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How will the Nation’s Debt Impact future FAA funding?

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Presentation on theme: "How will the Nation’s Debt Impact future FAA funding?"— Presentation transcript:

1 How will the Nation’s Debt Impact future FAA funding?

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4 Why is our debt growing?  Population aging  More Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security spending  In this GAO projection – 73% of every tax dollar would go to Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and Interest payments

5 Source: CRS and OMB Mandatory Spending is Overwhelming the rest of the Budget

6 Fiscal Commission’s Report released 12/10 What have we done so far to reduce our Debt?

7  Debt Ceiling debate Summer of 2011  Budget Control Act passed Aug 2  Created a Congressional Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction - “Super Committee”  Super Committee to propose further deficit reduction, with a stated goal of achieving at least $1.5 trillion over 10 years  BCA has Statutory Caps for 2012 to 2021 – Security and Non Security  If Congress spends above caps – OMB identifies sequestration levels  Cuts $1.2 trillion in spending

8 This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly By Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff What is a Reasonable Debt level for a developed country? Spoiler Alert -- 60%

9 Need to Build on our Glossary of Terms Four Categories of Federal Debt (1) Gross Federal Debt – sum of debt held by the public and held by government accounts (intragovernmental debt). (2) Debt held by the Public – federal debt held by individuals, corporations, state or local governments, foreign governments and central banks. (3) Debt held by Government Accounts – debt owed by the federal government to itself – mostly by trust funding including Social Security and Medicare. (4) Debt subject to Statutory Debt Limit – debt guaranteed as to principal and interest by the US – for example, does not include TVA, Postal Service debt

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12  Point #1  Point #2  Point #3 Senate Budget Committee

13 Ben Bernanke is calling the end of ‘12 beginning of ‘13 a Fiscal Cliff because of multiple financial events:  expiration of the 2001/03/10 tax cuts,  winding down of certain jobs provisions,  $1.2 trillion across-the-board “sequester,”  immediate and steep reduction in Medicare physician payments (Doc Fix failed),  the end of current AMT patches, and  the need to once again raise the country’s debt ceiling. “ Together, these policies would reduce ten-year deficits by over $6.8 trillion relative to realistic current policy projections – enough to put the debt on a sharp downward path but in an extremely disruptive and unwise manner.” -- Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget “ Together, these policies would reduce ten-year deficits by over $6.8 trillion relative to realistic current policy projections – enough to put the debt on a sharp downward path but in an extremely disruptive and unwise manner.” -- Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget

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