The Mercury News

What Biden’s proposed social programs would actually do

- By Mark Weisbrot Mark Weisbrot is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington and the author of “Failed: What the ‘Experts’ Got Wrong About the Global Economy.” © 2021 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Democrats on Friday scored a win for President Joe Biden’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture bill. Now focus is turning to the broader Build Back Better Act, his proposal to expand access to medical care, child care, preschool and much more.

Unfortunat­ely, detractors are throwing around so many distortion­s that it’s hard to keep track of what’s actually in the legislatio­n, also known as the budget reconcilia­tion bill.

Sen. Joe Manchin, the Democratic swing vote from West Virginia, is a good starting point for straighten­ing out some of the misconcept­ions. Perhaps more than any other person in this world, he will determine how much Americans’ lives will change over the decade ahead.

He has opposed expanding social programs, and although his stated beliefs on the most important economic issues involved in this historic legislatio­n are shared by millions of Americans, not many economists would agree.

Manchin warns of “negative consequenc­es for the future” from the federal government spending “trillions upon trillions,” when the national debt is already at “$28.7 trillion and growing.” In its original form, Biden’s bill was estimated to cost $3.5 trillion. The current version, due in large part to his opposition, has now been pushed down to about $1.85 trillion.

These numbers can sound big and scary when presented without any context — and as Manchin and others present them, without even a time period. The $3.5 trillion, which appears to be one of the only facts that most of the public knows about this bill, would have been spent over a 10-year period. It amounts to less than 1.2% of our economy over the next 10 years. The current version of the bill is about 0.6% of our economy.

Also, the legislatio­n contains revenue increases that pay for the increased spending — including from higher taxes, but not on anyone making less than $400,000 a year (more than 98% of U.S. households). These sources of revenue are being fought over right now, and there’s no plausible outcome that is going to make a substantia­l difference in our national debt.

Not that our national debt is a problem anyway. While $28.7 trillion sounds menacing, what actually matters is how much interest we have to pay each year on that debt. And again, that has to be measured as a portion of our economy, or GDP, if we are talking about affordabil­ity. That cost is currently 1.5% of GDP, and projected at 1.9% for the coming decade. This is quite reasonable by any historical or internatio­nal comparison; we hit more than 3% of GDP in net interest payments on the public debt in the 1990s, when the economy had an economic expansion that lasted longer than any previous one in U.S. history.

Manchin also asks how he can vote for “a bill that proposes massive expansion to social programs when vital programs like Social Security and Medicare face insolvency and benefits could start being reduced as soon as 2026 in Medicare and 2033 in Social Security?” But this is also a false alarm. It is based on a misunderst­anding of the finances of these programs; they do not face “insolvency” any more than the Pentagon or the Treasury Department does.

Social Security benefits right now are paid for by payroll taxes of workers currently employed. The program also has some savings — about $2.8 trillion currently — but this is not the basis of the checks that 69 million Americans are receiving. As people live longer and spend more years in retirement, more revenue has been needed — and Social Security did not go broke.

On the other side of the ledger, the benefits from even the current, reduced version of the budget reconcilia­tion bill would be life-changing for tens of millions of Americans: A child tax credit of $250-$300 monthly for more than 35 million families, which was recently expanded to include millions of the poorest families. Free preschool for 3- and 4-yearolds (average current cost to parents: $8,600 per year). Child care subsidies that would expand access to millions of children.

Medicare would be expanded to include hearing coverage. Millions of people who currently do not have access to Medicaid would get health care.

What’s being proposed here is what most countries with national income comparable to the U.S. already have. Are Americans so different from everyone else? Don’t we want the same security for our health and our children? These questions answer themselves.

If this bill is passed, voters in the midterm elections a year from now will support those incumbents who made it happen.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States