Monday, November 29, 2010

So What's The Progressive Answer To The Catfood Commission?

Glad you asked.  We've seen the conservative plans and the Catfood Commission.  What do liberals want to do to fix our problems?  Not one but two plans will be unveiled over the next two days.

On Monday, the progressive policy organizations Demos, the Economic Policy Institute and the Century Foundation will unveil a liberal blueprint. Their report says that unlike the centrist plans, this version “stabilizes debt as a share of the economy without demanding draconian cuts to national investments or to vital safety net programs.” It would, however, leave the debt at a higher level as a share of the economy than the centrist plans.

On Tuesday, a separate coalition of liberal groups, economists and labor leaders — the Citizens’ Commission on Jobs, Deficits and America’s Economic Future — will release a similar outline.

Both plans are comparable to one recently proposed by Representative Jan Schakowsky, a liberal Democrat from Illinois who is a member of the Bowles-Simpson commission. Ms. Schakowsky opposed the chairmen’s draft as too hard on the middle class. 

There are a number of points to the plans:

  • Cuts wouldn't start until 2015, with near-term stimulus in 2012 and increased spending in infrastructure to directly attack unemployment.
  • Deeper military spending cuts after 2015.
  • Long-term savings from health care reform, including the public option to lower costs.
  • Raise the cap on Social Security taxable income to 90%.
  • Closing tax loopholes, a new surcharge on incomes above $1 million, cap and trade and a gas tax, and taxing financial transactions.
It wouldn't lower the deficit as quickly of course, but it would begin to do so by a combination of lower military spending and higher taxes.  It also accomplishes all this without Social Security benefit cuts too, but the gas tax is troubling.  Still, all the plans so far have called for raising the federal gas tax, so it's not like that won't happen.

I'm not excited about the plan (public option is nice however) but it's better than what we've seen so far.  Too bad the plan has zero chance.

2 comments:

  1. Maybe if we liberals didn't end virtually everything we say with "Too bad the plan has zero chance" some of these proposals would prevail. You can't change anything by throwing in the towel before you even start. There's no reason to believe the American people wouldn't prefer any of these blueprints to the Catfood Commission's. If we get some polling let the GOP oppose the will of the people at their own peril.

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  2. OK.

    I take that back then. It's a fair criticism.

    It has less of a chance than Simpson-Bowles or Rep. Paul Ryan's plan.

    But to be perfectly honest, I don't see any of the plans being adopted by Congress over the next two years.

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