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- <text id=93TT2254>
- <title>
- Dec. 20, 1993: Their Turn To Pay?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Dec. 20, 1993 Enough! The War Over Handguns
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE BUDGET, Page 36
- Their Turn To Pay?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Clinton is tempted to cut entitlements, but he may shy away
- from the battle
- </p>
- <p>By Walter Shapiro--Reported by James Carney and Suneel Ratan/Washington
- </p>
- <p> As Bill Clinton is learning, there is no such thing as a painless
- presidential promise. In August, just minutes before the win-or-die
- budget vote in the House, Clinton cut a deal to gain the crucial
- support of freshman Pennsylvania Democrat Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky.
- The price seemed paltry: the President agreed to appear this
- week at an entitlements summit in her suburban Philadelphia
- district to discuss the role of government benefit programs
- in fueling the deficit.
- </p>
- <p> Now it's payback time, and Clinton probably longs for the days
- when Presidents could buy congressional votes with old-fashioned
- pork. Entitlements are the true Nightmare Before Christmas,
- especially since Clinton's Democratic predecessors put most
- of them in place. The Bryn Mawr summit brings into the open
- a potentially divisive closed-door debate within the Administration--whether to support new limits on the government benefits
- that millions of middle-class Americans get.
- </p>
- <p> The fixation of budget cutters on entitlements reflects the
- Willie Sutton rule of fiscal politics--that's where the money
- is. Guaranteed-benefit programs currently eat up 49% of the
- federal budget, a whopping $738 billion. The largest chunk is
- Social Security ($319 billion), but entitlements also include
- Medicare, Medicaid, veterans' benefits, government pensions,
- unemployment insurance and farm subsidies. Only one-sixth of
- this money goes to Americans below the poverty line. A significant
- fraction of government benefit checks are cashed by the comfortably
- middle class. The Progressive Policy Institute estimates that
- families with taxable incomes above $50,000 receive 19% of federal
- entitlement money.
- </p>
- <p> These daunting numbers give rise to a series of related questions:
- Can the Federal Government afford to continue to subsidize middle-class
- and upper-income Americans? At what income should any benefit
- cuts begin--$40,000? $50,000? $100,000? Is it equitable for
- Washington to take tax dollars from 20-year-olds earning the
- minimum wage and redistribute some of the money up the economic
- ladder to $100,000-a-year pensioners collecting Social Security?
- And will the Clinton Administration risk offending potent constituencies
- like the elderly in the quest to reform government benefit programs?
- </p>
- <p> These are no longer theoretical problems. The once taboo topic
- of means testing--linking government payments to income--was debated at a recent high-level White House meeting. The
- President mostly listened, but proponents of some kind of limitation
- included Vice President Al Gore, Budget Director Leon Panetta
- and presidential counselor David Gergen. Their rationale: only
- by restraining entitlements can the Administration afford new
- programs and further deficit reduction. "Everyone agrees this
- is something to be looked at," confides a senior White House
- official. "Even a novice looking at the budget can't help seeing
- what's happening to entitlement spending."
- </p>
- <p> "Look but don't touch" was, in effect, the watchword of some
- of the President's political advisers, such as George Stephanopoulos
- and outgoing congressional liaison Howard Paster. Programs like
- Social Security and Medicare have been portrayed for decades
- as something that American workers had earned; trimming benefits
- for the affluent would be viewed as breaking a solemn social
- contract. (In truth, a recent Social Security beneficiary gets
- back what he paid with interest by age 71; anything after that
- is free). The Clinton political team believes the most serious
- problem is not Social Security but the runaway costs of Medicare
- and Medicaid. As outside political adviser Paul Begala argues,
- "All those ivory-tower elitists who talk about entitlement reform
- and really mean entitlement cuts should roll up their sleeves
- and help us reform health care."
- </p>
- <p> Complicating the equation is another promise that the President
- made in order to pass his budget plan: establishing a bipartisan
- commission on entitlement reform, led by Nebraska Democratic
- Senator Bob Kerrey and G.O.P. Senator John Danforth of Missouri.
- The tentative consensus within the White House leans toward
- dynamic inaction, waiting for the commission's report in May
- to test the political waters on paring entitlements. But that
- would still leave unresolved a ticklish problem: Where would
- the savings from entitlement reform go? Congress is awash with
- it's-the-deficit-stupid fervor, while the Administration covets
- new money to pay for the President's still moribund investment
- agenda. "If this is a strategy to free up a little more money
- for the White House to spend," Kerrey says, "I'm not interested
- in doing it."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton, who hopes to complete his consultations with Cabinet
- members before Christmas for the 1995 budget, is so desperate
- for money that one half expects to see him drilling for oil
- on the South Lawn. Panetta, playing the role of Dr. No, has
- already told the Cabinet that their initial requests were $20
- billion over the congressional budget ceiling. To the dismay
- of some liberals, Clinton has declared the $281 billion Pentagon
- budget off limits. Moreover, the latest rules of the fiscal
- game require that new spending must be matched by offsetting
- cuts in existing programs. Somehow Clinton must find $16 billion
- to pay for such cherished initiatives as an expansion of Head
- Start and job-training programs, new investments in high technology
- and aid to communities devastated by military base closings.
- </p>
- <p> Not too long ago, means testing was a notion embraced mostly
- by small political journals and policy wonks swimming in think
- tanks. But respectability came as the bipartisan cut-the-deficit
- Concord Coalition and investment banker Pete Peterson pushed
- schemes that would trim federal subsidies in gradual steps for
- families earning above about $40,000 a year. The new mood is
- reflected by Deputy Treasury Secretary Roger Altman, who declared
- recently, "Means testing in selected areas is an idea whose
- time has come."
- </p>
- <p> It still strains credulity to believe that a Democratic President
- would dare tamper with the aura of entitlement that envelops
- Social Security, which must be part of any reform package large
- enough to make a budgetary difference. But the President knows
- that three more years of fiscal austerity would be a dubious
- platform for re-election. The tenor of the budget debate is
- fast changing--and Clinton may soon be forced to choose between
- the sanctity of Social Security and his dreams of ambitious
- programs to grow the economy.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-