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- <text id=93TT0982>
- <link 93TO0135>
- <title>
- Feb. 22, 1993: A Call To Arms
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Feb. 22, 1993 Uncle Bill Wants You
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- COVER STORIES, Page 27
- A Call To Arms
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>If Clinton follows through on his plan to cut the deficit significantly,
- he must raise taxes $150 billion or so over the next four years.
- Here's how he hopes to do it.
- </p>
- <p>By GEORGE J. CHURCH--With reporting by Margaret Carlson, Michael Duffy and Dan Goodgame/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The job is one "that no government in your country's history
- has ever done." The economic crisis "is every bit as profound
- as those we have faced in the past." In fact, "if we don't reform
- our economic policies...10 years from now we won't even
- recognize the country." For openers, "we risk losing the standard
- of living that we have taken for granted for so many years."
- But Americans will make the sacrifices required--most prominently,
- paying $150 billion or so in new or increased taxes over the
- next four years--because they never fail to heed "alarm bells
- in the night."
- </p>
- <p> All last week Bill Clinton rang those alarm bells, playing a
- thunderous overture to his address to Congress this week. He
- will probably need every decibel. The economic plan he outlines
- this week is stunning both in size--some aides estimate it
- may shift as much as $400 billion in taxes and spending over
- the next four years--and scope. Its scores of proposals cover
- items as small as layoffs and lesser perks for the White House
- staff, calculated to save a penny-ante $10 million a year, and
- as large as new energy taxes that could raise as much as $25
- billion a year. Less than 30 days into his presidency, Clinton
- has crammed into one package most of the changes he wants to
- make in the next four years (the big exception is health-care
- reform). How much he can persuade Congress to enact, and how
- much political capital he has to spend doing so, will largely
- determine what options are open to the White House in 1994,
- 1995 and 1996.
- </p>
- <p> It promises to be a difficult sell. Clinton, it is true, may
- be overstressing the sacrifice it will require--possibly deliberately,
- in hopes of inspiring a gee-that-wasn't-really-so-bad sigh of
- relief. Still, he will be raising taxes on the middle class,
- rather than delivering the tax cut he promised during the campaign,
- and at least nicking the hide of that most sacred cow, Social
- Security. Though polls do show that people are worried about
- the deficit and want it reduced, it seems questionable whether
- many citizens could identify the ways in which an untamed deficit
- might cause more pain than the sacrifices needed to bring it
- under control.
- </p>
- <p> The President makes a sound case that America's budgetary red
- ink in the long run will drown all hope of economic prog ress.
- To about 230 businessmen invited last Wednesday to the White
- House, Clinton gave some dire predictions about the U.S. "Ten
- years from now, if we don't change present policies": budget
- deficits exceeding $650 billion a year, or more than double
- even today's bloated figures; and a national debt equal to 78%
- of the country's total output of goods and services. But to
- many people that might seem a rather dry statistical apocalypse
- and not exactly imminent; the President cannot really point
- to any awful calamity likely to strike next week or next year.
- Similarly, Clinton in his town-hall television appearance last
- week sketched the joys of deficit reduction: "The United States
- doesn't borrow so much money. We have more of your tax money
- to spend on the education of your children, or on developing
- new jobs, or on health care. We keep interest rates down, and
- it's easier for you to borrow money in the private sector, so
- you create more jobs." Unimpeachable logic and in layman's language--but still a rather complicated chain of cause and effect.
- </p>
- <p> The latest TIME/CNN poll taken by Yankelovich Partners Inc.
- indicates that while voters buy the general idea of sacrifice,
- they will be very hard to convince on some all-important specifics.
- Asked if "people like you" should make sacrifices in order to
- reduce the budget deficit, respondents voted yes, 53% to 39%.
- But they overwhelmingly opposed two of the most likely proposals.
- Higher taxes on upper-income Social Security pensioners were
- rejected, 65% to 31%; federal taxes on all forms of energy,
- 74% to 23%. Those questioned did, however, favor higher personal
- income taxes on families making more than $200,000 a year, 79%
- to 18%. Despite the altruistic answers about sacrifice in general,
- these results were distressingly in keeping with an attitude
- of, sure, raise taxes--but not on me.
- </p>
- <p> The Administration, nonetheless, is pressing ahead. Its package
- was still being refined over the weekend, and some specifics
- are subject to change right up to the time the President goes
- before a joint session of Congress on Wednesday night. Clinton,
- as he so often does, has been reopening some issues that his
- advisers had thought settled. At the end of last week, he was
- still seeking a way to save some vestige of the middle-class
- tax cut he once promised, perhaps by slightly increasing the
- child-care tax credit for low- and moderate-income families.
- But at least the main outlines, and some specifics, were fairly
- well settled:
- </p>
- <p> DEFICIT-CUTTING AMBITION In January, Clinton promised to cut
- the budget deficit for fiscal 1997, which begins in October
- 1996, by $145 billion. The latest official forecast of the 1997
- deficit, by the Congressional Budget Office, is $319 billion,
- but according to some congressional sources, the Clinton Administration
- has drawn up if-nothing-is-done estimates of $357 billion or
- even $384 billion. After Clinton mentioned the $145 billion
- figure, some of his aides began backing off, saying the important
- thing was simply to get the number moving down, and giving the
- impression that the President might settle for $70 billion to
- $100 billion. That now appears to have been a game intended
- to damp down expectations in the financial markets and among
- pundits, so that they could be pleasantly surprised when the
- original target was reinstated. "We are still pushing toward
- 145 [billion dollars]," says a top official. "It could be
- 135, it could be 142, it could be 138. Look at 140, and go a
- couple [billion] either way." One irony: the country will
- not be certain whether Clinton has met his $145 billion goal
- until September 1997, long after his first term is over.
- </p>
- <p> BALANCE Budget Director Leon Panetta once said he would shoot
- for a ratio of $2 in spending cuts to every $1 in tax increases.
- Clinton's lieutenants have been unable to find that much spending
- to cut, though, and are now striving just for "balance." Moreover,
- they may be able to get a 1-to-1 ratio only by playing semantic
- games: labeling as "spending cuts" what are really tax increases
- on heavily subsidized Social Security recipients, people who
- take home-mortgage deductions on their income taxes and others.
- Social Security taxes, for example, are counted against spending
- on pensions and the like; an increase in tax collections reduces
- net outlays and thus qualifies, to government accountants anyway,
- as a spending cut. All this will give Republicans reason to
- hoot again at tax-and-spend Democrats.
- </p>
- <p> ENERGY TAXES The big one, in terms of money involved, numbers
- of people affected (just about everybody) and vehemence of opposition.
- Though Administration officials were insisting late last week
- that the type and amount were still unresolved, the choices
- had apparently narrowed to either an ad valorem levy, essentially
- a sales tax on the wholesale price of fuel, or a BTU (British
- thermal unit) tax based on the heat content of fuel. Either
- would apply to every kind of energy--coal, oil, natural gas,
- nuclear and hydroelectric power--and for every use--running
- cars and trains, heating homes, firing factory boilers, generating
- electricity. A 5% ad valorem tax would raise about $18 billion
- a year over the next five years. A BTU tax, which Clinton is
- said to lean toward, could be tailored to bring in just about
- any amount of money desired, but would probably be aimed to
- raise $18 billion to $25 billion a year. At the $18 billion
- level, either would cost an average family about $100 a year
- in price increases forced by the tax hikes.
- </p>
- <p> Opposition will be bitter. Truckers and other big fuel users
- are claiming that energy taxes depress the economy and wipe
- out jobs. They have been joined by the very liberal Citizens
- for Tax Justice, which complains that energy taxes would hurt
- the poor and middle class. The Administration would probably
- try to give back some of the money to the poor in the form of
- a higher earned-income tax credit or some similar device. The
- Administration's essential argument is that it needs the money,
- and this is one way to raise it that also promotes energy conservation
- and helps curb pollution.
- </p>
- <p> ENTITLEMENTS Pensioners with incomes of more than $32,000 a
- year for couples or $25,000 for singles now pay income tax on
- 50% of their Social Security receipts. That would be raised
- to 85% if Congress approves a virtually certain Clinton request--and it may. The President tested out the idea on 22 congressional
- Democrats whom he invited to the White House for a 90-minute
- chat Thursday. Somewhat surprisingly, in view of the TIME/CNN-poll
- figures, all 22 reported that the idea had been favorably received
- in their district. Said Tim Penny of Minnesota: "It appears
- to have survived the coffee-shop test." Several legislators
- said a start on reining in Social Security, the biggest of all
- entitlements, would make it possible later to examine others:
- veterans' benefits, for example. Clinton has been talking about
- taking a whack out of some other entitlement programs even
- this year, but so far not in very specific terms.
- </p>
- <p> INCOME TAXES An increase in the top individual rate to 36% or
- more, from 31%, is nearly certain, probably for people with
- incomes of more than $125,000 a year for singles and $200,000
- for families. Congress has already voted a 10% surcharge on
- $1 million-plus incomes that Clinton will happily sign. Under
- his plans, the alternative minimum tax on people who get high
- incomes from sources sheltered from ordinary taxes--partnership
- investments in real estate, oil and natural gas, for example--would probably be raised to 28%, from 24% now. And the President
- called businessmen to the White House last week partly to tell
- them to their face that he intends to raise taxes on their company
- profits. The corporate income tax is supposed to go from 34%
- to 36%, or whatever the top individual rate becomes. The two
- must be the same to prevent owners of closely held corporations
- from shifting income from corporate to individual accounts,
- or vice versa, to take advantage of a lower rate.
- </p>
- <p> Some of these increases will be big moneymakers: a 36% top rate
- on individual incomes could bring in $60 billion over four years.
- But others are largely symbolic, designed to demonstrate to
- the middle class that if its taxes are being increased, fat
- cats who benefited heavily from the Republican tax cuts of the
- 1980s are being hit much harder. Standout example: a proposed
- limitation on the ability of companies to deduct "excessive"
- salaries paid to chief executives and other high officers. Clinton
- says it would have "relatively small dollar impact [maybe $300
- million the first year] but great significance to the American
- people."
- </p>
- <p> BACKDOWNS AND DELAYS Some tax boosts once widely talked about
- will not appear in the Clinton program. Treasury Secretary Lloyd
- Bentsen, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dan Rostenkowski
- and other veterans of the bloody inheritance-tax wars of the
- 1970s successfully counseled the Administration not to fight
- that battle again. Clinton's aides found that eliminating mortgage-interest
- deductions for second homes would hit hard at many people who
- are decidedly not rich. "It turns out after you study it that
- a lot of auto workers have cabins in Michigan," says a presidential
- assistant. Instead, the Administration is likely to propose
- limiting deductions to the interest paid on the first $300,000
- of mortgage principal--on first and/or second homes, combined.
- </p>
- <p> Clinton very much intends to propose higher excise taxes on
- liquor and tobacco and a new tax on generous health-insurance
- benefits provided by employers to their workers. But he will
- not suggest these important, big-money items this week. Instead,
- he is saving them to offset what could otherwise be the budget-busting
- costs of health-care reform.
- </p>
- <p> SPENDING CUTS The White House is in something of a bind. Tax
- increases can be made, or made to appear, equitable by spreading
- them over enough people. Spending cuts tend to target particular
- people--worse, constituents of particular Congress men,
- often Democrats who have won re-election by boasting that they
- kept in the budget spending programs that benefit their district.
- On the other hand, some Republicans who are scarcely enthralled
- by tax increases might buy them as the price for reducing the
- size of government. "If he does what he promises, he's going
- to get a lot of bipartisan support," says Wayne Valis, a former
- Reagan Administration official who is now a lobbyist.
- </p>
- <p> Not surprisingly, the Administration has been far less specific
- about this important aspect of its program than about its tax
- plans, and what it has stressed publicly tends heavily to the
- symbolic. The cuts in White House staff and in government-wide
- employment and perks--chauffeured limousines for top officials,
- cheap mess halls, riding stables--were designed to demonstrate
- to the public that the government too is pulling in its belt.
- </p>
- <p> Defense Secretary Les Aspin is identifying reductions in the
- Pentagon budget totaling $50 billion over four years, in addition
- to those planned by George Bush, with a down payment of $8 billion
- to $10 billion this year. Space projects and other federally
- funded big science programs are also in for a heavy hit. In
- many cases, though, the targets are being selected on the basis
- not of economic or social merit but of simple vote counting.
- Clinton is likely to take a hard whack out of funding for the
- space station, at the risk of offending Senators from California,
- Texas and Florida, but will not similarly slash money for the
- Texas-based Superconducting Supercollider. No point in giving
- the Texans an additional grievance.
- </p>
- <p> QUICK STIMULUS For all his emphasis on deficit reduction, Clinton
- still intends to start with immediate spending increases and
- tax cuts, totaling about $31 billion over two years. The spending
- will include $4 billion for extended unemployment benefits;
- $7 billion for road building, waste-water-treatment facilities
- and other infrastructure projects; and about $4 billion for
- miscellaneous needs, including hiring new meat and poultry inspectors
- and expanding child immunizations. The tax cut will be a credit
- for business purchases of new plant and equipment. The justification
- is that the economy still needs a quick boost because, though
- production is now growing swiftly, employment is not. Downside:
- the program will take effect well before any of the austerity
- measures, adding perhaps $30 billion to the deficits that Clinton
- will then try to reduce.
- </p>
- <p> INVESTMENT Clinton continues to insist on combining deficit
- cutting with long-term investment designed to promote social
- reform, increase employment and make the economy more productive.
- Some of his ambitious projects--creation of a national police
- corps, a job-training apprentice program, national service as
- a way for college students to repay government-backed loans--are being greatly reduced or begun only as pilot programs
- in order to save money. But he still intends to spend on such
- projects as high-speed commuting trains, a nationwide data
- "highway" connecting computers nationwide, and promoting research
- in emerging technologies. There will be some tax cuts too: Clinton
- intends to extend tax incentives to companies for investment
- in inner cities. He is even committed to that darling of Republicans,
- a targeted capital-gains-tax cut, though he insists it would
- be carefully focused to reward long-term investment in new,
- small companies. Some of these proj ects will obviously reduce
- the deficit-cutting effect of his bigger tax boosts and spending
- reductions.
- </p>
- <p> The President launched an all-out hard sell for his program
- last week with his TV appearance and meetings with business
- executives and legislators. The pace will pick up sharply this
- week: immediately after the speech to Congress, Cabinet members
- will fan out to radio and TV shows to plug the program, and
- some will be dispatched to their home state to begin grass-roots
- lobbying.
- </p>
- <p> The opposition is mobilizing too. Republican leaders will blast
- Clinton as a tax-happy promoter of "class warfare," in the words
- of House minority whip Newt Gingrich. The United Seniors Association
- vows to have its members send 1 million letters to Washington
- protesting any tinkering with Social Security. But business
- groups, while hardly enthusiastic about higher corporate taxes,
- have been holding their fire; there are some hints that the
- U.S. Chamber of Commerce may wind up endorsing the plan. For
- all those who have spent years bemoaning deficits, the opportunity
- to do more than complain about them is finally here.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-