The compromise bill passed by Congress to avert the worst effects
of the "fiscal cliff" is a small, imperfect package that will do too
little to address the nation's long-term debt problem. But for all
its weaknesses, the bill's enactment is far better than a failure by
this Congress to act before it adjourned Thursday.
Most important, the deal will delay the ill-targeted and unwise
spending cuts known as sequestration and cancel sharp tax increases
for most Americans. In the process, it will also make some
worthwhile reforms.
On Tuesday, the White House trumpeted estimates that the plan
would raise $620 billion in new tax revenue over 10 years and create
"the most progressive income tax code in decades." According to a
preliminary analysis from the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center, the top
1 percent of income earners will pay an average of nearly $51,000
more in taxes compared with current policy. The country needs
additional tax revenue, and in an era of growing inequality, the tax
code should become more progressive. The bill will also permanently
patch the alternative minimum tax, which has become a perennial
headache for Congress.
Despite these desirable structural changes, the deal will not
reduce future deficits much, even though Congress engineered the
fiscal cliff to force ambitious budget reform. Relative to current
policy, only 0.7 percent of American households will pay more in
income and capital gains taxes, producing too little revenue. For
context, the deal's $620 billion in new revenue over 10 years is
smaller than any single year's projected deficit in the coming
decade. If Republicans' opposition to raising tax revenue weren't so
blinkered, they could have extracted more from Democrats in return
for higher tax rates for more wealthy Americans. If Democrats hadn't
fought a money-saving reform to Social Security, they would have
been in a better position to demand those higher rates on incomes or
big estates. Instead, lawmakers seem to have gotten as close as they
could to doing the bare minimum.
The United States will have to wait longer yet for its inevitable
budget reckoning. Lawmakers are girding for battle over raising the
debt limit, and sequestration's spending cuts will continue to
threaten vital government operations, including at the Pentagon.
That means more brinkmanship in the next couple months. Then
Congress and President Barack Obama will have to tackle future
annual budgets.
We hope the nation's leaders will be able to accomplish in stages
what they have been unable to do in a series of self-imposed crises:
raise more revenue and significantly reduce future entitlement
spending. But the fiscal cliff episode offers little encouragement.
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News Column
A Feeble Finish for 112th Congress
Jan. 4, 2013
The Washington Post
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Source: (C) 2013 Bangor Daily News Bangor, ME. via ProQuest Information and Learning Company; All Rights Reserved
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