require “shared sacrifice.” It
requires that the millionaires who had the economic party for the last
decade – and whose greed caused the financial collapse -- be required to pick up
the tab. The middle class did not benefit from the Republican economic
policies that lead to the current deficit – they were the victims.
Fixing the Federal deficit is not an end in itself. The goal of budget
policy should be to assure long-term – widely shared – economic growth.
That requires more Federal stimulus now – to fill the deficit that is really
dangerous to America – the “Demand Deficit,” George Bush left President
Obama a three trillion dollar deficit in economic demand that resulted in
massive unemployment. Idle workers, plants and equipment are the real danger
for our economy, because they represented wasted output that will never be
recovered. The goods and services that they fail to produce directly
reduce the store of our country’s wealth.
The primary goal of our budget policy must be to get people back to work
by generating economic demand so they will produce more wealth.
And sustained, long-term economic demand requires that we end the
long-term trend of concentrating more and more wealth in the hands of the rich and
less and less in the hand of the middle class that will then buy the
products and services that will sustain long-term economic growth.
Those who argue that we can’t “afford” to maintain Social Security and
Medicare are flat wrong. We can’t afford not to.
First, from a purely economic standpoint reducing the standard of living
for senior citizens – or future retirees – will make our long-term economic
prospects worse – not better. Our problem is how to provide a larger
share of income to the middle class, not less.
Second, from a moral standpoint, it is ridiculous. We can’t afford
$14,000 in Social Security for a retired widow, but we can afford to allow the
barons of Wall Street to take home hundred million dollar bonuses?
Cuts in Medicare do nothing to reduce health care costs. They just shift
who pays. Increasing co-payment for Medicare is not the same thing as “
reducing health care costs.” To reduce health care costs you have to reduce
the cost of providing the services by providers.
There are obvious solutions to reduce the Federal deficit that benefit the
middle class. Here’s a start:
· Over the next several years we need to completely end the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan that have been such a drain on our nation’s wealth.
· We can end many of the “defense” contracts that are simply
boondoggles – such as the “star wars” missile defense program. It’s time to
end the programs aimed at defending America against the Soviet Union that
collapsed two decades ago.
· We must reject the Republican proposal to give a new $700 billion
tax break to the wealthy.
· We should increase job creation spending now and put the middle
class back to work. That will do more to generate long-term growth in
revenue over the long run than any other single policy.
· We should guarantee that millionaires pay the same tax rates for
Social Security and Medicare as the middle class.
· We should change the tax code to subject “capital gains” –
virtually all of which goes to the wealthy – to the same tax rates as income
earned by people who work for a living.
And finally, we need to remember that the idea of fixing the Federal
budget is to help create prosperity for us all – not austerity for the middle
class.
Robert Creamer is a long-time political organizer and strategist, and
author of the book: Stand Up Straight: How Progressives Can Win, available on
_Amazon.com._
(http://www.amazon.com/Listen-Your-Mother-Straight-Progressives/dp/0979585295/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1213241439&sr=8-1)
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