CRFB.org. The Debt is On an Unsustainable Long-Term Path Source: CBO Current Law with War Drawdown Savings, CRFB calculations Current Law with War Drawdown.

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Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008 The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending Chapter 14 Government in America:
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Presentation transcript:

CRFB.org

The Debt is On an Unsustainable Long-Term Path Source: CBO Current Law with War Drawdown Savings, CRFB calculations Current Law with War Drawdown 77 Percent of GDP Percent of GDP Debt Held By the Public 1

CRFB.org Debt is Worse if Congress Does Not Pay For Changes Source: CBO, CRFB calculations 80 Percent of GDP Permanent Doc Fix Extension of Normal Tax Extenders and Refundable Tax Credits Debt Held By the Public Percent of GDP 2

CRFB.org Debt is Worse if Congress Does Not Pay For Changes Source: CBO, CRFB calculations 84 Percent of GDP Repeal of Future Sequester Cuts Percent of GDP Debt Held By the Public 3

CRFB.org Debt is Worse if Congress Does Not Pay For Changes Source: CBO, CRFB calculations 86 Percent of GDP Extension of Unemployment Benefits and Bonus Depreciation Percent of GDP Debt Held By the Public 4

CRFB.org The War Savings Gimmick Source: CBO, OMB Note: “War Spending” refers to OCO budget authority. CBO baseline maintains current war spending with inflation, while their “Troop Reduction Schedule” uses CBO’s drawdown of war spending assuming troop levels are reduced from 85,000 in 2013 to 30,000 by CBO assumes war spending will grow with inflation, rather than fall as intended Billions Increase Current War Spending With Inflation (CBO Baseline) CBO’s Troop Reduction Schedule President’s War Funding Levels 5

CRFB.org The War Gimmick Does Not Generate Real Savings “[R]eductions relative to the [CBO] baseline might simply reflect policy decisions that have already been made and that would be realized even without such funding constraints.” — Congressional Budget Office “Drawing down spending on wars that were already set to wind down and that were deficit financed in the first place should not be considered savings. When you finish college, you don’t suddenly have thousands of dollars a year to spend elsewhere — in fact, you have to find a way to pay back your loans.” — Maya MacGuineas, Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget “The savings from troop reductions in Iraq and Afghanistan do not represent actual savings.” — James Horney, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities “An honest budget cannot claim to save taxpayers’ dollars by cutting spending that was not requested and will not be spent.” — Chairman Paul Ryan, House Budget Committee 6

CRFB.org Small Phony War “Savings” Create a Huge Potential Slush Fund Source: CRFB calculations based on CBO and OMB data Note: Spending refers to budget authority. “Current War Spending, Inflated” refers to CBO’s current law baseline war budget authority. “Planned Troop Drawdown” uses CBO’s drawdown of war spending assuming troop levels are reduced from 85,000 in 2013 to 30,000 by $50 Billion in Phony Savings ~ $600 Billion Slush Fund Caps above intended spending do not create savings. They open the door to new costs. Billions 7

CRFB.org Timing Gimmick #1 – Savings Now Which Cost Later Source: Congressional Budget Office, 2/7/14 Pension smoothing would reduce deficits in early years but increase them over time Billions 8

CRFB.org Pension Smoothing Does Not Generate Real Savings “These are gimmicks, plain and simple...collecting more taxes now and less in taxes later doesn't help our bottom line.” — Maya MacGuineas, Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget “This proposed change in pension funding rules can’t ‘pay for’ anything. While it would raise money at first, it would lose money in later years.” — Chye-Ching Huang, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities “The proposal to ‘smooth’ pension contributions would merely shift tax revenue from the future into the present while destabilizing pensions even further and increasing the risks of a taxpayer pension bailout.” — Romina Boccia, Heritage Foundation “Such tactics mock the very idea of PAYGO. These are not offsets. They are charades.” — Bob Bixby, Concord Coalition 9

CRFB.org Timing Gimmick #2 – Shifting Savings Inside the Budget Window Source: Congressional Budget Office and CRFB staff calculations 10 Year Increase in Savings: $2.1 Billion 11th Year Cost: $2.1 Billion The “Pathway to SGR Reform Act” shifted $2 billion of the sequester from 2024 to 2023 Billions 10

CRFB.org Timing Gimmick #3: Temporary Savings, Permanent Costs Source: CRFB staff calculations based on CBO estimates. For simplicity, numbers exclude interest savings. Billions End of the 10-year budget window Costs Continue: ~ $10 bn/yr Debt Impact Using one-time savings to pay for a permanent tax cut will increase debt in future years Savings to the Federal Budget 10-Year Costs From a 1% Corporate Rate Cut: $113 billion 10-Year Savings from Repealing LIFO: $114 billion 11

CRFB.org The Harm in Offsetting 1 st -Year Costs with 10 th -Year Savings $25 billion costs $25 billion savings $8.4 billion interest Note: Graph assumes $25 billion in 2015 costs paid for with $25 billion of savings in 2024 Accrued interest from waiting 10 years could leave a third of a bill’s costs unpaid. Rising Costs from Accumulated Interest Billions 12

CRFB.org For More Information, Contact Stark Sutton at or