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- <text id=93TT0481>
- <title>
- Nov. 08, 1993: Remember The Deficit?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 08, 1993 Cloning Humans
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ECONOMY, Page 39
- Remember The Deficit?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>While the White House nibbles at it, there are others who would
- rather take a real whack
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD LACAYO--Reported by Wendy Cole/New York and Adam Zagorin/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Congress was just days away from its August vote on his deficit-reduction
- package and Bill Clinton, still a few votes shy of victory,
- was working the phones, pleading with wavering members of the
- House. When he put in his call to Representative Timothy Penny,
- a Minnesota Democrat who wanted deeper cuts than the White House
- plan of $496 billion over five years, Clinton got right to the
- point. Not only would he propose more reductions in the fall,
- the President promised, but he would welcome proposals from
- Congress for further cuts. "This is just the first step," Clinton
- assured him.
- </p>
- <p> When the White House took the second step last week, it barely
- toddled forward. At a press conference, Clinton outlined what
- he said was an additional $30 billion in budget trims over the
- next five years, an estimate that Administration experts quickly
- admitted might be too large by half. Either way, a good chunk
- of the savings--about $10 billion--would be achieved through
- Vice President Al Gore's plans for "reinventing government"
- and reducing its cost. Gingerly picking through programs like
- the much ridiculed support payments for mohair-goat herders
- would yield an additional $1 or $2 billion.
- </p>
- <p> Was that the whole thing? Deficit reduction on that order is
- how the national debt grew from $994 billion when Reagan came
- into office to $4.4 trillion when Clinton arrived. Though the
- White House also announced last week that this year's deficit
- will add just $255 billion--not the $322 billion the CBO predicted
- in January--even that figure amounts to an uncomfortable 4.1%
- of gross domestic product. So Penny has taken Clinton at his
- word about welcoming more input from Congress. He and Ohio Republican
- John Kasich are sponsoring a proposal for $103 billion in further
- cuts over five years. In the Senate, Bob Kerrey of Nebraska,
- who gave Clinton his one-vote margin of victory on the budget,
- is trying to patch together a $100 billion deficit-cutting plan.
- </p>
- <p> Give them all credit for taking on a thankless task. The Penny-Kasich
- House version includes a politically risky reduction of Medicare
- payments for recipients who earn $75,000 or more in adjusted
- gross income. Penny can afford the risk--he has already announced
- that this will be his last term in the House. And Kerrey, who
- has no plans for retirement soon, knows what he's up against.
- "I could walk into the Senate with a headband in Japanese lettering,
- salute the Emperor and go to my death offering major deficit
- reduction," he laments. Should a ceremonial sword be the prize
- for lawmakers who dare to give voters what voters claim to want?
- </p>
- <p> However imprecise his budgetary math, Ross Perot can be credited
- with getting people to think seriously about deficit cutting.
- Even more earnest thinking is now coming from the Concord Coalition,
- a year-old group headed by three men safely out of the Election
- Day line of fire: Nixon-era Commerce Secretary Pete Peterson
- and two ex-Senators, Warren Rudman of New Hampshire and Paul
- Tsongas of Massachusetts, whose presidential campaign peaked
- on the eat-your-spinach message that everyone must sacrifice
- to bring the deficit down. Claiming 100,000 followers in 50
- states, they aim to make it easier for politicians to make painful
- budget cuts by educating voters as to why they must grin and
- bear it. Or as Tsongas puts it: "Congress will do what is courageous
- when it is no longer courageous [to do it]."
- </p>
- <p> Their message is short and sharp. The deficit is a powerful
- drag on the economy, they say, that will require a radical retrenchment
- on the entitlements--mostly Social Security, Medicare and
- farm-support payments--that make up more than half of all
- federal spending. In a new book, Facing Up: How to Rescue the
- Economy from Crushing Debt & Restore the American Dream, Peterson
- holds out the bitter pill. "We can't do it without the middle
- class and we can't do it without going at entitlements head-on."
- </p>
- <p> The Concord jeremiad goes this way. Even if Clinton's original
- budget package had passed unchanged, by 1997 the deficit would
- be just $140 billion lower than what it otherwise would have
- been. After that it would rise again rapidly, reaching $465
- billion by 2004, about 4.6% of that year's projected GDP. The
- President's deficit-reduction plan fell short because its main
- element was a tax increase on a sliver of American households--the 1.2% earning about $180,000 or more.
- </p>
- <p> The Concord Coalition would aim for a much broader target. To
- reach a balanced budget by the year 2000, it would impose a
- strict means test on entitlements. Households would lose about
- 10% of their federal benefits of whatever kind for every $10,000
- of income above $40,000, up to a maximum of 85% for those making
- $120,000 and up. The 58% of Americans whose incomes, including
- entitlements, range up to $40,000 would lose nothing. On the
- revenue side, the Concord plan calls for a 50 cents-per-gal.
- gas tax and a $12,000 cap ($20,000 for joint filers) on tax
- deductions for mortgage interest, a move that would affect just
- 5% of homeowners.
- </p>
- <p> Not all economists agree that budget cutting on that scale is
- necessary or desirable. "Coming out of recession, there is a
- tendency to exaggerate future deficits because you don't think
- you'll ever get out of the recession," says Alan Reynolds, director
- of economic research at the conservative Hudson Institute. Allen
- Sinai, chief economist of Boston Co. Economic Advisors, thinks
- that nearly half the current deficit is due to an underperforming
- economy, which results in lost tax receipts and extra spending
- on unemployment. Moving too sharply to balance the budget would
- "pour salt on the wound," he says. "Modest budget restraint
- is the best way to go, so that the recovery is not sacrificed."
- </p>
- <p> The economy does give signs of crawling into the light. The
- Commerce Department reported last week that GDP grew in the
- third quarter at an annual rate of 2.8%--up from 1.9% in the
- second. But that gathering speed is precisely why now is the
- time to make cuts, says economist Rudy Penner, a former CBO
- director. "The economy is growing. If we don't do it now, then
- after a while the only way we'll be able to pay the debt is
- to print money."
- </p>
- <p> Their critics say that the Concord group's proposed cuts for
- retirees violate the trust of people who paid into Social Security
- and Medicare for years. The Concord argument rests strongly
- on a moral plea of its own: older Americans should not burden
- their children and grandchildren with the task of paying off
- the debt. Peterson likes to quote Thomas Jefferson's observation
- to James Madison that passing on debt to future generations
- is "swindling futurity." Is it possible to make seniors sit
- still for such talk? Perhaps it is. The sky didn't fall when
- Congress approved the Clinton proposal to tax higher-income
- retirees on 85% of their Social Security benefits. Tsongas claims
- to have given his deficit-slashing speech 70 times this year
- to diverse audiences without resistance. "There is no doubt
- in my mind that the country would rally to a zero-deficit banner,"
- he says.
- </p>
- <p> The rally will have to grow substantially before the gamesmanship
- in Washington is over. Next month Congress is expected to consider
- the ultimate feel-good measure, a balanced-budget amendment
- to the Constitution, which lets lawmakers praise cutting without
- pointing the knife. Among the sponsors are 65 members of the
- House who voted in August against both Clinton's deficit-reduction
- package and the Republican alternative. But why should politicians
- stop playing deficit games before voters do?
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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