Senate Budget Committee
Chairman Patty Murray speaks at a press conference announcing a
bipartisan budget deal, as House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan
looks on at the US Capitol on December 10, 2013 in Washington, DC
December 12, 2013
|
The following article first appeared in the Nation. Sign up for their newsletter here.
The
trouble with making “functional” government the great aspiration of the
American experiment – as so many pundits and politicians now do – is
that a smoothly operating Congress is not necessarily moral, humane or
even economically smart.
It is important to remember this disconnect as we consider the budget deal
announced late
Tuesday by House Budget Committee chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wisconsin, and
Senate Budget Committee chairman Patty Murray, D-Washington.
“This
agreement breaks through the recent dysfunction to prevent another
government shutdown and roll back sequestration’s cuts to defense and
domestic investments in a balanced way,”
said Murray. “It’s
a good step in the right direction that can hopefully rebuild some
trust and serve as a foundation for continued bipartisan work.”
Ryan
was equally self-congratulatory, declaring that – after a fall the saw a
government shutdown, nasty wrangling over the historically
uncontroversial task of raising the debt ceiling and general
congressional dysfunction – he and Murray had achieved “
a clear improvement on the status quo.”
“This agreement makes sure that we don't have a government shutdown scenario in January,”
he added. “It
makes sure we don't have another government shutdown scenario in
October. It makes sure that we don't lurch from crisis to crisis."
Murray and Ryan are excited that they had stopped fighting for long enough to agree to $63 billion in “
sequester relief” –
as opposed to an actual end to sequestration – and $23 billion in net
deficit reduction. They're also glad that they have set the
discretionary spending level for fiscal year 2014 at $1.012 trillion,
while setting the level at $1.014 trillion for fiscal year 2015. That
apparently qualifies – in the eyes of the budget negotiators – as a
sufficient alternative to lurching from crisis to crisis.
But the
agreement does not address the crises that matter. “This plan won't
create jobs, get the economy back on track, or meaningfully cut the
deficit,” explains Congressman
Peter DeFazio, D-Oregon.
And that's not the worst of it.
The following piece first appeared in the Nation. For more great content, sign up for their newsletter.
What
of the 1.3 million jobless Americans who – with a fully Dickensian
twist – now stand to lose Federal unemployment benefits three days after
Christmas?
The budget agreement does not look like a “step in the
right direction” for them. And unless Democrats succeed in renewing
benefits in a distinct piece of legislation that apparently must pass
this week – as Congress is moving rapidly toward recess – many of the
most economically vulnerable Americans will be “lurching from crisis to
crisis” very soon.
Their crisis is our crisis. According to the non-partisan
Congressional Budget Office, extending
benefits for the long-term unemployed would boost a still slow economy
by two-tenths of a percent in the coming year – creating 200,000 needed
jobs. As the CBO explains: “Recipients of the additional benefits would
increase their spending on consumer goods and services. That increase in
aggregate demand would encourage businesses to boost production and
hire more workers than they otherwise would, particularly given the
expected slack in the capital and
labor markets.”
Without
providing for the extension, something that easily and appropriately
could have been done in the budget agreement, Ryan and Murray failed in
their most basic humanitarian and economic duties.
“Federal
workers have sacrificed over $113 billion for deficit reduction since
2011, including a three-year pay freeze and increased pension
contributions for newly hired employees. This figure does not include
the up to eight furlough days caused by sequestration this summer and a
16-day shutdown in October which resulted in financial hardship and
profound anxiety for half the government’s workforce and their
families,”
noted unions that represent federal employees. “Given
these contributions, we are dismayed to learn that increasing the
pension contributions and/or changing the retirement formula for current
federal employees is on the table. This is simply unacceptable.”
This is, also, absurd.
Despite
Murray's prodding, the House and Senate budget chairs did not close a
single tax loophole. But they did come up with a scheme to take money
away from public employees and people serving in the military –
effectively reducing what millions of Americans will have to spend on
Main Street.
Members of House and Senate who are paid $174,000
annually, collect generous benefits and – thanks to redistricting and an
incumbent-rewarding
campaign finance system
– enjoy no small measure of job security, can pat themselves on the
back for breaking through “the recent dysfunction.” But forcing others
to lurch from crisis to crisis so that you can tell yourself you have
taken “a step in the right direction” is socially and economically
dysfunctional. Not to mention cruel, and irresponsible.
John Nichols is The Nation's Washington correspondent.
No comments:
Post a Comment