This originally appeared on Robert Reich's blog.
With the election behind us I had hoped we’d get beyond games of chicken. No such luck.
But first you need to understand that the game of chicken isn’t about how much or when we cut the budget deficit. Or even whether the upcoming “fiscal cliff” poses a danger to the economy.
The
non-partisan Congressional Budget Office on Thursday warned that the
automatic tax increases and spending cuts scheduled to start in January
amount to too much deficit reduction, too soon. They’d put the economy
back into recession, and push unemployment to about 9 percent. But the
CBO also warned of an economic crisis ahead if the United States doesn’t
stem the growth of the nation’s exploding deficit.
Get it? Reduce
the budget deficit too quickly, and we’re in trouble. But fail to
address the deficit, and we’re also in trouble. It’s really a matter of
timing. That’s why I think any deal should include a trigger mechanism
that begins to cut spending and raise taxes when the economy has two
consecutive quarters of 6 percent unemployment or less, and 3 percent
annualized growth or more.
In reality, though, the upcoming game
of chicken isn’t about any of this. It’s over the clearest issue
President Obama and Mitt Romney fought over: whether taxes should be
raised on the rich.
Democrats and Republicans are now maneuvering to maximize their bargaining leverage when they sit down next year to decide this.
On
Friday the President called on called on Congress to immediately make
permanent the tax cuts for Americans who make less than $250,000 a year,
while at the same time allowing tax rates to rise for wealthy Americans
— and then making those rates part of a broader deal next year.
The
President knows congressional Republicans won’t agree, but he needed to
set out his central demand because it’s the one thing that can fairly
be interpreted as a mandate from the election.
So what’s going to happen? Bear with me, because this gets interesting.
Some
Democrats (and some White House strategists) figure they’ll have most
bargaining leverage in next year’s deal if they do nothing now –
allowing tax rates to rise automatically on everyone after the first of
the year. Then they plan to offer Republicans a deal that reduces taxes
on people earning less than $250,000 – which would be retroactive to
January 1st.
Republicans would have to choose between a
tax cut on the middle class or no tax cut at all. Democrats believe
Republicans would have to take the deal. Even Grover Norquist would be
hard-pressed to come up with an argument against it.
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