Here are the five things that are currently on the table:
The White House
President Obama has long been advocating what he refers to as “a balanced approach.’’ His proposal would reduce the deficit by about $4 trillion over 10 years by raising tax revenues a total of $1.6 trillion and implementing about $600 billion in program cuts, with most of that money coming from Medicare and Medicaid. The plan also counts on $1 billion in savings as a result of the end of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and $1 trillion in cuts that already have gained congressional approval.
Republicans remain adamantly opposed to the tax portion of the package, which would raise the top income tax bracket – families with incomes of $250,000 or more per annum – from the 35 percent set during the administration of President George W. Bush to the 39.5 percent adopted under President Bill Clinton. The president also wants to hike the tax rates on capital gains from 15 percent to 23.8 percent.
Obama also has slipped in some provisions close to his political heart, like $200 billion in new spending to bolster a sagging economy and removing congressional authority over the federal debt limit.
House Republicans
The Boehner plan is a bit more ambitious than the one circulated by the White House, calling for a deficit reduction of $4.6 trillion over 10 years. The plan would retain the tax rate cuts imposed during the administration of President George W. Bush – including the 35 percent top rate – but pull in an additional $800 billion over 10 years by either killing some tax breaks or deductions or by capping deductions at a certain amount, maybe $50,000.
In addition, the GOP would reduce Medicaid and Medicare spending by $900 billion and introduce additional cuts in discretionary spending by $300 billion.
Simpson-Bowles
There remains a slim possibility that White House and lawmakers may turn to the report issued by the National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform, popularly known as Simpson-Bowles, after the two chairmen, former Republican Sen. Alan Simpson (Wyo.) and Erskine Bowles, a Democrat who served as chief of staff during the Clinton administration.
The panel was established by Obama in 2010 to offer “policies to improve the fiscal situation in the medium term and to achieve fiscal sustainability over the long run.’’ The final report failed to garner sufficient support from commission members to serve as an authoritative proposal. But it offers some ideas that may serve as a guidepost.
Simpson-Bowles cuts the deficit by a little over $4 trillion over 10 years with a “balanced’’ plan — two-thirds spending cuts and one-third tax reform. The final report called for lowering tax rates — the top rate would fall from 35 percent to 29 percent – but increasing revenues by $1.2 trillion by repealing a host of tax breaks, deductions, and credits. The plan also seeks to simplify the tax code.
It also achieves $485 billion in healthcare savings and establishes a formula to limit healthcare spending growth. The package further called for an additional $300 billion in savings from programs like agriculture and federal retirement and limited future spending growth to one percent below inflation, saving about $625 billion.
Simpson-Bowles was overwhelmingly rejected in the House and never fully embraced by Obama, although Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has sung its praises.
Kick the can
Both sides maintain that delaying major decisions on how best to reduce the deficit is a bad idea – but it remains a possibility.
This scenario simply calls for retaining current tax rates while repealing the budget-cutting provisions contained in the Budget Control Act of 2011 – thus protecting the military and health programs from looming cuts.
The result would be leaving major budget and tax decisions to future congresses and administrations. The idea is reviled but, given the partisan gap, still a possibility. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) maintains, however, that extending tax cuts and canceling the automatic spending cuts should result in modest growth over the short term and no major economic hit.
“The worst thing that can happen, frankly, from my perspective, is if they just kick the can down the road,’’ Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said during a recent speech before the Center for a New American Security. “All that would wind up doing is continuing to present a shadow over the Defense Department and for that matter the rest of government as to what would happen and that’s the damn last thing I need.’’
Do nothing
Support for simply letting the provisions contained in the Budget Control Act of 2011 go into effect has gained currency. Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), who served as chairman of the Super Committee, has expressed a willingness to jump if Republicans refuse to compromise on taxes.
Under the fiscal cliff, all Bush-era tax cuts will expire, including those aimed at the middle class. It also calls for across-the-board spending cuts, technically known as sequestration, broadens the alternative minimum tax, and kills the current 2 percent Social Security payroll tax cut. Defense and healthcare programs would be particularly hard hit.
Under this scenario, the CBO estimates the deficit would be cut by about $560 billion. But the agency also warns that the nation’s gross domestic product could fall dramatically, forcing another recession that could result in the loss of an estimated 2 million jobs.
Obama insists it won’t come to that.
“Now, we’ve seen some movement over the last several days among some Republicans,’’ Obama told the Business Roundtable. “I think there’s a recognition that maybe they can accept some rate increases as long as it’s combined with serious entitlement reform and additional spending cuts. And if we can get the leadership on the Republican side to take that framework, to acknowledge that reality, then the numbers actually aren’t that far apart.”
“Another way of putting this is we can probably solve this in about a week; it’s not that tough. But we need that conceptual breakthrough that says we need to do a balanced plan; that’s what’s best for the economy; that’s what the American people voted for. That’s how we’re going to get it done.’’
And now, my bonus!
My scenario involves the last one from up above, "Do Nothing". Here's how it plays out:
Obama and Friends let us go over the cliff, causing everyone to freak out for a few days. Then the President instructs Harry and Nancy to go before the TV cameras, and announce that they are writing legislation that will reinstate all of the tax cuts that just expired a few days ago, except for those earning more than $250,000.
They remind everyone in TV Land that the cuts expired for everyone, thanks to those do-nothing Republicans, but once again, the Democrats have come to the rescue of Working Families. They are ready to vote today to approve the reinstatement of all the cuts (except for those rich, one-percenters!), and will even make it retroactive back to January 1st! They'll also get rid of those mean Medicare/Medicaid cuts, which harm our most at-risk Citizens. All they need is for mean John Boehner to bring it to the floor for an up or down vote.
How can the Republicans not bring it to the floor, how can it not pass through both chambers without any pork/sneakiness attached to it, and how does it not come out as a huge win for the Left?
They get the best of all worlds:
- Mandatory Defense cuts
- Increased taxes on the "Rich"
- Tax breaks for everyone else
- No cuts or entitlement reform whatsoever
- Being viewed/spun as the Party that "fixed" it
Tell me why I am wrong, and why it wouldn't work.




