Thursday, July 21, 2011

What Does "Means Testing" Mean to You?

An ABC News poll dated July 17th asks "adults" (not voters) what they think about the debt talks in Washington.  Question 20 asks: "In order to reduce the national debt, would you support or oppose [ITEM]?"  Items include raising taxes on hedge fund managers (64% approve); raising taxes on those earning over $250,000 a year (72%); cutting spending on Medicaid (26%); and raising Medicare premiums for wealthier retirees (61%).  This last item is referred to as "means-testing."

As the debt arguments have progressed, I have noticed a rise in the use of the phrase "means testing" (especially in relation to Social Security and Medicare.)  What I haven't heard or read is a clear explanation of how this "test" would be applied in "real life"?

For example, given how most IRA accounts and home values have been decimated by the economic recession, and how dicey the markets will be going forward, it seems unreasonable to assume that the average retiree could necessarily count on income other than Social Security from year-to-year.  So one assumption is that benefits would get paid to everyone and the "means test" would be part of the income tax returns process.  But I don't know if this is correct. 

Or does it mean we have to create a new reporting system -- that considers medical benefits as "income" -- even though other insurance pay-outs are tax-exempt?  Since most insurance pay-outs are the result of unforeseen circumstances (whether damage to one's home or car or body) why would Medicare (as health insurance) be taxed differently from other insurance?  And why is civilian insurance (Medicare) "means tested" while VA benefits are off limits?  Especially since all workers pay into the Medicare system, while members of the armed services don't.

Or one could change the funding of Social Security to include all taxable income (not just the current $109 K "wage base") so those in the upper 2-3% contribute more equitably to a system from which they derive basic income "security" should their situation change after retirement.  (See my earlier blog entry for more details.)   In the poll, 66% of those interviewed approve this option.

You can see that one can travel down a very circuitous road when dealing with the realities of what seems to be a simple and reasonable limitation to "entitlements."

So I ask for clarification:
What is meant by the term "means testing" and how would it be applied in "real life"?

I look forward to your thoughts on this topic.


Image information:
March 13, 2008, Blairsville, Georgia; AARP Tax-Aide program offers free one-on-one counseling.
Credit: Janice Boling, Writer/Photographer for the North Georgia News

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Obama and Boehner: They have a "rendezvous with destiny"


I have been grappling with this debate about the debt ceiling and the "grand bargain" of spending cuts offset by revenue increases.  I understand why we need to increase the debt ceiling.  I understand why we need to cut some spending programs.  I agree with the need to close tax loopholes and tax breaks for those sending jobs to other countries.  And most of the commentary has been spent talking about the various maneuvers of politicians around these issues.

To me, what has emerged are a few key points:
·        We cannot get out of this mess with spending cuts alone. 
·        We are in trouble because 14 million Americans are out of work; and they are depending on safety-net benefits instead of paying taxes.
·        There is no "partial deal" or "deal on spending cuts" without a full agreement, including revenue enhancement. Despite what the chattering heads may say, Obama and Biden have not agreed to any cuts until and unless the GOP agrees to some revenue increases.
·        The GOP will not allow any discussion of revenue increases.  They consider the elimination of tax breaks and loopholes for the wealthy to be "job killing tax increases on small business."
·        Going into last weekend, the President and Speaker Boehner wanted to try for a big deal – three trillion dollars in spending cuts and one trillion dollars in revenue increases.
·        Speaker Boehner discovered he did not have the support of enough Republicans in the House to make this deal a reality.  In this effort, he appears to have been challenged by the GOP Majority Leader, Eric Cantor (R-VA.)
·        As a result, the Speaker backed away from the potential historic deal and started setting smaller targets.  In these efforts, he was still undercut by Cantor.
·        With the Republicans refusing to consider any revenue growth ideas, while wanting to undermine the social safety net for children, the disabled, the unemployed and the elderly, the Democrats are beginning to position themselves politically for a potential take-over of the Congress in the upcoming 2012 elections.

These developments led me to consider what I would do if I were John Boehner.  I would conclude the following:
·        Boehner will be a one-term Speaker. Either Cantor will challenge him or the GOP will lose control of the House and he'll be rejected as leader.
·        Boehner may want to consider his "place in history" now that his career is ending.
·        Taking the country to the edge of bankruptcy and undermining the "full faith and credit" of the US Treasury is not a legacy a reasonable person wants to see on his resume'.
·        Boehner should work with Minority Leader Pelosi and her team to find an agreement (or a "clean bill") for which the two parties together can provide enough votes to get it passed in the House of Representatives.  (Yes, I understand this means more Democrats will likely vote for it than Republicans. But then the Democrats believe in more than politics – they believe in governance.)
·        Boehner and Pelosi then must assure there are sufficient votes in the US Senate to support this measure.

If this can be done, the President will sign the debt ceiling extension measure.

John Boehner reminds me of Senator Ross in Kennedy's Profiles in Courage: "I almost literally looked down into my open grave. Friendships, position, fortune, everything that makes life desirable to an ambitious man were about to be swept away. . ."

If President Obama understands Boehner's position in this situation I call on him to encourage the Speaker to do the right thing for the country.  Obama and Boehner have been dealt a bad hand: a broken economy and high unemployment; dropping federal revenues; un-funded wars and under-funded benefit expansions.  This is not the time to debate who is to blame for this situation.  This is the time to act to change the direction, to "bend the curve" and set us back on course for a successful future.

In the election year of 1936, President Franklin Roosevelt addressed his Party's convention in Philadelphia with words that ring true today:

We are poor indeed if this nation cannot afford to lift from every recess of American life the dread fear of the unemployed that they are not needed in the world. We cannot afford to accumulate a deficit in the books of human fortitude.
. . .
Governments can err, presidents do make mistakes, but the immortal Dante tells us that Divine justice weighs the sins of the cold-blooded and the sins of the warm-hearted on different scales.

Better the occasional faults of a government that lives in a spirit of charity than the consistent omissions of a government frozen in the ice of its own indifference.

There is a mysterious cycle in human events. To some generations much is given. Of other generations much is expected. This generation of Americans has a rendezvous with destiny.



Photo Credit:
Washington, DC - July 12: Speaker of the House John Boehner (R-OH) answers reporters' questions during a press briefing after a caucus meeting at the U.S. Capitol July 12, 2011 in Washington, DC. The House Republicans spoke about the ongoing budget and debt limit talks between Congress and the White House. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)