Bait and switch: Now health-care reform won’t solve deficit problem

posted at 10:55 am on October 13, 2009 by Ed Morrissey

Henry J. Aaron and Isabel Sawhill attempt to switch directions on deficit issues in today’s Washington Post, trying to sell higher taxes as the long-term solution to America’s fiscal woes.  In doing so, Aaron reverses his past statements on the nature of the deficit, when he claimed that the deficit was entirely caused by health-care costs. Now, however, ObamaCare won’t be nearly enough to undo deficit spending, and Aaron and Sawhill pump for a value-added tax (VAT) on top of all the other new and higher taxes Americans will pay:

Anyone who thinks that health-care reform alone is going to close the massive current — and even larger projected — U.S. budget deficit is deluded.

Really?  Here’s Aaron on April 12, 2007, in a presentation for Brookings:

  1. There is a long term fiscal problem; all of it is health care
  2. There is no entitlement crisis other than health care

This analysis helped drive the push for a government-imposed overhaul of the private-sector health-care industry in the first place.  Supposedly, such a “reform” would solve our deficit spending problem, which is why the federal government claimed jurisdiction for such legislation in the first place.  Now, however, people who bought that argument are deluded.

President Obama has pledged that health-care reform will not make matters worse. But that isn’t good enough. There is no way to restore this nation to fiscal health without higher taxes — for the middle class as well as for the rich. The only question is when. Those increases should be enacted now, phased in gradually after the recovery is well established, and tied to the increased spending that health-care reform will generate.

And here’s Aaron from the same presentation in 2007:

… since taxes are assumed to remain a constant share of GDP, projections show no other long-term budget problem.

But now that we’ve begun working on health-care reform, suddenly Aaron acknowledges that it will increase spending, and that Congress needs to raise taxes as a result.  Reform itself won’t solve the deficit crisis, Aaron now argues.  Only the deluded would have believed it in the first place!

I contacted Chuck Blahous of the Hudson Institute for a comment, and he replied:

We are witnessing perhaps the most ambitious, and damaging, bait-and-switch in federal fiscal policy history.  For the past few years, some have irresponsibly argued that we have no long-term spending problem that can’t be fixed by comprehensive health care reform.   This fallacy was used to provide cover to politicians who wanted to duck responsibility for addressing unsustainable spending growth elsewhere in the budget, including Social Security.  Those who bothered to scrutinize the canard understood that this could only lead to massive tax increases.  Now that it’s clear that health care reform won’t fix our budget problems, the mask is slipping off.   We need either to get serious about tackling rising spending – meaning both Social Security reform, and health reform that reduces rather than expands federal commitments – or the American people are going to be taxed like they’ve never been taxed before.

Andrew Biggs all but predicted this outcome:

Some claim that health care cost growth is by far the dominant source of projected increases in overall entitlement program costs, using that claim to justify a far-reaching overhaul of both public and private health care provision. . . .  While reasonable changes in assumptions or methodology could easily swing the balance of influence in either direction, it is clear that aging does not play the minor role in driving entitlement spending that purveyors of the new consensus purport. . . . The recent work of the CBO in exploring health care cost and quality issues in new detail is of great value, but neither task should be taken as an excuse to ignore the direct financing challenges of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

VAT is a consumption tax that will be much more regressive than people think.  Basically a sales tax, it encourages people to save money, and that will be much easier for those with larger percentages of disposable income.  It discourages purchasing, which will dampen retail business, while soaking those who can least afford it — the working and middle classes.  The wealthy will simply curtail consumption and wait for a more propitious moment to spend.

How does that square with Barack Obama’s pledge that people making under $250,000 a year won’t see “one dime” in increased taxation?  He already broke that pledge with higher cigarette taxes, but this would hit broadly across the entire spectrum of American voters.  Every time they bought something, the voters will be reminded of that broken pledge.

Obama should ignore the 2009 version of Aaron.  In fact, he should also ignore the 2007 version, inasmuch as Aaron does the same.

Update: Bruce Kesler notes that Aaron’s not the only one doing contortions over their previous statements on health-care reform.

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Comment pages: 1 2

Um…I was talking to Markthe’Great’…

Dark-Star on October 13, 2009 at 1:37 PM

This is funny. You jumped in on something that I wrote to unclesmrgol. Now you get upset when someone jumps in on something you wrote to me.

I always new liberals were hypocrites, thanks for proving it.

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:42 PM

BTW D-S, since you think I’m your king, why do you object so much to my decrees. Being inconsistent again?

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:43 PM

Yup. For the children. Why, do you think kids should smoke?

unclesmrgol on October 13, 2009 at 1:26 PM

Really pitiful. But then people who want to use govt to control others, never were deep thinkers.

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:44 PM

Seatbelts and airbags are designed from the ground up to save lives, period. (what, BTW, do they have to do with guns and knives in the first place)

Dark-Star on October 13, 2009 at 1:18 PM

You seem to believe that it is the role of govt to protect people from anything that might harm them. Why stop with mandating safe cars? (Which the companies were already providing.)

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:45 PM

My statement is why I am motivated to want to tax the hell out of cigarettes, and I’m glad my side is winning on that front. Get it, guy? My side is winning.

unclesmrgol on October 13, 2009 at 1:25 PM

Liberalism is ascendent right now. Precisely because so many people think that it is the role of govt to ensure the world turns out right.

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:47 PM

People should be able to put whatever they want into their bodies!

Dark-Star on October 13, 2009 at 1:30 PM

Why do you believe that you have a right to control what other people do with their bodies? Do you own their bodies? Does the govt own their bodies?

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:48 PM

I have an uncle who ate himself to death.

So I demand that govt place a huge tax on food. Let’s drive those evil food conglomerates out of business.

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:53 PM

If you want govt to pass laws to save lives, why not pass laws limiting food choices, and requiring everyone to work out three times a week?

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 1:41 PM

I wondered how long it would be until you trotted out this ‘argument’…

A quick comparison.

Enforcement issues

—Seatbelts: On the road, a quick glance by a police officer through the window if he/she has time. At the car factory, check that seatbelts are installed securely and fasten correctly.
—Government food and exercise limitations: Short of implementing mass exercise yards, enough CCTV’s to make England jealous, hordes of ‘supervisors’ and an army of records-keepers, the very idea becomes absurd. And even if you did have all of the above there would be no way to fund it all without (even more) ruinous taxes.

Economic Costs

—Seatbelts: May actually improve the sale value of cars. When once manufacturers whined and dragged their feet, they now strive to outdo each other for ‘bragging rights’ as customers look for safer cars. Also, medical costs decreased the more people keep themselves properly restrained in car crashes.
—GFaEL: Marginal to massive depending on the individual’s budget and location. Many food companies KO’ed by dietary restrictions.

Rights-and-regulations impact:
—Seatbelts: Minimal, since there isn’t any right to drive a vehicle in the first place.
—GFaEL: Massive. Compulsory attendance three times weekly and a bewildering array of restrictions on menu choices.

The long and short of it is there is a point at which saving lives, improving health and protecting the public quickly becomes an exercise in diminishing or even negative returns.

Dark-Star on October 13, 2009 at 1:55 PM

D-S, the fact is that you believe it is the role of govt to protect people from themselves. Once you buy that argument, there is no limit to what comes next.

The fact remains, you want to use govt to run other people’s lives. This is hardly the first time you’ve supported such a position.

As your post above demonstrates, the only reason you don’t support using govt to control what people eat, is that present technology makes such control too expensive. Once the technology exists to bring the price of big brother down to something you are willing to pay, no doubt you will change your mind.

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 2:06 PM

As your post above demonstrates, the only reason you don’t support using govt to control what people eat, is that present technology makes such control too expensive. Once the technology exists to bring the price of big brother down to something you are willing to pay, no doubt you will change your mind.

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 2:06 PM

Quick! Go get an extinguisher! Your pants are on fire.

Rights-and-regulations impact:
—GFaEL: Massive. Compulsory attendance three times weekly and a bewildering array of restrictions on menu choices.

Economic Costs
—GFaEL: Marginal to massive depending on the individual’s budget and location. Many food companies KO’ed by dietary restrictions. (food can only get so cheap, BTW, it’s not a neverending process. there’s only so much farmland and the population isn’t getting smaller)

Enforcement issues
—Government food and exercise limitations: Short of implementing mass exercise yards, enough CCTV’s to make England jealous, hordes of ’supervisors’ and an army of records-keepers, the very idea becomes absurd. And even if you did have all of the above there would be no way to fund it all without (even more) ruinous taxes.

Dark-Star on October 13, 2009 at 2:15 PM

Politicians have another reason to love the VAT- unlike sales tax, the total Value Added Tax isn’t listed on the receipt given the ultimate consumer. It is hidden, instead of a constant reminder of just how much tax government by the politicians and for the politicians is extorting from every transaction.

They are not merely thieves, they are sneak thieves.

novaculus on October 13, 2009 at 2:25 PM

Dark-Star on October 13, 2009 at 2:15 PM

As I said before, you quite obviously would love to implement govt mandated diets and mandatory excercising, except at present, it’s too expensive.

I dread the day when technology lowers the cost.

Does the idea of telling other people how to live their lives give you a thrill? Is that how you compensate for the lack of love in your life?

MarkTheGreat on October 13, 2009 at 3:16 PM

VAT’s when implemented in the US will be regressive only at the time of purchase. I have no doubt that the non-income tax payers will be given a credit to offset what they paid in VAT much like how you used to be able to figure your sales tax deductions if you didn’t keep every receipt for everything you bought. The Gov will just phase out the credit against higher incomes so it will be the usual suspects who actually end up paying the VAT. Lord knows what kind of distortions this will introduce in the economy.

JohnnyL on October 13, 2009 at 3:51 PM

by showing financial markets that Congress is determined to put our fiscal household in order, it would help keep interest rates low and encourage investment.

Encourage investment of the capital they won’t have because the government took it away in taxes.

I think this plan might have a few flaws.

Terry_Dyne on October 13, 2009 at 4:10 PM

This is why Romney has NO CHANCE to be POTUS.

NONE.

Get over it!

Sapwolf on October 13, 2009 at 5:36 PM

First they passed high cigarette taxes, but I wasn’t a smoker…
jimmy2shoes on October 13, 2009 at 11:07 AM

And that was the first time Obama broke his if you make less than $250K, I will not raise your taxes 1 single dime!

It went without a whimper from the MSM, giving Obama a green light to plunder ALL Americans!

DSchoen on October 13, 2009 at 5:50 PM

So do Liberals love or hate a Growing National Debt?

I guess it depends on who’s increasing the national debt, i.e., liberals or neo-conservatives. According to PoliticalMath, Obama’s own national debt projections make Bush look like a thrifty coupon cutting housewife. See:

Do Liberals love or hate a Growing National Debt? Enjoy!

RomanticIdeal on October 13, 2009 at 8:07 PM

http://www.veteranoutrage.com

THEY ARE ALL

LIARS

Thow them all out and have them all arrested
For theft
For FRAUD
Fopr Lying
For cheating (especially on their taxes)
Hell arrest them all for being
TRAITOROUS LYING CHEATING SCAMMING SCUMBAGS.

Hell i would trust osama bin laden more than
the democrats or republicans

veteranoutrage on October 13, 2009 at 10:26 PM

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