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Politics : The Donkey's Inn -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Mephisto who wrote (2687)2/7/2002 8:29:18 PM
From: Mephisto  Respond to of 15516
 
BUSH BUDGET PLAN
February 5, 2002
Los Angeles Times

Social Security Takes on Role of a Cash Cow
Budget: A critic says Bush's plan 'abandons fiscal discipline.' Others consider it an appropriate response to a
'national emergency.'


By PETER G. GOSSELIN, TIMES STAFF WRITER

WASHINGTON -- In the budget he delivered Monday, President
Bush relies on one source of new money more than any other to pay for
his proposals: the trillions of dollars in Social Security funds being set
aside for the start of the baby boom retirement.

Although Bush and his aides warned in advance that the war on terror
and the need for homeland defense would require dipping into the Social
Security surplus and running deficits for a few years, the dimensions of
what the administration had in mind were not apparent until the unveiling
of the $2.13-trillion spending plan for fiscal 2003. The measure took the
breath away from some Democrats and independent analysts.

"The president is
requiring the use of
Social Security to
pay for the normal
operations of government," said Robert D.
Reischauer, president of the nonpartisan Urban
Institute and a Washington budget veteran.

"That's the most significant, and largely
unrecognized, change he's making." Declared
Citigroup vice chairman and former Clinton
administration Treasury Secretary Robert E.
Rubin: "This country is ill-served by abandoning
fiscal discipline and this [budget] abandons
fiscal discipline. It's the opposite of what was
accomplished in the 1990s."

To be sure, that opinion was not universally
shared, and no one claimed there was any danger to current retirees' benefits. Former Democratic
Sen. Daniel P. Moynihan, who co-chaired a recent commission on Social Security for Bush, said:
"My own view is that this is a war budget. This is a national emergency and the president is
responding."

$150-Billion Deficit Each Year for a Decade

Still, many analysts expressed surprise, both at the extent of deficits in the new Bush budget and its
extensive use of Social Security money to cover them. What most surprised them:

* Far from running only a few years of deficits, the new budget assumes that the government's
so-called "on-budget" spending, which covers everything from maintaining a military to subsidizing
Amtrak, will run $150 billion or more in the red each year for the next decade, according to
documents and White House officials.

* Instead of covering the bulk of the costs with expanding income tax revenue that can be expected
with the resumption of economic growth, the plan relies heavily on Social Security money to nudge
the overall budget--which includes on- and off-budget spending, such as payments to retirees--into
the black by 2005.

* Although the president argues that the chief reason the nation must run in the red is to pursue the
war on terror, his budget calls for new tax cuts--over and above the 10-year, $1.3-trillion package
approved last year--equal to or greater than the new defense spending he seeks. The plan includes
$590 billion in additional tax cuts over 10 years, but only $550 billion in new defense spending.

"Everybody concedes that deficit spending, if it is in response to an emergency like Sept. 11, is not
a bad thing," said Robert Bixby, executive director of the anti-deficit Concord Coalition. "But what's
astounding is that this goes way beyond what was [once] a strong political consensus to save the
Social Security surpluses."

In fact, before the September attacks, the president was at the center of that consensus. In
addressing a joint session of Congress only one year ago, he declared that "to make sure the
retirement savings of America's seniors are not diverted in any other program, my budget protects
all . . . of the Social Security surplus for Social Security, and for Social Security alone." His pledge
was considered critical to winning congressional passage of his $1.3-trillion tax cut.

But Bush and his aides appear to have decided that they cannot pursue their new military and
homeland defense goals, protect the president's already approved tax cuts and maintain the Social
Security surplus. And they apparently think there is little political cost to giving up on the surplus
pledge.

In part, that's because there is no immediate danger to retirees' checks. The system expects to
collect more than $700 billion in revenue this fiscal year and pay out only about $470 billion in
benefits. But analysts warn that failure to keep running surpluses and paying off federal debt will
leave the country in a painful bind as baby boomers retire in growing numbers, and will burden the
smaller generation of workers that follows with rising Social Security tax costs.

"By paying down the debt, we were increasing national savings, reducing the upward pressure on
mortgages and corporate debt, and cutting the government's own interest bill," Rubin said.

Analysts drew the analogy to a couple paying off their home mortgage before retiring in order to cut
monthly costs and save. They said that Washington was making the payoff in the nick of time
because boomers are expected to begin leaving the work force in substantial numbers around the
end of the decade.

Rubin and other analysts said that the administration's sudden lurch into deficits demonstrates that
last year's tax cuts were more than the country could afford, and that any further cuts would
compound the problem. "They're unwise and unjustified," said Reischauer.

But it was unclear Monday whether congressional Democrats will find the political spine to oppose
a president with sky-high public approval ratings in the midst of a war on terror.

Democrats Bedeviled by Budget Needs

Capitol Hill Democrats criticized Bush for submitting a budget that goes into deficit, but they offered
no suggestions about how to bring it back into the black.

In fact, the lawmakers suggested they would support policies that would make the deficit even
bigger: While supporting Bush's increases in defense and homeland security, Democrats opposed
offsetting cuts in highway, environmental and other domestic programs. At the same time,
Democrats insisted they would not seek a tax increase or rollback of last year's tax cut.

About all that congressional Democrats would offer were ideas for curbing future tax cuts. Senate
Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.) said that the Democrats' budget proposal
may include a "trigger" that would turn off future cuts or spending increases if the tax revenue to pay
for them do not materialize.

latimes.com