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US budget slashes social spending to fund war and
tax cuts for the rich By Bill Van Auken
3 February 2006
www.wsws.org
In the wake of George W. Bush’s State of the Union address, the
White House and the Republican-led Congress have moved swiftly to
implement a series of budget measures that will slash funding for
health care and education while allocating vast new sums for the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and tax cuts for America’s wealthy
elite.
The House of Representatives approved a $39.5 billion five-year
budget-cutting package on Wednesday. More than half of the savings
has been carved out of funding for Medicare and Medicaid, the
principal programs that provide minimal health care coverage to the
elderly, poor and disabled.
On Thursday, Congressional sources reported that the White House
was preparing to ask Congress for another $70 billion to pay for the
US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. This comes on top of $50 billion
approved just last December, and brings the total allocated for
these military interventions in little over four years to more than
$420 billion, the vast majority of it spent on the aggression
against Iraq.
Before the year is out, the administration will seek yet another
supplemental appropriation to pay for the military operations in the
two countries. It is anticipated that before the end 2006, the cost
of these wars will top the $500 billion mark—ten times the amount
estimated by the administration prior to the invasion of Iraq.
Meanwhile, the Senate continued debate on a $56 billion tax cut
that has already been passed by the House.
Taken as a whole, these legislative initiatives will deepen the
social misery in America while widening the already enormous gulf
separating a tiny financial oligarchy from the masses of working
people. They further underscore American capitalism’s growing
dependence upon militarism to offset the decline in its economic
position in the world arena.
The House bill is misnamed the Deficit Reduction Act. In fact, it
will do next to nothing to reduce the US budget deficit, which is
expected to rise to $360 billion this year. While draconian in their
impact on those who depend on the programs being slashed, the budget
cuts hardly make a dent in this deficit and account for less than 3
percent of the $14.3 trillion in federal spending projected over the
next five years.
The House leadership and the Bush White House praised the budget
package for taking what one Republican congressman termed a "first
step toward long-term fiscal discipline." However, it is clear that
discipline is being demanded only from those at the bottom of the
social ladder, who will pay for the amassing of even greater
personal fortunes by those at the top.
The tax package that is currently under consideration is centered
on the extension of capital gains and dividend tax cuts, over half
of which would go to the top 0.2 percent who have incomes in excess
of $1 million a year. Over three-quarters of the tax cuts benefit
only households making more than $100,000 a year—just 14 percent of
the population. According to some estimates, the real cost of this
give-away to the super-rich and the most privileged sections of the
upper-middle-class will be closer to $100 billion in lost federal
revenues over the next five years.
The biggest spending cuts enacted by Congress include $6.4
billion slashed from Medicare, the health program for the elderly,
and $4.8 billion from Medicaid, which provides health coverage for
the poor and disabled.
The legislation marks a fundamental shift in federal policy,
allowing state governments to impose premiums and co-payments on
Medicaid benefits and further limit eligibility. Its approval came
just days after the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released a
report pointing to the barbaric consequences the budget-cutting
measures will have for millions of Americans.
According to the CBO report, over the next decade the changes in
Medicaid will increase costs on prescription drugs for some 20
million low-income recipients and force at least 65,000 out of the
program altogether—60 percent of them children. The report estimated
that the greatest savings from the legislation will come from higher
co-payments and premiums, causing people to drop out of the program
or not seek needed medical care because they will be unable to
afford it.
"In response to the new premiums," the report warned, "some
beneficiaries would not apply for Medicaid, would leave the program
or would become ineligible due to nonpayment." It added, "About 80
percent of the savings from higher cost-sharing would be due to
decreased use of service."
The areas expected to be targeted with new premiums include
mental health services, intensifying a national crisis that already
sends three times as many mentally ill people in the US to prisons
than to mental health facilities.
Additional savings will result from repealing federal standards
and allowing states to deny Medicaid benefits for such things as
wheelchairs, crutches, canes, eyeglasses and hearing aids.
The savings in the Medicare program for the elderly come from a
series of changes including increased premiums, cuts in funding to
hospitals and a freeze on funding for home health agencies. Another
punitive provision aimed at elderly nursing home residents would
deny them Medicaid benefits if they had given away money over the
previous five years. This would include money donated to charity or
contributed to the college tuition of a grandchild.
While slashing benefits for the poor and elderly, the legislation
was carefully crafted to protect the interests of the managed health
care industry and the major drug companies. Provisions in the Senate
version of the bill that would have required the big pharmaceutical
firms to give larger rebates on drugs bought by states under
Medicaid and cut overpayments to HMOs covering Medicare
beneficiaries—which alone would have saved an estimated $22 billion
over 10 years—were stripped from the legislation. Some in Congress
charged that the final language of the bill was directly dictated by
lobbyists for HMOs and drug companies, which are among the largest
campaign contributors to both major parties.
Another socially regressive provision will sharply increase
interest rates on college loans to students and their parents. The
interest rate on PLUS loans to parents will rise from the current
6.1 percent to 8.5 percent next July, while the rate on federal
Stafford Loans used by some 10 million students will climb from 5.3
percent to 6.8 percent.
This change amounts to a cut in financial aid that will
ultimately deprive a section of working class youth of the right to
a higher education. It is projected to generate as much as $14
billion in revenue over five years, money that will be used to
defray the cost of tax cuts for the rich.
The legislation also includes stiffer work requirements for some
2 million adult Americans on welfare. The burden, which will require
most recipients to spend 40 hours a week either working or in job
training, will fall most heavily on single mothers. At the same
time, the bill includes only $1 billion in new funding for
childcare—$11 billion less than what is needed to allow parents to
manage the extended work requirement, according to an estimate by
the Congressional Budget Office.
This measure deepens the attacks initiated under the so-called
welfare reform introduced by the Democratic administration of Bill
Clinton in 1996.
The 216-214 vote on the final legislation split largely on party
lines, with 13 Republicans joining the Democratic minority in
opposing the bill. Its passage underscored once again the inability
of the Democratic Party to offer any alternative to the reactionary
social agenda of the Bush administration.
The Deficit Reduction Act is a holdover from last year. The
administration is already preparing to introduce even deeper cuts in
social programs and further increases in military spending in a
fiscal 2007 budget that it will present to Congress next week.
Declaring his support for the bill passed by Congress, Bush vowed he
would "continue to build on the spending restraint we have
achieved."
The 2007 budget will continue the sharp and protracted growth in
US military spending. The proposed Pentagon budget for the next
fiscal year will rise to $439.3 billion, a 4.8 percent increase over
last year. This includes $84.2 billion to be allocated for new
weapons, an 8 percent rise in such purchases over fiscal 2006. This
budget is over and above the supplemental funding requests for the
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and does not include more than $6
billion spent each year to maintain the US nuclear arsenal.
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