President
Obama and top budget analysts are warning the so-called debt Super
Committee not to take the easy way out of their mandate to cut the
deficit by at least $1.2 trillion, as lawmakers have yet to reach a
deal ahead of a Nov. 23 deadline.
For
weeks, the overriding incentive for reaching an agreement was the fact
that the law creating the committee would "trigger" sweeping cuts to
defense and entitlements if the panel failed to identify the necessary
savings. But lawmakers over the past several days have increasingly
talked up the idea of simply changing the law so that those cuts --
particularly to the Pentagon -- would not go into effect should the
committee fail.
Bad idea, officials warn.
Obama
on Friday told the co-chairs of the Super Committee that he "will not
accept" any attempt to water down the automatic cuts, according to
White House Press Secretary Jay Carney.
The
automatic cuts were designed not only to compel the committee to act,
but to make sure the deficit is reduced, no matter what. Without a deal
and without the automatic cuts, analysts warn that Congress will have
confirmed the markets' worst fears about Washington's inability to
confront its gargantuan debt problem.
"You
certainly are sending the signal that you're not dealing with the
problem," said Doug Holtz-Eakin, former director of the Congressional
Budget Office. "I don't think the credit agencies and the bond markets
are going to like that."
The
country already endured one rating downgrade from Standard and Poor's.
Another rating firm, Moody's, assured recently that it was not
necessarily gearing up for a U.S. rating downgrade in the event of
failure by the Super Committee -- but that statement was based on the
assumption that the automatic cuts would kick in and get the country
moving down the deficit-cutting path.
Erskine
Bowles, the former White House chief of staff in the Clinton
administration who later co-chaired Obama's now-defunct deficit
committee, warned earlier this month that undoing the trigger would be
"disastrous" for the United States.
"The
sequester was agreed to by both parties to ensure there was a
meaningful enforcement mechanism to force a result from the committee,"
Carney said in a statement. "Congress must not shirk its
responsibilities."
"Sequester" is Washington-speak for the automatic cuts.
Carney
was pressed by reporters Friday on whether Obama would veto any
attempt to water down the trigger, but Carney stopped short of calling
Obama's statement an outright veto threat.
Lawmakers on the committee remain stuck over the proper balance of taxes and cuts.
Republicans
recently offered about $300 billion in new revenue, but Democrats said
it didn't go far enough. Republicans complain that Democrats want at
least $1 trillion in tax increases without making permanent and
meaningful changes to Medicare and Medicaid.
Amid
the impasse, lawmakers from both parties -- including Sens. Lindsey
Graham, R-S.C.; John McCain, R-Ariz., and Carl Levin, D-Mich. -- have
talked about taking the sting out of failure. Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta warned earlier this week that the approximately half-trillion
dollars in mandated military cuts would hollow out the military and
invite aggression from abroad.
McCain said Monday that the automatic cuts are "not expressed on golden tablets," suggesting they could be reversed.
sumber : http://alam-hadi.blogspot.com/2011/11/obama-warns-debt-super-committee-not-to.html
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