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Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Info Post
Dr. Bill Smith, Editor: As identified in prior articles, I support the "Cut, Cap and Balance strategy proposed by House Republican Study Committee (RSC)*.

Today, the House Republican Study Committee (RSC) unveiled a new “Cut, Cap, and Balance” budget (H.Con.Res. 113) that would eliminate deficit spending in just 5 years. Essentially, they build off the Budget Committee’s proposal but cut more spending. It’s noteworthy that the RSC plan is the only proposal in the House that meets the requirements of the Balanced Budget Amendment that almost every single House Republican voted for last year.

In summary, first, the RSC budget is not based on or related to the proposed Ryan Budget. The RSC budget is a conservative budget that balances in 5 years because it  . . .
  • Cuts discretionary spending to slightly below the 2008 levels approved by Nancy Pelosi and freezes it until the budget balances in 2017.
  • Incorporates the cuts required by last summer’s deal to raise the debt ceiling, making the automatic “sequestration” unnecessary. Instead of half the cuts coming from defense, we propose the same defense spending as the House Budget Committee proposal. Non-defense in our proposal shrinks from $377 billion for the coming year to $329 billion in FY 2022.
  • Creates a simpler, flatter, and fairer tax code as proposed in the RSC’s Jobs Through Growth Act.
  • Extends federal funding for Medicaid & CHIP at current FY 2012 levels and gives states the tools they need to design and improve their own programs, as proposed in the RSC’s State Health Flexibility Act.
  • Budgets responsibly for federal welfare programs by returning spending for these programs to pre-recession levels once unemployment drops to 6.5%, as proposed in the RSC’s Welfare Reform Act.
The RSC budget also proposes reforms to strengthen Social Security and Medicare over the long-term while making no changes for people currently age 55 and older. Because of the 10-year delayed implementation, these reforms make no contribution to the budget balancing in 5 years. Specifically, the RSC proposal . . .
  • Transitions Medicare to a solvent premium-support system, as proposed by the House Budget Committee. This plan provides Medicare enrollees a greater menu of choices including staying with the current system, harnessing the power of competition among private insurance plans and improving the quality of care.
  • Gradually realigns the Social Security eligibility age with Americans’ increasing longevity. The threshold for eligibility would increase by 2 months per year, beginning with people born in 1958 and after.
For more information on the Republican Study Committee's CUT, CAP, AND BALANCE: A Fiscal Year 2013 Budget visit the RSC website. Also, consider reading the below following Washington Examiner Op-Ed.

Washington Examiner Op-Ed  by Reps. Scott Garrett and Jim Jordan: "Conservatives' Budget Will Stop Borrowing from Our Children"

It would be both cruel and unfair to make a 7-year-old girl pay off $50,000 she had no part in borrowing. Yet President Obama plans to do that and worse in his newest budget.

We hear every day from people who want Washington to cut spending and stop borrowing from their children. President Obama either doesn't hear them or isn't listening. He proposes huge tax increases, yet his budget still never balances and the borrowing never stops. This is a path to fewer jobs and fewer opportunities. As the sorry state of the Greek economy proves, you pay for borrowing too much, either sooner or later.

The $50,000 mentioned above represents our national debt divided evenly among every single American, including senior citizens and second-graders. But in reality, the burden will not fall so evenly. As the years pass and the debt grows, the cost will fall more heavily on today's second-graders.

Last week, Chairman Paul Ryan and the House Budget Committee unveiled a plan to restrain spending and put the budget on a path to balance by 2040. This represents a vast improvement over President Obama's goals, and certainly over Senate Democrats, who have failed even to produce a budget for the third year in a row.

Even so, we join the many Americans concerned by the thought of waiting decades to balance the budget.

Conservatives in the Republican Study Committee hope to build on and improve on the Budget Committee's work. Our goal is simple: The federal government should stop borrowing from today's second-graders before they graduate high school.

Last year, the RSC laid out a path to balance in just nine years without raising taxes. Today, we take another step by making the tough decisions necessary to balance the budget in just five years. Our plan begins by freezing agency spending at slightly below 2008 levels until the budget balances in 2017.

A balanced budget will require a vibrant economy in addition to spending cuts. Entrepreneurs must have the confidence to begin new enterprises. Existing businesses need confidence to grow and expand. To provide this, and to reward hard work, our budget reforms taxes so that no American family or business will pay a federal tax rate higher than 25 percent.

We eliminate the death tax and alternative minimum tax, both of which punish success and stifle job growth. We also call a timeout on costly new regulations that are strangling businesses.

The RSC budget calls for unlocking America's energy resources, opening more areas to drilling, approving the entire Keystone XL pipeline, and removing unnecessary government rules that increase the price of gas. While oil and natural gas production boom on private and state lands, production has fallen in areas controlled by the federal government. Our economy will not meet its full potential until we fix this problem.

Our budget also looks beyond the short term to address the entitlement elephant in the federal budget. We repeal Obamacare in its entirety and introduce greater choice and competition to fight the rising cost of health care. In Medicare and Social Security, on which many Americans rely, this proposal makes absolutely no changes for people 55 and older. But to preserve these programs for the young, the RSC believes that Medicare should transition to a solvent "premium-support" system as proposed by the House Budget Committee last week.

Like Ryan's, our plan provides Medicare enrollees a greater menu of choices -- including staying with the current system. By harnessing the power of competition among private insurance plans and improving the quality of care, we put Medicare on the path to long-term solvency. Additionally, we strengthen Social Security by gradually realigning eligibility with Americans' increasing longevity.

The road to recovery has already been far too long, and our journey remains far from over. For this reason, we aim our proposals not only at balancing the budget, but also at restoring sanity in Washington, confidence in our economy and opportunity for our future. Our second-graders deserve nothing less.
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Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) is chairman of the Republican Study Committee (RSC); Rep. Scott Garrett R-MJ) is an RSC member. The article was provided by the RSC Communications Director to the Editor, ARRA News Service.
* The Republican Study Committee is a group House Republicans organized for the purpose of advancing a conservative social and economic agenda in the House of Representatives. The RSC is dedicated to a limited and Constitutional role for the federal government, a strong national defense, the protection of individual and property rights, and the preservation of traditional family values. The group has played a major role in key policy areas including budget, appropriations, taxes, education, Social Security reform, defense, deregulation, and general government reform. The RSC is an independent research arm for Republicans.  Identified members of the RSC does not indicate members will exclusively support proposed actions of the RSC.

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