The Wall Street Journal
OPINION
October 8, 2013, 7:12 p.m. ET

Paul Ryan: Here's How We Can End This Stalemate
Both Reagan and Clinton negotiated debt-ceiling deals with their 
opponents. We're ready to negotiate.

By PAUL RYAN

The president is giving Congress the silent treatment. He's refusing to 
talk, even though the federal government is about to hit the debt 
ceiling. That's a shame—because this doesn't have to be another crisis. 
It could be a breakthrough. We have an opportunity here to pay down the 
national debt and jump-start the economy, if we start talking, and 
talking specifics, now. To break the deadlock, both sides should agree 
to common-sense reforms of the country's entitlement programs and tax code.

First, let's clear something up. The president says he "will not 
negotiate" on the debt ceiling. He claims that such negotiations would 
be unprecedented. But many presidents have negotiated on the debt 
ceiling—including him. In 1985, Ronald Reagan signed a debt-ceiling deal 
with congressional Democrats that set deficit caps. In 1997, Bill 
Clinton hammered out an agreement with congressional Republicans to 
raise the debt ceiling, reform Medicare and cut capital-gains taxes. Two 
years ago, Mr. Obama signed the Budget Control Act, which swapped 
spending cuts for a debt-ceiling hike.

So the president has negotiated before, and he can do so now. In 2011, 
Oregon's Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden and I offered ideas to reform 
Medicare. We had different perspectives, but we also had mutual trust. 
Neither of us had to betray his principles; all we had to do was put 
prudence ahead of pride.

If Mr. Obama decides to talk, he'll find that we actually agree on some 
things. For example, most of us agree that gradual, structural reforms 
are better than sudden, arbitrary cuts. For my Democratic colleagues, 
the discretionary spending levels in the Budget Control Act are a major 
concern. And the truth is, there's a better way to cut spending. We 
could provide relief from the discretionary spending levels in the 
Budget Control Act in exchange for structural reforms to entitlement 
programs.

These reforms are vital. Over the next 10 years, the Congressional 
Budget Office predicts discretionary spending—that is, everything except 
entitlement programs and debt payments—will grow by $202 billion, or 
roughly 17%. Meanwhile, mandatory spending—which mostly consists of 
funding for Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security—will grow by $1.6 
trillion, or roughly 79%. The 2011 Budget Control Act largely ignored 
entitlement spending. But that is the nation's biggest challenge.

The two political parties have worked together on entitlements before. 
In 1982, Social Security's trustees warned Congress that the program 
would go bankrupt within a year. If it had, seniors would have seen an 
immediate cut in their benefits. Instead, Congress passed a package of 
reforms—the most important of which was an increase in the retirement 
age. Because Congress phased in this reform over time, there were no 
budget savings in the first five years. But through 2012, the savings 
were $100 billion. In the next 75 years, Social Security's actuaries 
expect that these reforms will save $4.6 trillion.

Just as a good investment gets higher returns through compound interest, 
structural reforms produce greater savings over time. Most important, 
they make the programs more secure. They protect them for current 
seniors and preserve them for the next generation. That's what the 
president and Congress should talk about.

Here are just a few ideas to get the conversation started. We could ask 
the better off to pay higher premiums for Medicare. We could reform 
Medigap plans to encourage efficiency and reduce costs. And we could ask 
federal employees to contribute more to their own retirement.

The president has embraced these ideas in budget proposals he has 
submitted to Congress. And in earlier talks with congressional 
Republicans, he has discussed combining Medicare's Part A and Part B, so 
the program will be less confusing for seniors. These ideas have the 
support of nonpartisan groups like the Bipartisan Policy Center and the 
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, and they would strengthen 
these critical programs. And all of them would help pay down the debt.

We should also enact pro-growth reforms that put people back to 
work—like opening up America's vast energy reserves to development. 
There is even some agreement on taxes across the aisle.

Rep. Dave Camp (R., Mich.) and Sen. Max Baucus (D., Mont.) have been 
working for more than a year now on a bipartisan plan to reform the tax 
code. They agree on the fundamental principles: Broaden the base, lower 
the rates and simplify the code. The president himself has argued for 
just such an approach to corporate taxes. So we should discuss how 
Congress can take up the Camp–Baucus plan when it's ready.

Reforms to entitlement programs and the tax code will spur economic 
growth—another goal that both parties share. The CBO says stable or 
declining levels of federal debt would help the economy. In addition, 
"federal interest payments would be smaller, policy makers would have 
greater leeway . . . to respond to any economic downturns . . . and the 
risk of a sudden fiscal crisis would be much smaller."

This isn't a grand bargain. For that, we need a complete rethinking of 
government's approach to helping the most vulnerable, and a complete 
rethinking of government's approach to health care. But right now, we 
need to find common ground. We need to open the federal government. We 
need to pay our bills today—and make sure we can pay our bills tomorrow. 
So let's negotiate an agreement to make modest reforms to entitlement 
programs and the tax code.

This is our moment to get a down payment on the debt and boost the 
economy. But we have to act now.

The Federal Reserve won't keep interest rates low forever. The 
demographic crunch will only get worse. So once interest rates rise, 
borrowing costs will spike. If we miss this moment, the debt will spiral 
out of control.

That's why I want a budget agreement—because if we don't make the tough 
decisions now, we'll face only tougher decisions later. We can work 
together. We can do some good. All it takes is leadership—and for the 
president to come to the table.

Mr. Ryan, a Republican, represents Wisconsin's first congressional 
district and is chairman of the House Budget Committee.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to