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Congressional Progressive Caucus People’s Budget |
Rep. Ryan’s The Path to Prosperity |
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| Underlying Philosophy |
Strengthens role of government in reducing income inequality and providing social safety net. Reduces deficit through combination of increased revenues and reductions in spending |
Relies on private sector to spur economic growth and employment using a trickle down approach. Reduces deficit solely through spending cuts |
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| Revenues |
Shifts tax burden towards higher income earners and corporations |
Decreases taxes for wealthy and corporations |
| Individual Taxes |
Allows for the expiration of Bush era tax cuts |
Maintains the Bush era tax cuts |
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Reverts highest individual tax brackets to 36% and 39.6% from 33% and 35% |
Cuts the top individual tax rate to 25% from 35% |
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Enacts new tax brackets for high income earners (45%-49% for $1 million – $1 billion range |
Consolidates the current six tax brackets |
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Taxes capital gains and dividends as ordinary income |
Eliminates $800 billion in tax increases imposed by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act |
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Limits tax benefit of itemized deductions to 28% |
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Enacts progressive estate tax in which larger estates pay higher tax rates |
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| Corporate Taxes |
Imposes financial transaction tax on derivatives and speculative financial products |
Reduces corporate tax rate to 25% from 35% |
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Repeals tax deductions and preferences for oil, natural gas and coal producers |
Eliminates loopholes and deductions that allow some corporations to pay no tax |
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Taxes US corporate foreign income as it is earned instead of as dividend |
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Imposes tax equal to 0.15% of covered liabilities for banks with more than $50 billion in assets |
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| Investment |
Emphasizes public investment as engine for job creation and economic growth |
Believes that public investment crowds out private investment |
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Rebuilds infrastructure – highways, railways, National Infrastructure Bank |
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Funds highway construction through increase in Gasoline Tax of 25 cents |
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| Health Care and Social Safety Net |
Maintains government role in providing vital public services and programs |
Limits government provision of social programs |
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Maintains Medicare reimbursement rates for doctors |
Privatizes Medicare starting in 2022 for new beneficiaries |
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Establishes public health care option in health care exchanges starting in 2014 |
Repeals Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act |
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Negotiates drug prices with pharmaceutical companies |
Raises age of Medicare eligibility to 67 from 65 |
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Increases Social Security benefits based on higher employee contributions |
Converts Medicaid into block grants to the states |
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Raises Social Security contribution limits, including employer contributions for high earners |
Converts SNAP (food stamps) into block grant to the states. Requires recipients to work or get job training |
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Reduces Pell grants to 2008 levels |
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Imposes time limits and work requirements for recipients of federal housing assistance (Section 8) |
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| Defense |
Makes significant cuts in annual defense spending and ends the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan in FY2012 |
Largely exempts the military from spending cuts |
| Funding for Security |
Generates $2.3 trillion in savings compared to the CBO baseline over the FY2012-2021 period |
Provides real growth for “security” in each year through 2021, totaling $214 billion in new spending |
| Annual Pentagon Spending |
Reduces DoD baseline budget by $692.2 billion over 10 years compared to CBO, or $816.7 billion compared to the Obama Pentagon spending plan |
Reduces DoD waste by $178 billion. Reinvests $100 billion of this into key combat capabilities and uses $78 billion to reduce the deficit |
| Overseas Contingency Operations (Iraq & Afghanistan) |
Provides $161.4 billion for “Overseas Contingency Operations” (OCO) in FY2012 and withdraws U.S. forces from Iraq and Afghanistan. Provides no funding for OCO starting in FY2013, saving $1.6 trillion between 2013-2021 compared to the CBO baseline |
Continues Iraq and Afghanistan wars and provides $117.8 billion in FY2012. Anticipates over $1 trillion in savings from reduced costs of the “Global War on Terror” over the next decade by using the Pentagon’s $50 billion annual “placeholder” for OCO costs |
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| Government |
Maintains size and role of government |
Reduces size and scope of government |
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Provides percentage increases for discretionary programs |
Reduces size of government to 20% of GDP by 2015 and 15% of GDP by 2050 |
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Reduces non-security discretionary spending to pre-2008 levels |
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Reduces public sector employment by 10% through attrition by 2014 |
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Institutes government pay freeze through 2015 |
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Increases federal employee contributions to retirement |
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Privatizes Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac |
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Decreases regulation of the energy industry |
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Establishes a binding cap on total spending as a percentage of the economy |
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Requires any increase in debt levels to be accompanied by spending reductions |