The Tea Party Debt Commission that took place yesterday and got
kicked out of the Senate has released a budget
plan. It’s not clear to what extent this plan represents the
views and preferences of Tea Partiers around the country, since it
seems pretty well “astroturfed”: Freedomworks facilitated the whole
thing. Yet I can’t imagine that any given self-described Tea Party
member would have many problems with the proposal.
Here’s the plan:
To achieve these goals, our plan, among other things:
- Repeals ObamaCare in toto.
- Eliminates four Cabinet agencies - Energy, Education, Commerce,
and HUD - and reduces or privatizes many others, including
EPA, TSA, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac.
- Ends farm subsidies, government student loans, and foreign aid
to countries that don’t support us- luxuries we can no longer
afford.
- Saves Social Security and greatly improves future benefits by
shifting ownership and control from government to individuals,
through new SMART Accounts.
- Gives Medicare seniors the right to opt into the Congressional
health care plan.
- Suspends pension contributions and COLAs for Members of
Congress, whenever the budget is in deficit.
And here’s what they predict it would accomplish:


(By the way, the low quality of the graphs and tables in the
report suggests to me that there might even be less astroturfing
than meets the eye.)
What’s interesting to me about this report is that it is,
relatively speaking, not that radical. Of course it’s utterly
politically infeasible. There are parts of the plan that are
contradictory: it calls for the Fed to lower inflationary
pressures, yet elsewhere advocates a new government inflation
metric that would result in lower measured inflation. And some of
the numbers probably don’t match up, or are simply wishful
thinking.
All that said, the budget appears to be a fairly straightforward
and plausible set of guidelines. It would gradually reduce federal
spending from 24 percent of GDP to 16 percent of GDP, by cutting
domestic spending most of all but also applying non-radical reforms
to Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security. It also includes a lot
of defense spending cuts:

The fiscal future envisioned by the Tea Party debt commission
would differ starkly from the one we’re rapidly approaching, but
it’s not an unthinkable future by any means. No one part of the
plan is simply unworkable, in the way that Occupy Wall Street’s
demand to cancel all student debt would be. In fact, parts of it,
such as the treatment of Medicare, are less drastic than proposals
currently being seriously debated on the Hill. Others, such as the
defense cuts, violate conservative orthodoxy. Overall, it’s an
impressive statement of what the Tea Party platform could
be.