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Here are the main numbers to focus on when discussing Paul Ryan’s Path to Prosperity budget for 2012 and ten-year spending blueprint:

  • The plan cuts $6.2 trillion in spending pver tje mext decade relative to President Obama’s 2012 budget and cuts $5.8 trillion relative to the current-policy baseline.
  • It achieves $4.4 trillion in deficit reduction over the next decade compared to the president’s 2012 budget, exceeding the Bowles-Simpson Commission recommendations.
  • Non-security discretionary spending is brought below 2008 levels.
  • Federal spending is brought back to 20 percent of GDP, roughly its historic level, and drops to 15 percent by 2050.
  • Reduces the national debt by $4.7 trillion relative to the president’s budget and  pays the debt off over time.
  • Stops the $800 billion in new taxes imposed by the health care law, which the budget repeals and defunds, and $1.5 trillion in tax increases anticipated by 2012 Obama budget.
  • Lowers the top corporate and individual income tax rates to 25 percent.

The main number liberals seem to be focusing on? The $4 trilion in deficit reduction, which they (statically) project is equal to the Bush tax cuts. Remember that golden oldie? When the Gingrich Congress proposed Medicare reforms that would yield $270 billion in savings, liberals compared it to the size of the $245 billion tax cut.

View all comments (1) |

Oldefarte| 4.5.11 @ 11:48AM

Ryan's numbers are great, and I agree wholeheartedly. Paul Ryan for President! The D's will be/are against anything that hurts their governmental welfare dispensation. Taxpayer-voters have to begin to politically support Ryan and these R's in their budgetary reduction efforts, be they in Wisconsin or DC!!!!!!!!!

More Blog Posts by W. James Antle, III

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/04/05/big-picture-on-gop-2012-budget

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