In the midst of ongoing hysteria about a 'non-existent deficit crisis'
in Washington, the Congressional Progressive Caucus on Wednesday
unveiled an alternative approach to destructive austerity economics by releasing their 'Back to Work Budget' plan for 2014.
Pushing
back specifically on the dominant talking point of inside-the-Beltway
elites, the budget challenges the idea that cutting programs, reducing
corporate tax rates, and slashing investments is a pathway to economic
prosperity. Its proponents argue the US does not have "a deficit
crisis"—as those pushing for steep cuts suggest—but rather, "a jobs
crisis."
Presented by CPC co-chairs Reps. Raúl M. Grijalva and Keith Ellison
and backed by members of the caucus' Budget Task force—Reps. Jim
McDermott, Jan Schakowsky, Barbara Lee and Mark Pocan—the plan describes
how smart investments, not deep cuts to key programs, would create
almost 7 million jobs over the first year of its implementation.
“Americans face a choice,” Grijalva and Ellison said. “We can either
cut Medicare benefits to pay for more tax breaks for millionaires and
billionaires, or we can close outdated tax loopholes and invest in jobs.
We choose investment.”
They continue:
The Back to Work Budget invests in America’s future because the best
way to reduce our long-term deficit is to put America back to work. In
the first year alone, we create nearly 7 million American jobs and
increase GDP by 5.7%. We reduce unemployment to near 5% in three years
with a jobs plan that includes repairing our nation’s roads and bridges,
and putting the teachers, cops and firefighters who have borne the
brunt of our economic downturn back to work. We reduce the deficit by
$4.4 trillion by closing tax loopholes and asking the wealthy to pay a
fair share. We repeal the arbitrary sequester and the Budget Control Act
that are damaging the economy, and strengthen Medicare and Medicaid,
which provide high quality, low-cost medical coverage to millions of
Americans when they need it most. This is what the country voted for in
November. It’s time we side with America’s middle class and invest in
their future.
Received as a breath of fresh air of economic sanity, the plan was praised by a variety of individuals and groups.
“If you listen to the budget debate in Washington too long, you
almost start to believe that austerity is inevitable, and that the only
choice left is how to allocate the suffering,"
said
Ben Schreiber, a policy analyst for Friends of the Earth. "It is
refreshing that the House Progressive Caucus has come up with a positive
vision for moving the country forward. It serves as a reminder that we
don’t need to cut teachers and school lunches when we can eliminate
wasteful giveaways to fossil fuel corporations."
Schreiber specifically welcomed inclusion of a carbon tax on fossil
fuels and compared it to the woefully inadequate and industry-friendly
approach laid out in the GOP budget presented by Rep. Paul Ryan on
Monday. “The Back to Work Budget would allow us to make polluters pay
for the damage they are causing, while using the revenue to invest in
the clean energy technologies of the future—rather than continuing our
addiction to dirty energy, as proposed in the Ryan plan yesterday," he
said.
"Financial speculation taxes can raise substantial revenue to
counteract devastating spending cuts," said Micah Hauptman of Public
Citizen. "The automatic, across-the-board “sequestration” cuts began to
take effect two weeks ago. And while most people have not experienced
the disastrous consequences of these cuts, it is likely that they will
shortly, as funding to emergency response and disaster relief programs
are slashed, food inspections are reduced and public safety is
compromised."
Writing at
In These Times, Ian Becker assessed the budget's approach by
writing:
With corporate profits already back up to record highs,
the budget's strategy of public investing and corporate
belt-tightening--for instance, modernizing 35,000 public schools rather
than providing a $25 billion stock option loophole for Wall
Street--don't seem bold, so much as commonsensical.
Key aspects of the budget proposal include:
Job Creation
• Infrastructure – substantially increases infrastructure investment
to the level the American Society of Civil Engineers says is necessary
to close our infrastructure needs gap
• Education – funds school modernizations and rehiring laid-off teachers
• Aid to States – closes the recession-caused gap in state budgets
for two years, allowing the rehiring of cops, firefighters, and other
public employees
• Making Work Pay – boosts consumer demand by reinstating an expanded tax credit for three years
• Emergency Unemployment Compensation – allows beneficiaries to claim
up to 99 weeks of unemployment benefits in high-unemployment states for
two years
• Public Works Job Programs and Aid to Distressed Communities –
includes job programs such as a Park Improvement Corps, Student Jobs
Corps, and Child Care Corps
Fair Individual Tax
• Immediately allows Bush tax cuts to expire for families earning over $250K
• Higher tax rates for millionaires and billionaires (from 45% to 49%)
• Taxes income from investments the same as income from wages
Fair Corporate Tax
• Ends corporate tax bias toward moving jobs and profits overseas
• Enacts a financial transactions tax
• Reduces deductions for corporate jets, meals, and entertainment
Defense
• Returns Pentagon spending to 2006 levels, focusing on modern security needs
Health Care
• No benefit cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security
• Reduces health care costs by adopting a public option, negotiating drug prices, and reducing fraud
Environment
• Prices carbon pollution with a rebate to hold low income households harmless
• Eliminates corporate tax subsidies for oil, gas, and coal companies
GETTING AMERICANS BACK TO WORK
So far and according to Dave Johnson and Bill Scher at the Campaign
for America's Future, the most troubling aspect of the 'Back to Work
Budget' is the absolute poverty of the media coverage surrounding it.
Writing ahead of the budget's release, Scher
wrote:
For the past 24 hours, the media has dutifully reported on the budget
proposal from Rep. Paul Ryan, even though everyone knows it is
extremely unlikely to become law.
That’s fine; it’s not the media’s job to short-circuit debate. It’s
the media’s job to report factually on the ideas proposed in Congress,
so the public can weigh in before Congress votes.
Today, another budget will be proposed by the
Congressional Progressive Caucus, the “Back to Work” budget. It probably
won’t become law either. But it deserves every bit of media attention
that Ryan’s budget gets.
But as the day followed and Johnson
tracked coverage
via web news searches, what did he find? As expected: Nothing. Or
almost nothing. As of his writing he'd found 72,000 hits looking for
stories on "Paul Ryan Budget," but searching for "Back to Work Budget"
only two—one from
Huffington Post and one from
Raw Story.
It's safe to say a search Thursday will yield better results. But for
the moment, austerity remains the mainstream media's darling.
Read the budget's executive summary
here (pdf).
Enjoy this infographic:
Watch Rep. Keith Ellison introduce the budget here:
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