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House passes GOP budget plan promising deep cuts
The Republican-controlled House passed a tea party-flavored budget plan Thursday that promises sharp cuts in safety-net programs for the poor and a clampdown on domestic agencies, in sharp contrast to less austere plans favored by President Barack Obama and his Democratic allies.
The measure, similar to previous plans offered by Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., demonstrates that it’s possible, at least mathematically, to balance the budget within a decade without raising taxes.
But its deep cuts to programs for the poor like Medicaid and food stamps and its promise to abolish so-called “Obamacare” are nonstarters with the president, who won re-election while campaigning against Ryan’s prior budgets. It passed on a mostly party-line 221-207 vote.
The House measure advanced as the Democratic Senate debated its first budget since the 2009 plan that helped Obama pass his health care law.
The dueling House and Senate budget plans are anchored on opposite ends of the ideological spectrum in Washington, appealing to core partisans in the warring parties that are gridlocked over persistent budget deficits. Obama is exploring the chances of forging a middle path that blends new taxes and modest curbs to government benefit programs.
The sharp contrast over the 2014 budget and beyond came as the House cleared away last year’s unfinished budget business — a sweeping, government-wide funding bill to keep Cabinet agencies running through the 2013 budget year, which ends Sept. 30.
The House passed the bipartisan 2013 measure by a sweeping 318-109 vote. The Senate had approved the measure on Wednesday after easing cuts that threatened intermittent closures of meat packing plants starting this summer and reviving college tuition grants for active-duty members of the military. The cuts were mandated by automatic spending cuts that took effect at the beginning of the month.
Looking to the future, Democrats and Republicans staked out divergent positions over what to do about spiraling federal health care costs and whether to raise taxes to rein in still-steep government deficits.
The long-term GOP budget plan authored by Ryan, the party’s failed vice presidential nominee, offers slashing cuts to domestic agencies, the Medicaid health care plan for the poor and “Obamacare” subsidies while exempting the Pentagon and Social Security beneficiaries. The measure proposes shifting programs like Medicaid to the states but is sometimes scant on details about the very cuts it promises.
The Ryan measure revives a controversial plan to turn the Medicare programs for the elderly into a voucher-like system — for future beneficiaries born in 1959 or later — a program in which the government would subsidize the purchase of health insurance instead of directly paying hospital and doctor bills. Critics say the idea would mean ever-spiraling out-of-pocket costs for care, but Ryan insists the plan would inject competition into a broken system.
The cuts to domestic agencies like the FBI, Border Patrol and National Institutes of Health could approach 20 percent when compared with levels agreed to as part of a hard-fought budget deal from the summer of 2011. That could run the already troubled appropriations process — it features 12 spending bills that are supposed to be passed by Congress each year — into the ground.
AP
Rockets Hit Israel As Barack Obama Meets With Palestinians To Push For Peace Deal
U.S. President Barack Obama is meeting Palestinian officials on the second day of his Mideast tour to emphasize the importance of reaching an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal, a message underscored Thursday when Palestinian militants in Gaza launched rockets into southern Israel.
After a visit to Israel’s national museum – where he inspected the Dead Sea Scrolls, which highlight the Jewish people’s ancient connection to the land that is now Israel – Obama headed to the West Bank to tell the Palestinians that the creation of a Palestinian state remains a priority for his administration.
He is not bringing a new plan to relaunch peace talks, but in meetings with Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and a speech to Israeli students later in the day, he will appeal to both sides to halt unilateral actions that make negotiations more difficult. (AFP PHOTO / Saul LOEBSAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images)
NP
Why the GOP Congress Doesn’t Care What You Think
Embracing the gratuitous anti-government rhetoric and archaic economic theorizing that passes for policy analysis in much of today’s G.O.P., Congress and the White House might be making the same mistake that F.D.R.’s Administration made in 1937, when it brought on another recession that led to the Great Depression.
And Fed Chairman Bernanke has, on many occasions, shown the willingness to tell this to members of his own party even though they clearly do not care because they know that they will be taken care of regardless of what happens to the rest of us. Even while the rest of government feels the pain from the cuts stemming from “the sequester”, Congress made sure that their own bloated and perk-loaded staffs, as well as their own pay, pensions, and healthcare would not be effected.
Of course, his warnings are likely to be ignored, but that is beside the point. Bernanke has done his bit for sanity and reason. He and many of his colleagues are worried that by embracing austerity policies, the U.S. will be making the mirror image of the mistakes made both before and during the Great Depression.
The U.S. Never Learns
Not only does the U.S. voting public refuse to believe that they can get into a situation that they can not get out of, they seem to want to prove it. The results of Europe’s experiment in fiscal shock therapy are in: austerity has failed, and failed miserably.
The Eurozone club of 17 countries is now plagued by mass unemployment –- 26 percent and rising in Spain and Greece –- and a prolonged drought in demand. Recession-torn Italy is in the grips of a political crisis; neo-Nazis have actually been elected to parliament in depression-hit Greece.
Outside the Eurozone, the UK economy last week lost its prized triple-A credit rating, and has been battered and humiliated by a double-dip recession after making strong inroads to recovery; in much the same way that America had done so. They elected a conservative Prime Minister who immediately instituted the same failing austerity program which proceeded to grind their own recovery to a standstill until eventually slipping back into another economic contraction.
Until the insanity of sequestration and the 84 billion, across-the-board spending cuts were welcomed by a stubborn and beyond crazy GOP who has been allowed to change the very process of the Democracy it pushes onto other countries, there was at least hope that the U.S. would not do the same to its citizens that all of Europe has done to hers.
Why then is the United States Congress committed to repeating Europe’s economic mistakes? Some analysts in England are in disbelief as their American cousins seemingly undermine themselves with a succession of politically-inspired yet macroeconomically-illiterate bonehead maneuvers — from the “supercommittee,” to the “fiscal cliff,” to the latest legislative Americanism, the “sequester.”
The repercussions of an austerity-induced double-dip recession in the U.S. –- still the world’s biggest and most important economy, by some distance –- could be global. “We were just beginning to feel that the Americans were pulling Europe out of austerity and now they’re going to plunge us all back in it,” says a gloomy Ann Pettifor, director of PRIME Economics and one of the few British economists to have predicted the 2008 financial crash. “The fact is that further [U.S.] contraction is going to crash the global economy.”
The Fed Has Done Its Job, Why Won’t Congress?
The answer always reverts to abject ignorance, a political civil war, and a media that fuels it. Bernanke, appearing before Congress, recently repeated his warning that the Fed was powerless to offset the hit to the economy from the combined effects of tax increases and spending cuts, which he said could well reduce economic growth this year by about one and a half per cent of G.D.P. “There is a sense in which monetary and fiscal policy are operating at cross purposes,” he said. “The (deficit) problem is a long-term problem and should be addressed over a longer time frame.” [I suppose “Economist Joe Scarborough will want to debate Chairman Bernanke as he did Paul Krugman—word of warning to self-declared Mr. Know-it-All Joe Scarborough, Ben Bernanke won’t let you shout and verbally abuse like mild-manned Paul Krugman did].
While the Fed chairman’s warning about the futility of Republican policy appears unlikely to be heeded, it augments his reputation as a straight shooter. With just eleven months to go before his second term is up, and with reports saying he doesn’t want to be renominated, he has evidently decided to say what he thinks and be damned. Not only did he put pressure on G.O.P. leaders to compromise in the dispute over the sequester; he also called on European countries to ease up on their austerity policies, saying that they could adopt a “more judicious balance” of short-term and long-term fiscal policy consolidation.
Of course, being lectured by George W. Bush’s former chief economic adviser didn’t sit well with some Senators. Tennessean Corker, a former builder who is a long-time critic of Bernanke’s expansionary policies, called him “the biggest dove since World War Two.” Toomey, a former head of the conservative lobbying group Club for Growth, questioned whether the sequester would have any real impact on the economy. Bernanke shrugged off the criticisms, the same way he always has; by laying out the actuality of the situation.
He tried to point out some of the significant advances that have already been made in stabilizing public finances. Backing him up was the Congressional Budget Office which isrecently forecast that by 2015 the budget deficit will be just two and one-half percent of GDP, while in 2009, it was ten percent. A fact Republicans are determined to bury.
While the Fed’s monetary policies gave the economy some support—in an effort to bring down interest rates, it is purchasing tens of billion of bonds every month—“I don’t think they can offset the one-and-a-half per cent of fiscal restraint we are seeing this year,” Bernanke explained. Therefore, much depends on Congress.
As I’ve explained before, monetary policy can only get you so far…the real cure has to come from fiscal policy and monetary policy working in tandem; and most importantly of all, at the correct point in the economic cycle. I cannot stress enough how important timing is. Austerity can and does work well during period s of growth. But Americans and our arrogant Congressional elected officials are woefully ignorant of just how different economic cycles are. Especially blowhards looking to make names for themselves like Joe Scarborough did when he shouted down the mild-mannered Paul Krugman.
As Mr. Scarborough has said numerous times on his show, “Winning is everything.” Notice he did not say being right was everything, or being knowledgeable, but winning. Winning what I do not know, because he is mclearly more impressed with his own economic acumen than anyone else is.
But such is life in the new world order where ”news’ is entertainment and entertainment means idiotic pundits who care less about being correct than “winning”.
This Obstructionism Will Be a Slow Painful Death to the American Way
If most of this was merely what any adequate macroeconomics textbook will tell you—tax and spending policies have a big impact on the economy; monetary and fiscal policies work best in concert—it was a message that needed restating loudly and clearly. Bernanke did that, as well as stressing the urgent need to bring down unemployment, particularly long-term unemployment, which is the main rationalization for the Fed’s expansionary policies:
High unemployment has substantial costs, including not only the hardship faced by the unemployed and their families, but also the harm done to the strength and productive potential of our economy as a whole. Tax cuts to the wealthy literally accomplish nothing.
Lengthy periods of unemployment and underemployment eat away at :
Going back to the nineteen-thirties and nineteen-forties, Keynes and many of his followers were fully aware of how high unemployment, in addition to being a human disaster, ruined an economy’s long-term productive potential.
During the nineteen-eighties, this caustic process was given a fancy name—“hysteresis”—and applied to Europe. Now it is threatening the U.S.—a fact Bernanke that has been busy pointing out. He has stuck with the message despite the fact that many people on the ultra-right are accusing him of debasing the currency, confiscating the savings of the elderly, and generally being engaged in some quasi-socialist plot to undermine the Republic.
For any Fed chairman deserving of the position, such criticisms are part of the job[Unless you are Andrea Mitchell’s husband, EX-Chairman Alan Greenspan].
We could have done SO much worse than Ben Bernanke. It’s a shame he’s been wasted on such an ignorant, lazy, and arrogant group of Republican obstructionists in Congress…and thier supporters.
Hagel Pressed to Add East Coast Missile Defense Site
Hagel Pressed to Add East Coast Missile Defense Site
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel should include funds in the Pentagon’s next budget request to start work on a U.S. East Coast site for 20 anti-missile interceptors as a defense against Iran, House Republicans said.
The plea for “not less than $250 million” in the fiscal 2014 budget to be presented next month was made yesterday in a letter from 19 Republicans on the House Armed Services Committee, led by Representative Howard P. “Buck” McKeon of California, the committee’s chairman.
For the second consecutive year, the lawmakers are pushing for an East Coast array of interceptors to complement the 30 already deployed in a $34 billion system on the West Coast. They seized on Hagel’s announcement March 15 of plans to add 14 more in Alaska by fiscal 2017 to counter escalating threats from North Korea as it seeks to develop nuclear weapons.
“There is no legitimate reason to not similarly defend the eastern third of the U.S. from Iranian missiles,” they said in the letter.
Source: Bloomberg
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