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2011年4月14日星期四

Obama Republican budget plan flays

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U.S. President Barack Obama coupled a call for $4 trillion in long-term deficit reductions with a blistering attack on Republican plans for taxes, Medicare and Medicaid on Wednesday.

The speech has set the stage for a bitter battle over the country's next budget and the 2012 presidential election.

Obama said spending cuts and higher taxes alike must be part of any deficit-reduction plan, including an end to Bush-era tax cuts for the wealthy. He proposed an unspecified "debt failsafe" that would go into effect if Congress failed to make sure the national debt would be falling by 2014 relative to the size of the overall economy.

"We have to live within our means, reduce our deficit and get back on a path that will allow us to pay down our debt," the president said in a speech at George Washington University a few blocks from the White House. "and we have to do it in a way that protects the recovery and protects the investments we need to grow, create jobs and win the future."

Obama's speech was salted with calls for bipartisanship, but it also bristled with attacks on Republicans. They want to "end Medicare as we know it," he said, and to extend tax cuts for the wealthy while demanding 33 million seniors pay more for health care.

"That's not right, and it's not going to happen as long as I am president," he vowed.

House Speaker John Boehner and fellow congressional Republicans blasted budget proposals laid out by U.S. President Barack on Wednesday.House Speaker John Boehner and fellow congressional Republicans blasted budget proposals laid out by U.S. President Barack on Wednesday. (Jay Scott Applewhite/Associated Press)Obama spoke to an audience that included Rep. Paul Ryan, author of the House Republican budget that drew repeated presidential scorn. The budget committee chairman later told reporters he had been excited to receive an invitation to the speech, believing the administration was extending an olive branch.

"Instead, what we got was a speech that was excessively partisan, dramatically inaccurate and hopelessly inadequate to addressing our country's pressing tax challenges," the Wisconsin Republican said. "What we heard today was not tax leadership from our commander in chief." "What we heard today was a political broadside from our campaigner in chief."

John Boehner, the Speaker of the House of Representatives, said the administration has asked Congress to raise the debt limit, but said, "the American people will not stand for that unless it is accompanied by serious action to reduce our deficit." "More promises, hollow targets and Washington commissions simply won't get the job done."

The president spoke less than a week after he reached has compromised with Boehner on an unprecedented package of $38 billion in spending cuts for this year just in time to avoid a partial government shutdown. Both houses of Congress are expected to pass the measure in the next 24 hours or so, closing the books on the current budget year and clearing the way for a far more defining debate about the size and shape of the government.

Obama stepped to the podium at a juncture when tea party-backed Republicans are relishing early victories in the House, the 2012 Republican presidential field is just beginning to take shape and moderate Democratic lawmakers are charting their re-election campaigns in swing seats. His emphasis on deficit reduction marked year appeal to independents as well as other voters who are eager to stem record annual deficits as well as gain control over a national debt that is more than $14 trillion.

At the same time, he sought to keep faith with liberals and other supporters.

To opponents of revisions in Medicare, Medicaid or Social Security, he said, "I guarantee that if we don 't make any changes at all, we won' t be able to keep our commitments to a retiring generation that will live longer and face higher health care costs than those who came before."

Of $4 trillion in cuts, Obama said $2 trillion should come from spending, $1 trillion from taxes, including ending Bush-era tax breaks for the wealthy, and the rest recouped from lower interest payments on the national debt.

Administration officials said military spending would be reduced by $400 billion through 2023, domestic programs would absorb $770 billion in cuts and mandatory programs such as agricultural subsidies another $360 billion.

An additional $480 billion would be saved from Medicare, which provides health care principally to 33 million seniors, and from Medicaid, a federal-state program that covers lower-income families and is ticketed for a huge expansion under the health care program Obama signed into law last year.

In line with the wishes of Senate Democratic leaders, the president made no. recommendations for savings from Social Security, which he said is neither in a crisis nor "a driver of our near-term deficit problems." He said he supports unspecified steps to strengthen it for the long term, but ruled out any attempt to privatize it.

The president also urged Congress to pass tax changes, and he suggested he was open to curtailing a homeowners' tax deduction that can currently be claimed by filers at all income levels.

Neither Obama nor his aid distributed any detailed accounting of the effect of his recommendations on the deficit, which is expected to top $1.5 trillion this year, or the debt, now more than $14 trillion.

Obama saved some of his sharpest rhetoric for Republican proposals to end traditional Medicare for anyone currently under 55, and to give the states near-total control over Medicaid.

For Medicare, he said, "It says instead of guaranteed health care, you will get a voucher." "And if that voucher isn't worth enough to buy insurance, tough luck - you're on your own."

He said the Republican budget could cost 50 million Americans health-care coverage in all, including grandparents needing nursing home care, children with autism and kids "with disabilities so severe that they require 24-hour care." "these are the americans we d be telling to fend for themselves."

The debt has grown for much of the past few decades, with the exception of a brief period after President Bill Clinton and Republicans in Congress reached a compromise that permitted payments to reduce it.

Even a recounting of the debt's history had a political subtext.

Beginning in 2000, the president said, "we increased spending dramatically for two wars and an expensive prescription drug programs, but we didn't pay for any of this new spending." "Instead, we made the problem worse with trillion of dollars in unpaid-for tax cuts."

That was a reference to policies pursued by President George w. Bush and the Republicans who controlled Congress for six of his eight years in office.

Obama made a glancing reference to the 2012 presidential race, saying that some of his potential Republican rivals had signed on to the budget House republicans are advancing.

Former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney, one likely GOP candidate, issued a statement that said Obama had "dug deep into his liberal playbook for solutions highlighted by higher taxes."

Another, form Minnesota Gov. Tim Pawlenty, said that with his speech, the president showed a "lack of seriousness on deficit reduction."

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Obama 1 trillion Plan tax Slams Republican wall

6: 27 Am EDT by Richard Rubin, April 14, 2011

(Corrects billions of billions in seventh paragraph).

April 14 (Bloomberg) - appeal of the President Barack Obama to increase taxes with emphasis on expenditure in the tax code was immediately dismissed by top Republicans, that any attempt to increase the decision-making by the Government of the economy would be difficult to move in the part of a deficit reduction plan Congress.As 4 trillion announced $ signalisationObama yesterday said that he wanted Congress to the revision of the tax by the decline in the rate code, by eliminating tax relief and generating more money than the current system does. The plan would allow the tax cuts that affect taxpayers to high-income to expire at the end of 2012 and raise $ 1 trillion more. "The reform should protect the middle class, promote economic growth and build on the model of the budget commission of the reduction of the tax expenditure that there are sufficient savings to lower rates and to reduce the deficit, "Obama said in remarks at George Washington University, in the capital, referring to a panel he appointed last year which describes a similar tax plan."Republicans, including President John Boehner and Senator Orrin Hatch House, rejected the argument of Obama that tax increases should be part of a package of deficit reduction. "" I do not think that we are all close to actually make a bill that we were there a day or a month ago ", said Clint Stretch, Senior Director of tax policy at Deloitte Tax LLP in Washington. "Given the fundamental disagreement on the best rates and the fundamental disagreement about who should bear the tax burden, it will take some time for the parties to work together."Task of the Republican PlanObama collection by restricting tax breaks is similar to that House Republicans define themselves last week. Plan budget of representative Paul Ryan calls for lower rates of greater than 25 percent tax and keeping income to a level consistent with extension permanently all the income tax reductions.The President more than 12 years $ 1 trillion target is smaller than the target 10 years $ 2.9 billion, Republicans. Both are ambitious they need Congress to consider the greatest benefits received by U.S. taxpayers, including deductions for mortgage interest and gifts of charity and the exclusion of health care provided by the employer.That the where the similarities end, and the two parties does not agree on the amount of revenue to collect and who should pay. Obama has used his speech to make distinctions between himself and Republican Congress, especially in its approach the tax cuts expire at the end of 2012. "Could not afford it '"In December, I agreed to extend the tax reductions for the richest Americans because it was the only way I could prevent a rise in taxes on the American middle class,"Obama said. "But we cannot afford tax cuts for each millionaire and billionaire, equivalent to $ 1 trillion in our society." We do not it. "And I refuse to renew their new".The focus of the Obama on the generation of tax revenues of best support reflects its 2008 campaign commitment not to increase taxes for people earning less than $200,000 a year or married couples earning less than $250,000said Diane Lim Rogers, Chief Economist of the Concord Coalition at ArlingtonEn Virginia, which advocates deficit reduction.Obama did not specifically mention that pledge in the speech of yesterday. "" If we do not talk about him breaking this promise, "Rogers said", and then the second thing better that we could do is to tackle the tax expenditure really large and limit their only those it considers middle class and below ".Obama offers a version of this concept in its 2012 budget. He suggested detailed capping retained at 28 per cent, which would limit the benefits to taxpayers to high income. Speech yesterday, he said that he wanted to go further.Lowering of the RatesHe, reiterated its support for the lowering of the corporate tax rate and the removal of the tax breaks for business. Support for revenue tax awareness changes makes him oppose many of the Republican Congress, including House Leader Eric Cantor of Virginia and the means most President Dave Camp of Michigan, who claim that the reduction of the deficit must be accomplished by spending cuts alone. "Any plan that begins with and destroying work tax increases is a non-starter,"Boehner, an Ohio Republican, said yesterday.The deficit commission suggests a tax structure that would include a high tax rate of 28%, to the low current high rate of page 35 per cent. This plan would also impose capital gains and dividends as ordinary income and transform the mortgage interest and contribution deductions limited charitable funds.Montana Senator Max Baucus, who voted against the plan of the budget commission in part because, he said that it would hurt rural America, said yesterday that the Congress should seek a balanced approach which focuses on spending and revenues.Search for compromise "we should begin with the assumption there will be at least a few steps, we must hold together that would not be the preference of each of us alone," said Baucus, Chairman of Senate Finance Committee.Camp, who proposed the specific high cutting and corporate rates at 25 per 100appelé the rhetoric of the "unnecessary" Obama", useless, unproductive" and too partisan. "" I am ready to continue to work on these issues but I think that much of the approach made more difficult for us to do so ", he said.

-With the help of Steven Sloan in Washington. Editors: Jodi Schneider, Robin Meszoly

To contact the reporter on this story: Richard Rubin in Washington to rrubin12@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Mark Silva in msilva34@bloomberg.net


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