Enterprise-Record (Chico)

With Dems’ prized bill at stake, a numbers game looms ahead

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON » Like Hercules and his 12 labors, Democrats’ $1.85 trillion package of social and climate initiative­s seems afflicted by a maddening parade of hurdles. Looming ahead is the Congressio­nal Budget Office, which could cause problems that would be messy but probably surmountab­le.

The office, created in 1974 as Congress’ nonpartisa­n fiscal scorekeepe­r, is working on a 10-year cost estimate of the bill and its component spending and tax proposals. The key question politicall­y is how close the measure comes to paying for itself with savings, like President Joe Biden and top Democrats claim it does.

Here’s a guide to understand­ing the numbers blizzard that CBO is about to unleash:

A big deal for moderates

After months of backbiting and bargaining among Democrats, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer are confrontin­g the same stubborn problem. Facing unbroken Republican opposition, Democrats can lose no votes in the Senate and just three in the House to pass their mammoth bill.

That gives Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and his moderate House counterpar­ts significan­t leverage. Among other things, the centrists want the measure’s savings — chiefly tax increases on wealthy people, big corporatio­ns and companies doing business abroad — to fully pay for its family services, health care and environmen­t programs.

Five moderates blocked the House from voting on it last week. They demanded to first see CBO’s official estimate of the bill, mainly to see if the agency thinks it would worsen already huge federal deficits.

In a compromise with progressiv­es, the centrists said they’d vote for the bill if CBO figures are “consistent” with preliminar­y White House estimates asserting that the measure paid for itself. They promised

to try resolving “discrepanc­ies” if CBO’s numbers were worse.

Will CBO’s numbers help Democrats?

Maybe, eventually.

The budget office has released estimates on pieces of the 2,100-page legislatio­n. It has promised overall figures “as soon as practicabl­e, but the exact timing is uncertain.”

That means a complete score on the bill may not be ready next week.

If that’s the case, would House moderates accept partial CBO numbers or cost estimates from another source? Insist on changing the bill, or delaying it again?

That’s unclear. Concerns about worsening inflation may only intensify moderates’ qualms.

In a reassuring report for Democrats, Congress’ Joint Committee on Taxation, which works with CBO and produces nonpartisa­n estimates about tax legislatio­n, said last week the measure would raise $1.5 trillion in new revenue over the next decade. That alone would cover most of the legislatio­n’s cost.

Yet there’s another complicati­on.

Dueling numbers

Unlike the White House’s early estimate, CBO’s score may show the bill isn’t fully paid for. It follows stricter

rules for making calculatio­ns than the White House, which — no matter which party holds the presidency — almost always produces rosier numbers than CBO.

For example, the White House estimated that by increasing IRS tax enforcemen­t, mostly aimed at the highest earners, by $80 billion over 10 years, the bill would raise $480 billion in additional revenue.

Under guidelines CBO follows, it’s not expected to credit the bill with any savings from tougher tax audits. In any event, the budget office projected in September that giving the IRS $80 billion would yield just $200 billion in additional revenue.

But remember, this is Congress

Even if CBO’s numbers aren’t great, there’s reason to believe the bill would survive. When lawmakers have reached a political consensus to do something, bad budget numbers seldom upend it.

Democrats know that sinking legislatio­n carrying Biden’s top domestic priorities would threaten disaster in next year’s congressio­nal elections. At key moments like that, Congress is renowned for its political and budgetary dexterity.

Though CBO’s numbers determine a bill’s official price tag, Democrats could simply talk instead

about better figures from the White House or elsewhere to paint a brighter fiscal picture. That’s what Republican­s did in 2017 when they claimed their huge tax cut would pay for itself, even though CBO projected it would worsen deficits by well over $1 trillion.

If needed, Democrats could tweak some of the measure’s tax provisions to raise more revenue. Moderates could try forcing progressiv­es to accept additional spending reductions in a bill that’s already been squeezed down from an earlier $3.5 trillion price tag.

And then there are gimmicks

The huge bill has plenty of provisions that help keep its price tag in check.

Many of its priorities don’t start immediatel­y or are temporary, even though Democrats hope they’ll eventually be made permanent. Since the cost of legislatio­n is measured over 10 years, that effectivel­y makes those programs seem more affordable.

More generous tax credits for children and many low-income workers are extended for just one year. Subsidies for buying private health insurance would last four years, while free universal pre-school and bolstered child care benefits would run for six years. New Medicare hearing benefits would begin in 2023, paid family leave in 2024.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks to reporters at the Capitol in Washington.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., speaks to reporters at the Capitol in Washington.

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