Phantom surplusFor all the screaming about spending and tax cuts, the truth is,
the money's already goneBy NANCY GIBBS
September 13, 1999
Web posted at: 3:41 p.m. EDT (1941 GMT)
The Great American Budget Battle, Washington's answer to
professional wrestling, has officially begun, all roars and
growls and theatrical blows to the head. This week Congress will
send the President a $792 billion tax-cut bill; he has promised
to stomp on it. Clinton has pushed a $300 billion spending
program, including a new prescription-drug program for Medicare;
congressional fists are already clenched. There is talk of grand
ideological warfare, of reckless spendthrift Democrats and
reckless plutocrat-loving Republicans fighting over how to divvy
up the glorious $3 trillion surplus. In this season's budget
politics, much of the fight is phony. But that doesn't mean no
one's going to get hurt.
The nastiest battles, where real blood may spill, are occurring
in the committees of Congress that have to pass 13 spending bills
by the end of the month to keep the government running. So far,
only two have been sent to Clinton to sign; he has threatened to
veto others if they gouge spending too deeply. But, if a $3
trillion surplus is expected over the next 10 years, why would
lawmakers be forced to gut programs like air-traffic control and
food inspection and counterterrorism? Because two years ago, they
promised they would. The problem is the famous 1997 Balanced
Budget Act, which balanced the budget only because Congress and
the President agreed to cut the total amount of discretionary
spending in future years, without having to say exactly what
would be cut. Congress, like Wimpy, will gladly pay you Tuesday
for a hamburger today.
Well, the future is now, and the caps are giving everyone a
blinding headache. If military spending merely keeps up with
inflation, then every other government program will have to be
cut 20% in the next two years. This would require, for instance,
slicing $16 billion this year from the huge, $315 billion bill
that covers health and education. Increasing Pentagon outlays, as
both sides have promised to do, could require 50% cuts elsewhere.
That's not going to happen. But the minute the lawmakers bust the
caps, the surplus starts disappearing.
That's because when the bean counters counted the beans and
predicted there would be an extra $1 trillion in 10 years, not
counting Social Security revenues, it was assumed that lawmakers
would obey the laws they had written and slash future spending by
billions of dollars. If lawmakers bail, then there's less extra
money to pay down the debt. Republican proposals so far, rather
than cutting spending, would increase it next year about $25
billion, which more than wipes out next year's projected $14
billion surplus. The only place to find that money is to raise
taxes (the White House still loves a tobacco tax) or raid Social
Security, as lawmakers have routinely done for years.
But this time around, both sides have promised not to touch the
Social Security surplus, which will run about $147 billion next
year. Republican leaders don't want to take the blame for
scooping out an extra $14 billion just to keep the government
running--especially after conservatives got so angry with them
when they did it in 1998. "This year, if spending means so much
to him, the President will have to justify dipping into the
Social Security trust fund," says John Czwartacki, spokesman for
Senate majority leader Trent Lott.
The most interesting thing about the phantom surplus is that by
every indication, voters don't think it really exists either. But
that has not prevented politicians on both sides from trying to
woo them with proposals that Washington can't pay for.
Republicans fanned out during their August recess to try to rally
public support for their tax cuts--Please, let us give you more
money!--but the polls showed a public unmoved. Voters said they
would rather use the money, if it exists, to pay down the $5.6
trillion national debt. "People are genuinely fiscally
conservative in this country," says Stephen Moore, an
irrepressible supply-sider from the Cato Institute. Though
personally he'd prefer deep tax cuts to spur growth, he finds in
his travels that "a lot of people look at this mountain of debt
and say, 'Gee, we really ought to start paying off the mortgage.'
And the public really is onto this gambit of stealing from the
trust funds."
Last week House Speaker Dennis Hastert and Lott acknowledged that
the tax cut was dead for 1999. Unlike some G.O.P. moderates, Lott
claimed he wasn't interested in a compromise--a little more
spending for Clinton, a smaller tax cut for the G.O.P. Better to
have the issue to take to voters next year. That suits most
Democrats fine: Al Gore never misses a chance to denounce the
G.O.P.'s "risky tax-cut scheme" and to promise that education and
health care would have priority over tax cuts if the Democrats
had their way. The only Democrat it may not suit is Clinton, for
whom this budget is the last opportunity to get anything done
that might count as a legacy.
But that leaves the immediate problem of the spending bills.
Republicans who were around in 1995 are still spooked by
Clinton's ability to put the blame on Congress if the government
shuts down. So they are finding even more creative ways to slip
programs over, under or around the caps. The census, which under
the Constitution has occurred every 10 years since 1790, has been
classified for 2000 as an emergency, along with at least $25
billion in other programs, because the 1997 caps exempted
emergency spending. That exemption was supposed to cover things
like floods and hurricanes, but floods of red ink and bad press
apparently count too.
None of the options are pretty. Lawmakers will probably pass a
continuing resolution to keep the government running at least
past the presidential primaries and hope that some extra money
falls from the skies by next January, after economists have
recalculated the surplus. And in the meantime, through the messy
magic of democracy, the public actually gets what it wants: the
President has to wait for new spending; the Republicans have to
put off their tax cuts; and as the months roll by, any surplus
that actually materializes goes into paying down the debt. It's
enough to make the title "The Do-Nothing Congress" a badge of
honor. --Reported by James Carney/Washington
SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
Congress's $792 billion tax-cutting package is stuffed with
goodies for special business interests. A sampling:
MARTINI LUNCH
Bon appetit! Courtesy of the restaurant lobby and Rep. Jim
McCrery (R., La.), business meals that are now 50% deductible
would become 60% deductible by 2007.
THE COST
$3.9 billion
R. & D. CREDIT
Backed by four Senators of both parties, the 20%
research-and-development credit--a high-tech and pharmaceuticals
favorite--would be extended five years.
THE COST
$13.1 billion
ARMS EXPORT
Rep. Sam Johnson (R., Texas) would give defense contractors, like
other companies, a 15% tax break on profits from foreign sales
corporations.
THE COST
$1.1 billion
SAPLING SUBSIDY
A provision inserted by Rep. Jennifer Dunn (R., Wash.) would give
logging companies bigger tax breaks for replanting trees on
company-owned lands.
THE COST
$277 million
GLOBAL INTEREST
Corporations could shelter more foreign income with a new
formula for deducting interest costs devised by Reps. Rob
Portman (R., Ohio) and Robert Matsui (D., Calif.).
THE COST
$24 billion
CHICKEN WASTE
The poultry industry would get a tax credit, crafted by Sen.
William Roth (R., Del.), for electricity generated by burning
chicken manure.
THE COST
$234 million
TACKLE-BOX BOON
An excise tax on fishing equipment would be dropped for tackle
boxes, greatly benefiting the Plano Molding Co. in Speaker
Hastert's Illinois district.
THE COST
$30 million
OIL & GAS GUSHER
Independent producers would improve their cash flow with a change
in the way operating losses are calculated, thanks to Reps. Bill
Thomas (R., Calif.) and Wes Watkins (R., Okla.).
THE COST
$246 million
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Cover Date: September 20, 1999
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