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July 27, 1999
(Senate)


S. 1429 - Taxpayer Refund Act of 1999
(Roth (R) Delaware)

The Administration strongly opposes the package of tax cut proposals contained S. 1429. If a bill encompassing these proposals were to pass the Congress, the President would veto it.

The Nation's economy is strong because the Administration and the Congress have followed the proper economic course over the past six years. Because the Administration and the Congress have focused on reducing deficits, paying down debt held by the public, bringing down interest rates, investing in our people, and opening markets, there is $1.7 trillion less debt held by the public today than was forecast in 1993. These actions have contributed to greater productivity growth, low inflation, low unemployment, and broad-based growth in real wages. S. 1429 would reverse the fiscal discipline that has had such great benefits for the Nation's economy, raising several serious concerns.

  • The President has stated repeatedly that, before considering using projected surpluses to provide a tax cut, the long term solvency of Social Security and Medicare must be addressed. To date, the Congress has not acted on either of these issues.

  • The magnitude of the tax cuts in the bill, plus the associated debt service costs, could approach the size of all of the on-budget surpluses the Congressional Budget Office projects for the next ten years.

  • A tax cut of this size leaves virtually none of these surpluses available: for addressing the long-term solvency of Medicare, which is currently projected by its Trustees to be insolvent by 2015; for addressing the financial needs of Social Security in the longer term; or for necessary funding for our national security and for education, health, and other domestic priorities.

  • The bill would cause the Nation to forgo the unique opportunity to eliminate completely the burden of the debt held by the public by 2015 as proposed by the President in the Mid-Session Review of the Budget. The elimination of this debt would have a beneficial effect on interest rates, investment, and the growth of the economy. Moreover, paying down debt is tantamount to cutting taxes. Each one-percentage point decline in interest rates would mean a cut of $200 to $250 billion in mortgage costs borne by American consumers over the next 10 years. If we do not erase the debt held by the public, our children and grandchildren will have to pay higher taxes to offset the higher Federal interest costs on this debt.

  • Since many of the major tax cuts are phased-in over a period of years, the cost of the proposed tax cuts would explode beyond the 10-year budget window. This would pose even greater risks for the future, just as the first wave of the baby boom generation is retiring.

  • Budget projections for any period in the future are inherently uncertain. For example, in a study reviewing fiscal years 1988-98, CBO has reported that the average change between its estimates of annual deficits or surpluses five years into the future and the actual results was substantial. Projections of budget surpluses ten years into the future are even more uncertain. The prudent course of action in the face of these uncertainties is to avoid making financial commitments -- such as massive tax cuts -- that will be very difficult to reverse.

  • The bill would not meet the existing pay-as-you-go requirements of the Budget Act, which has helped provide the discipline necessary to bring us from an era of large and growing budget deficits to the potential for substantial surpluses. It would also require an automatic sequester of mandatory programs, including Medicare.

  • Finally, while some of the proposals contained in the President's Budget are included in S. 1429, the Administration disagrees with the overall priorities of the bill. The President's balanced package of high-priority, targeted tax initiatives represents the right approach to addressing the needs of American working families.

The Administration looks forward to working with the Congress in the coming months to address the solvency of Medicare and Social Security, to meet critical national priorities, and to provide fiscally responsible tax relief targeted at the needs of working families.

Pay-As-You-Go Scoring

S. 1429 would affect receipts; therefore, it is subject to the pay-as-you-go requirements of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990. The Administration has not yet completed its scoring of the bill, but it is evident that the magnitude of the tax cut and the absence of significant offsets would cause a sequester of mandatory resources.