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Super Committee Deadline Looms: Failure Would Pose Crummy Choice

By ANDREW TAYLOR   11/20/11 01:51 AM ET   AP

WASHINGTON -- If the deficit-cutting supercommittee fails, Congress will face a crummy choice. Lawmakers can allow payroll tax cuts and jobless aid for millions to expire or they extend them and increase the nation's $15 trillion debt by at least $160 billion.

President Barack Obama and Democrats on the deficit panel want to use the committee's product to carry their jobs agenda. That includes cutting in half the 6.2 percent Social Security payroll tax and extending jobless benefits for people who have been unemployed for more than six months.

Also caught up in what promises to be a chaotic legislative dash for the exits next month is the need to pass legislation to prevent an almost 30 percent cut in Medicare payments to doctors. Several popular business tax breaks and relief from the alternative minimum tax also expire at year's end.

A debt plan from the supercommittee, it was hoped, would have served as a sturdy, filibuster-proof vehicle to tow all of these expiring provisions into law. But after months of negotiations, Republicans and Democrats were far apart on any possible compromise, and there was no indication of progress Saturday.

Failure by the committee would leave lawmakers little time to pick up the pieces. And there's no guarantee it all can get done, especially given the impact of those measures on the spiraling debt.

Instead of cutting the deficit with a tough, bipartisan budget deal, Congress could pivot to spending enormous sums on expiring big-ticket policies.

If lawmakers rebel against the cost, as is possible, they would bear responsibility for allowing policies such as the payroll tax cut, enacted a year ago to help prop up the economy, to lapse.

Last year's extensions of jobless benefits and first-ever cut in the payroll tax were accomplished with borrowed money.

The 2 percent payroll tax cut expiring in December gave 121 million families a tax cut averaging $934 last year at a total cost of about $120 billion, according to the Tax Policy Center.

Obama wants to cut the payroll tax by another percentage point for workers at a total cost of $179 billion and reduce the employer share of the tax in half as well for most companies, which carries a $69 billion price tag.

"The notion of imposing a new payroll tax on people after Jan. 1 in the midst of this recession on working families is totally counterproductive," said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, the No. 2 Democrat in the Senate.

Letting extended jobless assistance expire would mean that more than 6 million people would lose benefits averaging $296 a week next year, with 1.8 million cut off within a month.

Economist say those jobless benefits – up to 99 weeks of them in high unemployment states – are among the most effective way to stimulate the economy because unemployed people generally spend the money right away.

"We will have to address those issues," Durbin said.

Extending benefits to the long-term unemployed would cost almost $50 billion under Obama's plan. Preventing the Medicare payment cuts to doctors for an additional 18 months to two years would in all likelihood cost $26 billion to $32 billion more.

Lawmakers also had hoped to renew some tax breaks for business and prevent the alternative minimum tax from sticking more than 30 million taxpayers with higher tax bills. Those items could be addressed retroactively next year, but only increase the uncertainty among already nervous consumers and investors.

This time, Obama wants them to be paid for. But a move by Democrats to try to finance jobs measures with hundreds of billions of dollars in savings from drawing down troops in Iraq and Afghanistan has gotten a cold shoulder from top Republicans.

"I've made it pretty clear that those savings that are coming to us as a result of the wind-down of the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan should be banked, should not be used to offset other spending," said House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. He did not address whether war savings could be used to extend expiring tax cuts.

Those savings are the natural result of national security strategies unrelated to the federal budget. Deficit hawks say tapping into them is simply an accounting gimmick.

"It's just the worst of all worlds if that were to happen," said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

But without the war money at their disposal, lawmakers simply can't pay for the payroll tax cut and jobless benefits. Liberals such as Durbin are fine with employing deficit financing, especially if the alternative is playing Scrooge just before the holidays.

"Many people will hate to go home for Christmas saying to the American people, `Merry Christmas, your payroll taxes go up 2 percent Jan. 1 and unemployment benefits are cut off.'"

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WASHINGTON -- If the deficit-cutting supercommittee fails, Congress will face a crummy choice. Lawmakers can allow payroll tax cuts and jobless aid for millions to expire or they extend them and incre...
WASHINGTON -- If the deficit-cutting supercommittee fails, Congress will face a crummy choice. Lawmakers can allow payroll tax cuts and jobless aid for millions to expire or they extend them and incre...
Filed by Elyse Siegel  | 
 
 
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02:32 PM on 11/21/2011
Bush Tax Cuts , must come to an end an the world will be alot better off ! They just won't do it !!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
emmanuel kalu
commonsense
12:48 PM on 11/21/2011
we not solve any of our national issue until we remove republicans politician from office. there are plenty of solutions that we could apply to cutting the debt without touching the big 3. end the wars and stop borrowing for it. end bush tax cuts and close all the corporate and personal loop holes. cut all subs to oil and gas industry. implement the GAO report of all agencies, there is over 200 billion in saving right there. for the big 3, stop spending SS( we need a lockbox for SS), increase the income that is taxes, remove all the waste, fraud and abuse in the big 3. medicare needs to be means tested. we need to allow medicare bargain for drugs. there is a balance approach to debt reduction, but we would never get to it with this republicans congress. and with election a year away, that would be more time for the republicans to destroy the economy even more.
11:38 AM on 11/21/2011
Let's hope the supercommittee fails. I think people need a wake up call. Losing help from the government may make people recognize how much they need it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
albant
11:18 AM on 11/21/2011
Super Committee creation is a failure by itself. Congress gives up its responsibilities to a very few lawbreakers so they can have someone to blame besides Obama.
Such a concentration of power will have dire consecuences,
Ordinary citizen has nothing to do with law making but surely will pay for the broken dish as usual.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MN Liberal 68
10:35 AM on 11/21/2011
This is not a huge surprise! But think of it this way the Dems entitlement programs are SS, Medicare, etc. The GOP's entitlement programs are Defense, Tax cuts for the rich, When you look at all those programs which ones help the most people? SS, Medicare, etc. Does Defense help everybody? No. Does tax cuts for the rich help everybody? No. But the GOP are hiding behind Grover Nordquist!
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chaya
Another proud veteran
10:06 AM on 11/21/2011
I don't want to seem cold and heartless, but I'm a little confused. The fixed income of disabled (and elderly people) depending on VA benefits or Social Security has been stagnant for three years. In practical terms, they've lost income as the prices of many necessities have doubled. Even an extra $20 or $40 would have been invaluable.

Yet the U. S. borrowed money last year to give employed people nearly $1000 each last year? And they want to do it again this year?

Why?

I guess I'm just confused.
09:22 AM on 11/21/2011
Occupy Congress!
08:55 AM on 11/21/2011
Let it fail- the GOP lost the battle AND the war on this vote.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
godsonecooldude
08:51 AM on 11/21/2011
econmy is getting betr i went to walmart yesterday and no shopping carts
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chaya
Another proud veteran
10:07 AM on 11/21/2011
They were probably all still out in the parking lot because stores are getting rid of the workers who would have taken them in.
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DXM
A sane moderate living during insane extreme times
08:31 AM on 11/21/2011
The crummy choice was creating the super committee... no, wait... the crummy choice was choosing to tackle the long term issue of budget deficits now instead of addressing the near term problem of high unemployment. This was nothing more than a GOP ploy to further their radical right-wing social agenda even though they do NOT have the support of the American people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NER2
OBAMA 2012
12:09 PM on 11/21/2011
The crummy choices that bring us to this precipice were tax cuts for the rich and the decision to wage war in Iraq.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
08:28 AM on 11/21/2011
Super committee failure = further downgrade = 401K and stocks take a hit = rich, middle class and poor lose more of their savings = lose lose situation for all ! Nice job Washington. I guess the 8% that say you are doing a good job will probably drop to zilch.
08:46 AM on 11/21/2011
There will be buget cuts without the super committee. Don't buy the BS, cornel. We will all live another day. The economy was improving before the SC failed and it will roll on its merry way after the SC fails. It's nothing short of nauseating to watch the Washington polls try to convince us that the sky is falling. What horse puckey!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
09:44 AM on 11/21/2011
Sure we will all live another day and take a 5% loss on our investments. You like that ? I don't, specially when it is avoidable !
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sdanca4
How is "trickled-down" working for you
08:27 AM on 11/21/2011
4 trillion in cuts were on the table and the republicans didn't bite...because it meant revenue and Grover Norquist wouldn't like that.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dbos
Single payer universal health insurance agent
08:26 AM on 11/21/2011
What does one do to an employee who fails to do their job? "fire them" ,if only it were that easy.
08:01 AM on 11/21/2011
Every one of those Congressmen should resign. They have not done their job.
08:38 AM on 11/21/2011
I agree.
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chaya
Another proud veteran
10:09 AM on 11/21/2011
"Every one" of them? Really? Patty Murray?

I think you're using a shotgun.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
pj-smith
solidarity with OWS
07:47 AM on 11/21/2011
the payroll tax cut is a back door way to tell us that SS is not fully funded, and thus must be cut too...This is not a good way to stimulate the economy. It's a sneaky way for Obama to do the bidding of the GOPS...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mgd2854
Movement Conservatives: Insane and dangerous!
09:01 AM on 11/21/2011
I agree! The best way to deal with the deficit is for Congress to do nothing and let the Bush tax cuts expire in 2013.