Perspective
What Congress won't do

10/17/1999
The Star-Ledger   Newark, NJ
FINAL
006
(c) 1999. The Star-Ledger. All rights reserved.

  The Republican Congress is finding it difficult to achieve their
stated targets for spending and budget balance.

  In a search for savings, they are proposing a delay in payments of the
Earned Income Tax Credit due under current law to low-wage taxpayers.
For the reader's enlightenment, we detail assorted savings measures that
the GOP has rejected.
  1. Delay income tax refunds to wealthy Americans.

  2. Delay flood insurance payments to owners of second homes destroyed
by Hurricane Floyd.

  3. Cancel congressional pay raise. go from biweekly to monthly salary
payments. reduce base salary and institute productivity incentive
bonuses.

  4. Delay payments to corporations that earned billions in profits but
qualify for corporate income tax refunds.

  5. Push September 2000 congressional pay to first month of Fiscal Year
2001.

  6. Apply reduced "diet COLA" cost-of-living adjustment to
congressional pensions.

  7. Replace Congress health insurance benefits with voucher redeemable
at HMO. sell Walter Reed Hospital to Kaiser Permanente.

  8. Limit reimbursable accommodation expenses for Congress to Motel 6
and Econolodge.

  9. Contract out operations of Senate cafeteria. replace home-made bean
soup with generic version from Shoppers Food Warehouse.

  10. Three words: cut corporate welfare.

  Compiled by Max B. Sawicky, an economist at The Economic Policy
Institute, a Washington think-tank



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