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"Obama’s $2 trillion stealth tax hike"

James Pethokoukis, Reuters:

The Obama White House naturally wants the media to favorably compare his outline to House Budget Chairman Paul Ryan’s 73-page “Path to Prosperity” which is highly detailed and has been scored accurate by the Congressional Budget Office. It brings the budget into balance and eliminates the national debt by cutting spending — not raising taxes.

And how does Obama’s “Framework for Shared Prosperity and Shared Fiscal Responsibility” compare?

1) Obama’s Framework is a speech, along with a roughly 15-page fact sheet that is unlikely ever to get placed under the CBO microscope. It’s tough to score generalities such as the president’s claim the plan would put “deficits on a declining path toward close to 2.0% of GDP toward the end of the decade.” “Close to”? “Toward the end”?

2) The Obama Framework also fails to give a clear trajectory of where the debt-to-GDP ratio is heading, other than to call for a trigger that would boost taxes or cut spending in 2014 if the ratio doesn’t appear to be bending lower.

3) Other oddities abound. The plan has a 12-year time frame rather than the customary ten. It doesn’t indicate what baseline it uses to make claims that it cuts debt by $4 trillion, if you include interest expense. Nor does it spell out what economic projections are being plugged in. Obama’s 2012 budget released in February was more bullish than the CBO’s, which Ryan uses.

4) Also unlike the Ryan Path, the Obama Framework doesn’t show how his plan affects debt and deficits over the coming decades. If it did, Obama would have to reveal that he can’t a) keep government spending above historical levels and b) balance the budget and reduce debt long term without c) jacking middle class taxes through the roof.

The Obama Framework is so vague and fuzzy that doing a true apples-to-apples comparison between the Ryan Path and the Obama Framework comparison is almost impossible. (Best guess: Ryan cuts $3 trillion more than Obama over a dozen years.) This could be intentional.

The tax issue mentioned earlier provides a perfect illustration. Toward the end of his speech last week, Obama said the following:

This is my approach to reduce the deficit by $4 trillion over the next twelve years. It’s an approach that achieves about $2 trillion in spending cuts across the budget. It will lower our interest payments on the debt by $1 trillion. It calls for tax reform to cut about $1 trillion in spending from the tax code. And it achieves these goals while protecting the middle class, our commitment to seniors, and our investments in the future.

But earlier in the speech, Obama also said this:

In December, I agreed to extend the tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans because it was the only way I could prevent a tax hike on middle-class Americans. But we cannot afford $1 trillion worth of tax cuts for every millionaire and billionaire in our society. We can’t afford it. And I refuse to renew them again.

If you’re keeping score, what Obama is actually proposing is $1 trillion in new taxes on wealthier Americans (and small businesses) and $1 trillion in higher tax revenues by reducing tax breaks and subsidies for a total of $2 trillion in new taxes over 12 years. That means total debt reduction, not counting interest, would be $4 trillion, 50 percent of which would come from higher taxes. The econ team at Goldman Sachs ran a similar analysis and found that 56 percent of Obama savings over ten years could come from higher tax revenue.

In this way, Obama relies far more on taxes than the two-parts spending/one-part taxes formula of the Obama-Bowles-Simpson debt panel that is supposedly his model. As Obama said, “It’s an approach that borrows from the recommendations of the bipartisan Fiscal Commission I appointed last year.” Not really.

Now none of this is easy to discern from Obama’s speech nor from the accompanying fact sheet. Neither indicates which budget baseline Obama is using. If he is, for instance, using the standard CBO baseline which assumes all the Bush tax cuts expire, Obama’s budget plan might actually get close to 60 percent of its debt reduction from taxes, especially if he also used the CBO’s gloomier GDP forecast. And if his mid-decade tax “trigger” should get pulled …

Of course, the framework that really interests the White House is a political one. They want to set the terms of the 2012 presidential election debate. And with this budget plan they have, though surely not in the way they intended. America’s debt problem is one of too much spending, not too little revenue. By offering a tax-heavy fiscal fix that keeps Big Government firmly in place, Obama offers Americans a clear choice of economic futures, his or Paul Ryan’s.

But is it really a choice any longer? We’re near the tipping point — that progressive sweet spot where more people pay no federal income tax than do, and so make up an electoral majority, one whose Democrat clients will be counseled to vote “their economic interests,” meaning, vote for a government that promises to take your productive neighbors’ money and labor and redistribute it to them.

For fairness. And social justice.

At which point it’s either revolt, accept your enslavement, or join the ranks of the Dem clients and just enjoy the luxury cruise ship right up until that moment when it slams into the iceberg.

12 Replies to “"Obama’s $2 trillion stealth tax hike"”

  1. B. Moe says:

    The Obama Framework is so vague and fuzzy that doing a true apples-to-apples comparison between the Ryan Path and the Obama Framework comparison is almost impossible. (Best guess: Ryan cuts $3 trillion more than Obama over a dozen years.) This could be intentional.

    Heh.

  2. Carin says:

    Shared Prosperity and Shared Fiscal Responsibility. In which 45% pay NO Federal income tax.

    Of course, it’s all a big huge lie.

  3. JHoward says:

    “Make no mistake” [dramatic pause, chin up, snap to second teleprompter, resume]

    We’re so terribly easily led.

  4. cranky-d says:

    The progressive pundits and politicians still talk about “the rich paying their fair share” ignoring the fact that the tax burden is already slanted towards the wealthiest taxpayers, and some of them aren’t really wealthy at all. It’s another piece of the lie.

  5. SDN says:

    cranky, every day there’s a fresh reminder that these people are too damn dishonest to live with.

  6. JD says:

    Only in the Joe the Plumber moments do they actually reveal themselves.

  7. DarthLevin says:

    Let’s see, cranky. I don’t use: Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, Section 8 housing, WIC cards, or eat government cheese.

    So to “pay my fair share” for my use of these services, I need to pony up somewhere between nil and bupkis.

    The language, she’s fucked up is all I’m sayin’.

  8. Pablo says:

    No, no, no! These are not tax hikes. O’Bomber is talking about spending reductions in the tax code. Didn’t you hear the man?

    Eric Blair’s estate ought to be looking for theirs.

  9. JD says:

    I like how the most transparent administration EVAH! Put up a tax receipt calculator slash campaign prop that grossly distorts how tax receipts are allocated. Lying fuckers.

  10. Slartibartfast says:

    “Make no mistake” isn’t something I need to be told a lot. I make mistakes with roughly the same frequency with or without the warning.

    “Framework for Sharing Your Prosperity and Sharing Their Fiscal Responsibility”

    Fixed!

  11. B. Moe says:

    Kinetic deficit adjustments.

  12. Seth says:

    The problem, the biggest problem, is that people can vote for a tax hike and spending platform who peay no taxes/get more back in benefits than they are taxed. Everyone should have some skin in the game. Or no vote.

Comments are closed.