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- <text id=93TT1766>
- <title>
- May 24, 1993: Budget Battle: Clinton vs. Kasich
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- May 24, 1993 Kids, Sex & Values
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ESSAY, Page 88
- Budget Battle: Clinton vs. Kasich
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Michael Kinsley
- </p>
- <p> John Kasich is a personable youngish Republican Congressman
- from Ohio and the ranking Republican on the House Budget Committee.
- He's been getting favorable attention lately for an alternative
- he has produced to President Clinton's budget plan. Pundits
- note with respect that Kasich's plan is 80 pages long, which
- is the main fact they seem to have absorbed about it. That,
- plus Kasich's claim to reduce the deficit by as much as Clinton
- proposes over five years, only with no tax increase, with half
- the cuts in defense that Clinton is proposing, and (Look Ma,
- no hands!) without touching the sacrosanct Social Security.
- </p>
- <p> For 12 years Republicans have been repeating their mantra--"The problem isn't that taxes are too low; the problem is that
- spending is too high"--without actually proposing enough real
- spending cuts to bring the deficit under control. President
- Reagan never did. President Bush never did. Is Kasich the man
- to make an honest woman at last of the G.O.P.? Skeptics have
- claimed for years that you can't cure the deficit without demanding
- significant sacrifice from the great middle class. Has Kasich
- discovered a budgetary philosophers' stone?
- </p>
- <p> Problem No. 1 with the Kasich plan is that the Republican leaders
- don't really endorse it. They use it to beat Clinton over the
- head. However, "Endorse it? No," says Kasich's press secretary,
- modestly. "We've never asked them to." How convenient. But as
- long as they're allowing themselves deniability over the unpleasant
- details, the Republicans cannot claim to have met Clinton's
- challenge to put up or shut up about his own deficit-reduction
- plan.
- </p>
- <p> Problem No. 2 is that Kasich's plan at best only equals Clinton's
- in deficit reduction over five years. So forget all that G.O.P.
- talk--correct talk--that Clinton's plan doesn't cut the
- deficit enough. In fact, Kasich's fifth-year projected deficit
- is $228 billion, compared with Clinton's $198 billion. That
- means in later years, when deficits are projected to increase
- again anyway, Kasich's deficits would be larger still.
- </p>
- <p> Then there is the old blue-smoke-and-mirrors problem. To be
- sure, there are magic tricks in Clinton's plan too. For example,
- the President claims $15 billion-plus to be saved over five
- years in unspecified work-force and administrative cost reductions.
- But Kasich claims to save more than $70 billion by cutting "bureaucracy"
- and "overhead." Exactly how, pray tell? Says the Kasich plan,
- piously: "It is not the role of Congress to micromanage the
- administrative functions of Executive Branch agencies." Oh,
- that explains it.
- </p>
- <p> Keep in mind that these huge but unspecified bureaucratic savings
- are supposedly after programs identified as "wasteful" have
- been eliminated or cut. Other Kasich "cuts," such as $6.8 billion
- in sewage-treatment grants, simply transfer costs to state and
- local governments, which will have to raise taxes or increase
- their own deficits to cover them.
- </p>
- <p> The Kasich plan eliminates all the new spending proposed by
- Clinton, including items Republicans claim to be for--or at
- least lack the guts to say they're against, such as more money
- for vaccinating children. Do Republicans now oppose the increases
- in infrastructure spending (fixing our crumbling roads and bridges)
- scheduled by President Bush, which Clinton would keep and Kasich
- would cut? Are they now against increasing the earned-income
- tax credit--a tax break for the working poor they have long
- claimed to favor? Do they really wish to go on record opposing
- expansion of Head Start (which reaches only a third of the youngsters
- who qualify for it)?
- </p>
- <p> Kasich brags about raising Medicare premiums for folks with
- incomes over $100,000. Hot stuff--about $7 billion. Not so
- prominently advertised is almost $19 billion in increased costs
- to Medicare patients of all income levels for lab tests and
- the use of nursing homes. To put that number in perspective,
- Clinton proposes to raise $21 billion by reducing the Social
- Security exclusion from the income tax--only for incomes over
- $32,000 a couple--and the Republicans tar that as an unbearable
- burden on the elderly. And how about this half-a-billion dollar
- cut I see in prison construction? Doesn't bother me. But doesn't
- it bother them?
- </p>
- <p> Is there, in the contrast between these two budgets, even the
- germ of a legitimate debate about the proper role of government
- in our society? Well, yes. Kasich grasps a few nettles Clinton
- avoids for fear of offending Democratic interest groups. For
- example, he gets $6.2 billion from limiting the Davis-Bacon
- Act, which is beloved by unions because it inflates wages on
- federal construction contracts. On the other hand, he is no
- more courageous than Clinton in taking on America's ludicrous
- farm subsidies. Could that be because farmers tend to vote Republican?
- </p>
- <p> Clinton cuts foreign aid $4.7 billion. Kasich cuts it $13.6
- billion. Clinton freezes subsidies to the arts. Kasich slices
- them in half. He also kills all mass-transit operating subsidies
- and other subsidies to railroads and airports. By eliminating
- all Clinton's tax increases, he gives the typical median-income
- household an annual break of $173 and the typical $200,000-plus
- household a break of $23,750.
- </p>
- <p> The real lesson of Kasich's budget plan is that you can indeed
- cut spending more than President Clinton has proposed--but
- not without taking more political heat than the Republicans
- have shown an interest in taking. By all means, let's have a
- serious debate about the role of government. Bob Dole can kick
- it off by endorsing the Kasich plan in all its glorious detail.
- I really hope he does. In fact, I dare him.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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