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.
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!!!!!!!!!