Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction Beyond the Basics...What You Need to Know

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Transcription:

Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction Beyond the Basics...What You Need to Know September 20, 2011 Moderator: Rob Smith Speakers: The Honorable Bart Stupak, Robert Burton, John Cooney, Sam Olchyk 2008 Venable LLP 1

BACKGROUND: MEMBERSHIP Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) Co-Chair Sen. Patty Murray (D-Washington) Co-Chair Sen. Max Baucus (D- Montana) Rep. Xavier Becerra (D-California) Rep. Dave Camp (R-Michigan) Rep. James Clyburn (D-South Carolina) Sen. John Kerry (D-Massachusetts) Sen. Jon Kyl (R-Arizona) Sen. Rob Portman (R-Ohio) Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pennsylvania) Rep. Fred Upton (R-Michigan) Rep. Chris Van Hollen (D-Maryland) 2

BACKGROUND: KEY STAFF Mark Prater Staff Director Deputy staff director and chief tax counsel of Senate Finance Committee Republican staff Joined the Senate Finance Committee staff in 1990 Sarah Kuehl Deputy Staff Director Senior budget analyst for Senate Budget Committee Democratic staff 13 years of Senate experience Michael Bloomquist General Counsel Deputy general counsel for House Energy and Commerce Committee Prior experience with Energy and Commerce Committee and House Science, Space and Technology Committee 3

BACKGROUND: WEB SITE AND GENERAL INFORMATION It is notable that all hearings and meetings going forward will be webcast and archived at www.deficitreduction.gov. Available Information (as of September 19) Rules Members Press releases Calendar (public hearings require 7 days notice) 4

BEYOND THE BASICS: ESTABLISHMENT Established: Budget Control Act of 2011 Mandate: Issue a formal report (findings, recommendations and legislative language) on how to reduce the deficit by at least $1.5 trillion over FY2012 to FY2021 Limitations on report: NONE no limits on revenue no limits on spending Termination date: January 31, 2012 5

BEYOND THE BASICS: KEY DATES October 14: deadline for House and Senate committees submission of deficit reduction recommendations November 23: deadline for JSC vote on final report (majority vote required) December 2: date by which approved report must be transmitted to House and Senate December 23: deadline for House and Senate votes January 15, 2012: deadline for enactment to prevent automatic spending reduction process (a/k/a sequestration) 6

BEYOND THE BASICS: Special Procedural Protections If approved by November 23, JSC legislation is afforded special procedural protections: House and Senate Majority Leaders must introduce the legislation without change as a bill. By December 9, each House and Senate Committee with jurisdiction must report the legislation without amendment. Senate: maximum 30 hours of debate only simple majority of Senators voting must vote by December 23 House: maximum two hours of debate only and then vote on final passage all points of order are waived must vote by December 23 7

BEYOND THE BASICS: WHAT HAPPENS IF Q: The JSC does not vote on a report by November 23? A: No legislation will be eligible for the special procedural protections Sequestration takes effect in January 2013, unless Congress enacts other legislation in 2012 that reduces the deficit by $1.2 trillion, or Congress repeals or modifies the Budget Control Act Q: The JSC report reduces the deficit by less than $1.2 trillion? A: Sequestration applies with respect to the shortfall (unless Congress repeals/modifies the Budget Control Act) 8

BACKGROUND PRINCIPLES 1. Modification of sequestration procedures adopted in Gramm- Rudman-Hollings act of 1985 2. The White House, through the Office of Management and Budget, will make the calculations and, if necessary implement the sequestration using its own assumptions 3. Longstanding differences between OMB and the congressional budget office about how to calculate spending levels These differences are sufficiently important that congress took on and lost a supreme court case in 1986 seeking to have the comptroller general run the sequester 9

DEFINITION OF SEQUESTRATION Sequestration = automatic, indiscriminate, across-theboard budget cuts to force reductions in spending to defined levels written into statute Sequestration = a gun congress holds to its own head to force program advocates to propose and to agree to compensating cuts elsewhere for fear of having their own favorite programs cut 10

BASIC GROUND RULES 1. If sequestration occurs, the automatic, indiscriminate spending cuts will be divided roughly equally between: eligible defense programs eligible non-defense programs 2. Many domestic entitlement programs are exempt from cuts: Social Security federal retirement programs Medicaid cuts in Medicare limited to 2% 3. The major difference between this bill and Gramm-Rudman many more defense programs are subject to sequestration. Proponents of defense spending have greater incentives to engage in the process and demand spending cuts elsewhere. 11

OPTION 1: CONGRESS ADOPTS A DEFICIT REDUCTION LAW FOR FY 2012-2021 Step 1: OMB calculates the reduction in spending from the bill If the amount is less than $1.2 trillion, OMB sequesters the difference between that amount and $1.2 trillion Step 2: OMB subtracts 18% of that amount for interest on the debt Step 3: OMB divides the remainder by 9, to allocate the spending cuts to each of the 9 covered years Step 4: OMB divides that amount by 2, to establish the amount to be cut separately from defense and non-defense programs Step 5: OMB calculates the uniform amount each eligible program in these two categories must be cut 12

OPTION 2: CONGRESS FAILS TO ADOPT A DEFICIT REDUCTION LAW Step 1: OMB starts with the deficit reduction amount established by the statute $1.2 trillion Step 2: OMB subtracts 18% of that amount for interest on the debt Step 3: OMB divides the remainder by 9, to allocate the spending cuts to each of the 9 covered years Step 4: OMB divides that amount by 2, to establish the amount to be cut separately from defense and non-defense programs Step 5: OMB calculates the uniform amount each eligible program in these two categories must be cut 13

IF CONGRESS FAILS TO PASS A DEFICIT REDUCTION BILL CBO s best estimate: eligible defense programs will be cut by 10% eligible non-defense or discretionary programs will be cut by 7.8% Medicare will be cut by 2% The resulting spending reductions: appropriated programs will account for 71% of the cuts mandatory spending (entitlement) programs will account for 13% of the cuts the reduction in interest payments on the debt will account for 16% of the savings 14

Appropriations? 15

Tax Reform? 16

Concern from Contractors? 17

OMB versus CBO? 18

Sequestration? 19

Jobs for America Act? 20

Contact Information Robert Burton, Parnter rburton@venable.com, 202.344.4776 John Cooney, Partner jfcooney@venable.com, 202.344.4812 Sam Olchyk, Partner solchyk@venable.com, 202.344.4034 Rob Smith, Senior Legislative Advisor rlsmith@venable.com, 202.344.4077 The Honorable Bart Stupak, Partner bstupak@venable.com, 202.344.4226 21