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Bush proposes $2.8 trillion budget to boost military spending
and slash social programs
By Kate Randall
7 February 2006
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President Bush sent a $2.77 trillion budget plan to Congress
on Monday that includes record spending for the military and cuts
funding for a wide range of social programs. Included is $65 billion
in cuts to entitlement programs over the next five years, more
than half of this from Medicare. Bush is also seeking to make
his first-term tax cuts permanent.
The plan is in line with the agenda set forth by the president
in his State of the Union address last weekto boost funds
for the war on terror and domestic policing and slash
federal spending on programs relied on by working Americans, retirees
and the poor. The proposed budget covers the 2007 fiscal year
beginning October 1, and its appropriations must be approved by
Congress, which will begin debate on it this spring.
Under Bushs proposal, military spending would increase
by 4.8 percent, to a record $439.3 billion. The Defense Department
would see an increase of 6.9 percent, including a rise in the
Armys budget from $99 billion to $112 billion. The budget
would fund a 15 percent increase in the size of the US Special
Forces. A 2.2 percent increase in base military pay is also proposed.
Funds earmarked for the military include only a portion of
the money the administration proposes to spend on the wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan in fiscal 2007. The budget contains only
$50 billion in spending for the Iraq war. The Bush administration
will be asking for $70 billion in additional war spending in addition
to the $50 billion in supplemental funding already approved by
Congress just last December.
The Department of Homeland Security will get a 9.8 percent
funding rise, including increased funding to the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) and money to add 1,500 new border patrol
agents.
The biggest cut by far is aimed at entitlement programs, where
projected spending would be cut by $65 billion over the next five
years. Bush proposes to slash $36 billion from Medicare, the federal
program that provides health care to seniors and the disabled.
The Medicare cuts would be achieved by reducing inflation adjustments
for hospitals, nursing homes, home health providers and hospices.
The plan also includes triggers that would cut Medicare outlays
if spending surpasses certain limits already enacted in law. The
retiree advocacy group AARP (formerly known as the Association
for the Advancement of Retired Persons) said such cutoffs could
be very damaging because they cap spending without
addressing skyrocketing health care costs for seniors.
The Bush plan would divert $60 billion from tax revenues over
10 years for so-called health savings accountsa
program that would mainly be utilized by upper-income people.
Under the plan, individuals would set aside tax-free savings to
fund health costs. The benefits for working class families in
such a program would be drastically limited, as new data shows
that the majority of Americans have negative savings balances,
and contributions could only come by further carving into weekly
earnings.
The clear purpose of this initiative is to undermine federally
funded programs that guarantee certain benefits and replace them
with private accounts in which individuals would have to purchase
health care from private providers and their benefits would not
be guaranteed.
Reductions in other entitlement, or nondiscretionary, spending
include close to $5 billion in farm commodity programs and $16.7
billion from the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp., the federal program
backing private pensions. This cut in the federal pension program
comes at time when bankruptcy courts are authorizing wholesale
looting of workers pensions and a growing number of companies
are jumping on the pension-freezing bandwagon.
The budget calls for eliminating or sharply scaling back funding
for 141 discretionary programs, for a projected total reduction
of almost $15 billion. Such programs must be funded every year
by Congress.
Almost a third of such programs targeted for cutbacks or elimination
are in education, where overall spending would be reduced by 3.4
percent. The budget plan proposes cutbacks in programs supporting
the arts, a reduction in funding for vocational training, and
the elimination of a program providing college preparation for
poor students. A program combating violence against women would
also be cut.
Projects tapped by Bush for an increase include $4 billion
over the next five years for drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge, a proposal promoted by the energy industry and widely
opposed by environmentalists that has been blocked numerous times
by Congress.
Also tagged for a funding increase is the new American
Competitiveness Initiative, which would extend an expired
tax break for corporate research and development, a program highlighted
by Bush in his State of the Union speech.
Underscoring the brazen class bias of Bushs 2007 budget,
the proposal calls for reducing government revenues by $1.4 trillion
over the next 10 years by making permanent the tax cuts passed
earlier in the Bush presidency. While social programs for working
people and the poor are put on the chopping block, these tax breaks
overwhelmingly benefit the wealthiest and most privileged Americans.
In the Bush budget, a combination of burgeoning military spending,
huge tax breaks for the rich, and deep cuts in social spending
are still expected to result in a $423 billion federal deficit
for fiscal year 2007, according to the best-case estimates by
the White House.
Sections of Congressional Democrats and Republicans alike are
concerned about these deficits. Senator Kent Conrad of North Dakota,
the top Democrat on the Senate Budget Committee, commented that
the budget explodes deficits, but then conceals them by
providing only five years of numbers and leaving out large costs.
Commenting on the expenditures for entitlement programs, Republican
Senator Judd Gregg (New Hampshire), the Senate Budget Committee
chairman, said, We have to face up to this fiscal reality
that this baby boom generation is going to retire soon and we
need to do something about it.
Bushs budget proposal met with a somewhat lukewarm reception
in Congress. Congressmen and women facing reelection this November
will have to justify to their home constituencies a budget that
nakedly favors military spending and tax cuts for the rich, while
targeting programs for the elderly and societys most vulnerable.
The statements of House Speaker Dennis Hastert (Republican,
Illinois), however, summed up the general attitude of House Republicans,
who can be expected to campaign for the passage of much of Bushs
proposed budget. Make no mistake, Hastert said, This
House of Representatives will keep a sharp eye on controlling
spending throughout this budget process.
The Senate minority leader, Harry Reid (Democrat, Nevada),
criticized the proposed cuts in the Bush plan as the cost of the
Republican culture of corruption.
While Congress failed last year to implement Bushs proposals
on revamping Social Security, in the end two-thirds of his spending
cuts were approved. An overwhelming majority in Congressboth
Democratic and Republicanhas repeatedly authorized White
House requests for military spending.
A spokesman for Fiscal Dynamics, a financial advisory firm
for the affluent, predicted that much of Bushs budget would
be pushed through in a lame-duck session after the election.
See Also:
US budget slashes social spending to
fund war and tax cuts for the rich
[3 February 2006]
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