html5-img
1 / 24

Brave New World: Advocacy in the Era of Deficit Reduction

Brave New World: Advocacy in the Era of Deficit Reduction. Emily Holubowich, MPP Senior Vice President CRD Associates Follow Me! @ healthfunding Join the Twitter Conversation # NDDUnited. Overview. During this presentation I ’ ll cover: Key budgetary concepts

claire
Download Presentation

Brave New World: Advocacy in the Era of Deficit Reduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Brave New World: Advocacy in the Era of Deficit Reduction Emily Holubowich, MPPSenior Vice President CRD Associates Follow Me! @healthfunding Join the Twitter Conversation #NDDUnited

  2. Overview • During this presentation I’ll cover: • Key budgetary concepts • Why deficit reduction is important • How to reduce the deficit (according to experts) • What’s been done to date • What austerity means for your members • Advocacy efforts to date • Suggested strategies

  3. Deficit vs. Debt • Deficit is difference between receipts & outlays • Receipts include money the government brings in from taxes, fees, and other income • Outlays include all spending on programs, and interest payments on the debt • Debt is total amount of money owed to creditors • Accumulations of deficits • US Debt ~ $16 trillion (and counting)

  4. Mandatory vs. Discretionary • Discretionary spending is at Congress’“discretion” • “Defense” discretionary is military spending • “Nondefense” discretionary or “NDD” is everything else • Research, education, food/drug/airline/public safety • Mandatory spending enacted by law • Entitlement Programs (e.g., Medicare) • To change spending, must change eligibility rules

  5. Absent reforms, debt WILL skyrocket in the coming decades % of GDP Debt breaches 100% of GDP in 2027 Note: Unlike current law, the Bipartisan Policy Center’s Plausible Baseline assumes that the 2001, 2003, and 2010 tax cuts are extended, the AMT is indexed to inflation, Medicare’s physician payment rates are maintained at their current rate (the “doc fix”), the looming sequester from the Budget Control Act of 2011 is lifted, and troops stationed overseas decline to 45,000 by 2015 Sources: Congressional Budget Office (January 2012) and Bipartisan Policy Center extrapolations

  6. Health care costs are the primary driver of the debt % of GDP Sources: Congressional Budget Office’s Alternative Fiscal Scenario (January 2012), additionally assuming that troops overseas decline to 45,000 by 2015; Bipartisan Policy Center extrapolations

  7. Revenue Under current policies simply will not be enough Revenues Averaged 20% of GDP When the Budget Was Balanced… …and that Was Before the Baby Boomers Arrived %of GDP 2012-2022 Average Fiscal years Source: Congressional Budget Office alternative fiscal scenario (January 2012)

  8. How Do We Fix It? • Several bipartisan, expert commissions recommend “balanced approach” • Reduce spending • Defense and nondefense discretionary spending • Mandatory spending • Entitlement reform • Increase revenue • Tax reform • Total deficit reduction package of $4 trillion needed to stabilize the debt

  9. Budget Control Act: Reigning in Deficit • Two-phase debt ceiling increase • Phase 1: $900 billion through end of 2011 • Phase 2: $1.2-$1.5 trillion through November 2012 • Increases contingent upon offsets • Phase 1 offset: discretionary caps over decade • FY 2013 capped at $1.047 trillion • Phase 2 offset: determined by “supercommittee” • If no agreement, “sequester” takes effect • Budgetary tool designed to force compromise

  10. Sequester: The Price of Failure • Effective January 2, 2013 • Across the board cuts of $984 billion over 10 years, or $109 billion annually • Cuts equally divided between defense and non-defense • Non-defense discretionary: $322 billion (8%) • Defense discretionary: $492 billion (12%) • Medicare: $123 billion (capped at 2%) • Other mandatory $47 billion • Social Security, Medicaid, and low-income support programs exempt

  11. Impact of Unbalanced Approach? • Efforts have focused on spending cuts, only • “NDD” now lowest level since Eisenhower • Cut by 10 percent, on average since FY 2010 • By 2022, another 7 percent cut under Budget Control Act spending caps • More cuts by “sequestration” January 2013 • For “NDD” alone: • 1 million jobs lost • $120.5 billion Gross State Product lost • $63 billion income lost

  12. If You Do the Math… • Completely *eliminating* all NDD programs won’t balance the budget • Cuts alone won’t stop deficits and debt • Experts agree: balanced approach needed to reduce the deficit and debt

  13. But This Is POLITICS! • Republicans’ fix: exempt defense • Make NDD and entitlements bear the brunt • Democrats’ fix: balanced approach where “rich pay fair share” • Balance or Bust! White House standing ground • No carve outs • No exemptions • No delays

  14. Driving Toward the “Fiscal Cliff” • CR at current levels through March 2013 • Avoids shutdown showdown pre-election • Nothing substantive before election • No political will to make tough decisions • Hellacious lame duck • Bush tax cuts expire • “Extenders” package expires • Unemployment benefits, payroll tax holiday, Medicare physician payment fix • Sequester!

  15. The Tea Leaves • Lame duck scenarios • Balanced approach • How balanced is “balanced?” • Kick the can • How long? • What’s the offset, if any? • “Carve-out” bills • Exempt defense • Exempt Medicare • Cancel altogether • How do we react? • Know when to hold ‘em, and when to fold ‘em • You can’t always get what you want

  16. Fiscal Discipline = Advocacy Conundrum • Post-BCA World • Game changer for appropriations advocates • No sacred cows • Lowering the bar for measuring success • Where money comes from now matters • Free lunch is over • Deficit/debt is crisis, requires action now • Associations face tough choices • Actions to save one priority may undermine another

  17. What We’re Doing About It • Budget Control Act defines us as community • “All for one” approach to advocacy • NDD Summit developed as ad hoc “network of networks” to coordinate: • Education of policymakers, policy professionals, and public • Advocacy for a balanced approach to deficit reduction that does not include further cuts to NDD programs

  18. Activities to Date • Inside Beltway • Customizable NDD fact sheet • NDD Sign On Letter • 3,000 national, state, local organizations • NDD Rally • 350 participants; trending on Twitter • NDD Call/Tweet Day • 400 tweeters, 500K reached, 1.75 million impressions • Media Visibility • WashPo, HuffPo, PBS, NYTimes; trade press • Outside Beltway • Grassroots Toolkit • Local editorials

  19. Tools to Engage • “NDD United” Grassroots Toolkit available at www.publichealthfunding.org • “Deficit Reduction and You” video tutorial • Sequestration FAQs • Tips for Editorials • With sample Op Ed, letter to editor • Town Hall Tip Sheet • Sample questions & flyer for distributing at events • Press Event Tip Sheet • Social Media Tip Sheet

  20. Surviving in a Post-BCA World… Associations *should* continue to advocate for funding… To advance these priorities, must associations go where they haven’t gone before…?

  21. Contact Information Emily J. Holubowich, MPP Senior Vice President Cavarocchi ∙ Ruscio ∙ Dennis Associates 202.484.1100 eholubowich@dc-crd.com Follow Me! @healthfunding

More Related