By John Cavanagh
This fall, the U.S. Congress is going to wage a pitched,
dragged-out battle over cutting roughly $120 billion a year to solve the
so-called deficit crisis. Vital things like teachers’ jobs and Medicare
could well get cut.
The Right is already launching new coalitions to push for
an austerity budget, calling for cuts in “wasteful government spending,”
including key safety-net programs like Medicare, Medicaid, Social
Security, and food stamps. America has overspent, they say. America is
broke. But at the same time, they are calling for an extension of the
Bush tax cuts and ruling out cuts in military spending—both policies
that will increase the deficit.
It doesn’t have to be this way. My colleagues at the Institute for Policy Studies
(IPS) have identified seven steps that, together, more than eliminate
the deficit while making the country more equitable, green, and secure.
These proposals, from the IPS study called "America Is Not Broke,” would also address the two deficits that author DavId Korten
says do more to erode our society than the fiscal deficit does: our
social deficits (rising poverty and inequality) and environmental
deficits (starting with the climate crisis).
More Fairness, Less Deficit
Our first three proposals could bring in $329 billion a
year; this alone would solve the deficit problem while helping to close
the yawning inequality gap.
1. Tax Wall Street: $150 billion per year. A tiny tax
on stock and derivatives transactions, which several European countries
are on track to adopt, would discourage Wall Street speculation, fill
the hole in the deficit left by the Bush tax cuts, and leave plenty left
over to fund lots of programs. The National Nurses Union and many other
allies are fighting hard for this.
2. Tax Corporations and Stop Tax Haven Abuse: $100 billion per year. The Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency coalition
has pointed out that one of the main ways that corporations avoid
paying taxes is by declaring their profits in overseas tax havens like
the Cayman Islands.
3. Tax the Wealthy Fairly: $79 billion per year. Our
rigged tax code lets CEOs pay a lower tax rate than their secretaries do
(as Warren Buffett keeps pointing out). The proposed Fairness in
Taxation Act (HR 1124) would address this by adding five additional tax
brackets for incomes over $1 million.
These three policy changes would go a long way toward
making our society more equal, and that means better health, too. There
is a terrific body of global evidence, a lot of it compiled by British
researchers Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett,
that more equal societies are much healthier. People at all income
levels live longer; they are more fulfilled; and there is less violence.
The United States, a relatively equal society as recently as the 1970s,
is now off the charts in terms of wealth and income inequality. It
doesn’t have to be that way. Just as we created a more just and vibrant
economy and a strong middle class through fair taxes between 1940 and
1980, we can do it again through progressive taxation.
More Green, Less Pollution
4. Tax Pollution: $75 billion per year. A tax on
the carbon content of fossil fuels would reduce our dependence on oil
while cutting air pollution and emissions of greenhouse gases. And, as
economist Robert Frank pointed out on August 25 in The New York Times, “News that a carbon tax was coming would create a stampede to develop energy-saving technologies.”
5. End Fossil Fuel Subsidies: $12 billion per year.
This call should unite left and right. Why would anyone want to
maintain a giant government subsidy to an industry that is the world’s
major contributor to fossil-fuel emissions? 350.org has made this a centerpiece of their work. We should be able to win this.
More Savings, Less War
Finally, there are simple ways to cut the military while
making the country and the world more secure. More than half of
government discretionary spending now goes to the military. Congress has
long avoided cuts, in part because they equate military spending with
jobs, but IPS has pointed out
that almost every other industry employs more workers per dollar than
the military. Plus, there is now bipartisan support for two sets of
significant cuts.
6. End Military Waste: $109 billion per year. A
broad spectrum of experts has found over $100 billion a year in waste
that could be eliminated with no sacrifice in security. Three recent
commissions, two of them bi-partisan, have recommended roughly $1
trillion in military cuts over 10 years.
7. Close a third of our overseas bases and our Iraq operations: $21 billion per year.
Over two decades after the Cold War ended, the United States still
maintains roughly 1,000 military installations in other countries. A
majority of the President’s own deficit commission,
which includes three Republican senators—the National Commission on
Financial Responsibility and Reform—backed a proposal to close one third
of our overseas military bases.
This plan could help erase the nation’s dangerous social and environmental deficits.
These seven simple steps would raise close to $550 billion
a year. They would quickly erase the fiscal deficit and return the
country to a healthy budget surplus. There would be hundreds of billions
left to invest in key sectors that could make the country more secure,
more green, and more equitable: care jobs, green jobs, infrastructure jobs.
In other words, this plan could help erase the nation’s dangerous social and environmental deficits.
Many groups—from Jobs with Justice to National People’s
Action to the AFL-CIO—are organizing to counter a push by the Right to
use the deficit crisis to shred social programs and our nation’s safety
net. Let’s up the ante and spread the message. America is not broke. We
have plenty of resources to rebuild shared prosperity in the U.S.
John Cavanagh wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas and practical actions. John is director of the Washington-basedInstitute for Policy Studies, co-chair of the New Economy Working Group, and a co-author of IPS’s study: America Is Not Broke, where citations for this article can be found.
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