Hey! Supercommittee! Here’s the Smart Plan to Save $7 Trillion, Create Jobs, Save Social Security
America is not broke. But America does have broken priorities.
Americans are waking up to this reality. That’s why they are occupying Wall Street, that’s why they are protesting in Madison, Columbus, Lansing and other state capitals, that’s why thousands marched Saturday in Washington and other cities on behalf of “Jobs and Justice.”
“We are in the midst of a major economic crisis. Millions of Americans are jobless, our schools and infrastructure are under-resourced, our kids are being denied real educational opportunities and their futures are at risk. It’s no wonder that people are frustrated,” says American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten, a featured speaker at the Washington rally that honored the social and economic justice legacy of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. while highlighting the ongoing nature of the civil rights icon’s struggle. “The march and rally are about hitting the streets and taking concrete action to change our nation to once again become the place where everyone has a shot at the American dream.”
The people get it, and unions and activist groups such as Progressive Democrats of America have been stepping up this weekend with dozens of events to the highlight the the issues from coast to coast.
But will Congress?
The answer will come, at least in part from the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, which in coming weeks will have to decide whether to maintain the broken priorities that created the current mess—or to reject them and get the country on track toward fiscal stabiliy and economic renewal.
If the bipartisan committee perpetuates the austerity agenda that is being demanded by the Republcans and conservative Democrats—and too frequently references as a touchstone by President Obama—the United States will find itself in a worst-case scenatio that combines burdensome debts and stalled growth.
That does not have to be the case.
The Congressional Progressive Caucus is proposing a comprehensive plan to get the nation’s fiscal house in order while as the same time stabilizing the circumstance of social programs and spurring job growth. The CPC plan outlines $7 trillion in savings for the federal government and, just as critically, is proposes a new set of priorities that creates jobs, stabilizes communities and strengthens the social-safety net.
“It’s way past time to talk big or think big— it’s time to govern big and do what needs doing,” says CPC co-chair Raúl M. Grijalva, D-Arizona. “The American people are sick and tired of feeling too few in the government are responsive to their needs. While Republicans dither about cutting corporate taxes and dismantling Medicare, people are losing their homes, losing their jobs and losing their savings through no fault of their own. As a government, we need to look at ourselves and offer the country solutions that match the scope of the problems we face. Anything less is a waste of time.”
The CPC plan combines smart economics with a sound set of priorities.
How so?
It starts by finding the money the United States needs now—not just to balance budgets but to make the right investments for the future:
Step One: Allow the Bush-era tax cuts to expire and scrap irresponsible estate tax changes, saving $3.95 trillion over the next decade.
Step One: Engineer a responsible end to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, saving $1.6 trillion.
Step Two: Enact a “Fairness in Taxation Act,” creating a millionaire tax that generates $872.5 billion.
Step Three: Allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices with pharmaceutical companies, saving $157.9 billion.
The CPC plan outlines numerous other proposals for raising revenues—including a financial transactions tax on speculators dealing in “exotic financial products”—and for using the savigs to assure the long-term stability of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
Perhaps most importantly, however, the CPC plan recognizes the importance of job creation as a deficit-reduction tool. “While Republican politicians are busy slashing good paying American jobs from our economy, the Progressive Caucus continues to put job creation first with serious proposals to rebuild America,” says CPC Co-Chair Keith Ellison, D-Minnesota. “The most effective way to reduce the deficit is to put America back to work. Creating good jobs, making sure that everyone pays their fair share and protecting Social Security Medicare and Medicaid, are the best ways to ensure that all Americans are put on the path to prosperity, not just the wealthiest one percent.”
To that end, the caucus suggests that the supercommittee should include a job-creation component in its recommendations. To do that, the CPC recommends focusing on five initiatives:
1. Make it in America Again“We must begin with a strategy to revive manufacturing in the United States. This requires developing something every other industrial nation has—a national plan for manufacturing. When people see the words ‘Made in America’ they know that they are getting the highest quality manufactured goods money can buy. We need a policy that reopens our factories and lets Americans do what they do best: produce the highest quality products in the world.”
2. Rebuild America“With the cost of borrowing near zero, the construction industry flat on its back, and America’s decrepit infrastructure not only a competitive burden, but a threat to lives and safety, there is no better time to launch a major initiative to rebuild America. Create a national investment bank to leverage private capital and ensure that major projects are determined by merit, not by political muscle. Rebuild our half century old roads, bridges, locks and dams, while spurring creation of the roads of the future by connecting and empowering our country with fiber optic cable.”
3. Jobs for the Next Generation“There is no shortage of work to be done in America and no shortage of workers to do it. One in four teenagers are officially unemployed, including nearly half of young African Americans and Latinos. We are witnessing a generation of crushed hopes, and we are squandering the talent of young Americans. Destructive cuts in public education threaten America’s economic success and we are now falling behind. We must increase federal support for hiring teachers as a catalyst for job creation and immediate and future economic development. We must invest in the finest public education and job training in the world, education is no longer a guarantee of work. Let us make the guarantee of a good American job real for every young person. We should provide direct employment in the public sector and incentives for hiring in the non-profit sector and private sector. In addition, the caucus supports a ‘Train me and pay me’ program which would give stipends to workers and young people who are enrolled in job training programs.”
4. Lead the Green Industrial RevolutionA centerpiece of our economic strategy must be to create good jobs now by capturing the lead in the industrial revolution that is sweeping the world—starting with clean energy, electric cars, and efficient appliances. We need to invest in research and innovation so that America remains on the cutting edge of global technologies. Provide investment incentives to companies to create jobs here at home. Build a modern smart grid that can deliver efficiency and clean energy.”
5. Not Just Jobs— Good Jobs“American workers want good American jobs, not poverty level wages without benefits that make it impossible to support a family or save for the future. We can start by making sure that middle-class Americans are free to organize and have a voice and a seat at the table again. If corporations can join together to hire an army of lobbyists, working Americans must come together and use their strength in numbers to protect the rights of middle class Americans. We must ensure that businesses obey our labor laws and reward those that create good paying American jobs that protect our rights to equal opportunity and equal pay. Programs like TANF ECF have been proven to put people to work. While, we work on building these good jobs, we must ensure the long-term unemployed receive the full assistance and services they need so they can continue contributing to the economy.”
The supercommittee will, undoubtedly explore, and potentially embrace, a lot of bad ideas.
The Congressional Progressive Caucus has come up with the right response to all of them: America is not broke. But it does need to fix some broken priorities.
“With the supercommittee, the Republicans have manufactured yet another budget crisis,” says CPC Budget Task Force Chair Michael Honda, D-California. “We can ‘go big’ and address our budget deficits by allowing the unpaid-for Bush tax cuts to expire and ending our unpaid-for wars on schedule. Anyone who says we need to cut education, cut the social safety net, cut Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare or provide more tax cuts to the rich, is pushing a political agenda, not sound fiscal policy.”
Copyright © The Nation – distributed by Agence Global.
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13 comments on "Hey! Supercommittee! Here’s the Smart Plan to Save $7 Trillion, Create Jobs, Save Social Security"
ysieutx
October 17, 2011 3:04pm
. imagine you could protect jobs by
having all your friends
pool their savings to buy a company;
so that all your friends could have jobs;
but one of your friends reminds the group
that the best money
is in high-pollution work .
. why don't we just rent the business
to a foreign land,
and live off of rent money
instead of working?!
. your friends then want to know
if their kids are part of the rent sharing .
. you can share with your kids
all you want !
but I want a lot of kids .
. can't they start their own
job protection scheme?
maybe there's a new continent to rip off!
maybe we can just tell our kids
to scrap with each other about it .
won't there be complainers?
. let's build a prison for complainers!
ah, men!
October 17, 2011 8:56am
The purpose of the Supercommittee is to place a buffer between the present situation and the destruction of freedom. NO MEMBER OF THE SUPERCOMMITTEE has any concern whatsoever for the American People They will connive, sneak, manipulate, cook books and lie to destroy any worthwhile program that will take money out of the pockets of the people who are slipping them cash under the table. It's a SHAM. Just like the 911, the death of OBL, drones to kill key dissenters without trial and Obama's reduction of payments into Social Security from workers to help break the system faster. When the Supercommittee destroys America, Obama will shrug and say, "It wasn't me." THAT IS THE ONLY REASON IT EXISTS.
Burton, Washington
October 17, 2011 1:20am
Why limit a transaction tax to "exotic financial products"? The market could be run 3 days a week and still do all the trading necessary & sufficient. Hearing the Dow, Jones numbers 10 times a day- even on NPR- is one of the most regressive "desire stimulators" around... so let's CHARGE for it- all of it.
There's a real need to tax "Capital gains" as if it were "earned income"... unless it's for "capital gains" that took, maybe, 5 years or more to accrue. These hedge fund jackals, with their customized software trading programs buying and selling the same stock- in huge block- 5 or 6 times a day, need "a job Classification"... something akin to roulette wheel spinners... and pay taxes in a similar manner (along with the "transaction tax" mentioned above).
Ending "Job-killing globalization policies" & "free trade" deals that make it easier to dump the factory output from transnational investments in 3rd world countries more easily into the "U.S. market-of-last-resort". WHY sign a 'deal' with Korea to let them sell their cars here more cheaply? How big is THEIR market?.. and how big is OURS? (They should be making their deal with China- & NORTH Korea- and not Us.)
There's good talk here in the comments about getting more people back onto the land... and that's great. It doesn't require a "latter-day homestead/land rush", either. It requires ENFORCING CURRENT LAWS about property ownership in light of Federal water laws, and ending subsidies for crops like COTTON & SUGAR. These are both ridiculous & outrageous. (Why do WE have to pay almost twice the world price for Sugar? Why do WE pay Brazilian cotton growers OUR TAX Dollars in order to Continue to pay OUR TAX dollars to our own cotton farmers? That land could be growing food crops... and supporting thousands of working families in the process.)
Good "food for thought" here... thanks. ^..^
October 17, 2011 12:59am
The CPC is wonderful, it is just sad to read all of their proposals - knowing that they are pragmatic, logical, and would assure true growth - while knowing that it is unlikely to be given a voice, need alone strongly considered. This should be used by the protesters in NYC to further critique their list of demands. That is the kind of attitude that everyone needs to embrace and support.
October 16, 2011 9:25pm
In a perfect progressive world, this would fly. Unfortunately, with the Regressives in power in the House, nothing but dreams now.
October 16, 2011 4:42pm
Good ideas. Add to that, subsidies for mega farms should be abolished. Small farmers should be encouraged, given tax breaks, and the farms allowed to be handed down generation to generation w/o the outrageous taxes that cause so many to be lost. Small farms on public lands would not work - the land is unsuitable for farming w/o drilling super-deep wells - extremely cost-INefficient. The public lands used by the mega cattle ranchers should be leased to them at a rate commensurate with the value of that land. Preferably, keep the land for OUR wild horses.
October 16, 2011 3:53pm
was posted on wrong ed
October 16, 2011 3:18pm
Mr. Nichols: Hope one day you run for a political office and do not forget what you know so well. Knowledge to fix the economy is abundant but the WILL to organize a functional theory for a society hijacked by corporate elite is embedded in social force of the 99%ers. If the momentum is maintained with the help of the people (providing the organizers and active rally participants with needed food/materials), the chance of countering the corporate elite becomes more promising. The Occupiers are the hope of the future generations. If they fail to force the ESSENTIAL change for a more balanced society, then the end of the US as we know it is very much close. The US system is simply not SUSTAINABLE under current circumstances.
October 16, 2011 2:30pm
The idea of promoting small grower/ranchers as a means of improving America's economy is one that is seldom mentioned. Backing away from the agracorps giant farms and ranches could seriously improve not only the economy but the variety and quality of foods available not only to Americans but to the world. We really do have the potential to be the bread basket of the world, if only we try.
October 16, 2011 2:00pm
Kudos
October 16, 2011 12:24pm
Tax credits for creating jobs paying a living wage IN AMERICA not overseas! And additional taxes on corporations who send jobs overseas.
October 16, 2011 11:34am
Good ideas. Good talk. Next comes action then comes results....
Add one more program. Food production. America has the land, the climate, the knowledge and the people to grow food. It is one place where we can help ourselves as well as export to a hungry world. Food is a means for America to compete again. It is a way for America to help the rest of the hungry world as it helps its own economy and its own hungry.
THIS DOES NOT MEAN FLOOD THE MARKET WITH GENETICALLY MODIFIED FOOD. It means naturally heathy, wholsome food.It also means encouraging and supporting small farmers and ranchers and not just giving money to big Ag corporations.
Unless we help the small grower/ rancher all we are doing is adding to the wealth disparity problem.Lets have a new land rush. Lets open government lands to folks that will farm, and then lets help them succeed.
Food for US food for the World.