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Why I support the Omnibus Reconciliation Bill (One Big Beautiful Bill)

How did this bill come to be? The answer is simple: The United States' exorbitant privilege—the global demand for U.S. debt—and the general dynamism of its economy allow for deficit-financed tax cuts that no other country could sustain without risking an imminent debt crisis.

Is it wise to indefinitely rely on the global demand for U.S. debt to continue accumulating more of it? Probably not. However, the U.S. is unlikely to face a serious sovereign debt crisis similar to the 1997 Asian financial crisis or the 2010 Eurozone debt crisis.

Despite having relatively low tax rates compared to most developed nations, the U.S. remains one of the wealthiest countries in the world, with a GDP per capita far exceeding that of any other large, developed economy.

Moreover, U.S. entitlement programs function like a treasure chest. If Congress adjusts the eligibility age in line with rising life expectancy, it would help structurally adjust the debt trajectory, stabilizing fiscal imbalances.

As a last resort, the U.S. could reform entitlement programs, raise taxes, and cut discretionary spending, ensuring that a chaotic sovereign debt crisis is avoided. A poorer country with a less dynamic economy, a higher GDP/debt ratio and a much higher tax burden simply doesn’t have the same margin of error or fiscal wiggle room.

This bill will demonstrate that the U.S. can still implement substantial spending cuts, which may, counterintuitively, reassure bond markets. Over the past quarter-century, Congress has only passed revenue-reduction bills—either through tax cuts or increased spending. Even the Budget Control Act of 2011 was an attempt to contain future growth in discretionary spending via caps and sequestration, but it didn’t result in real, immediate cuts.

The Omnibus Reconciliation Bill (OBBB) is expected to enact the largest spending reductions relative to U.S. GDP, cutting $2.5 trillion over a 10-year period. However, due to the cumulative effect of various tax cuts, the bill will add $2.5 trillion to the primary deficit over the same period.

That said, if signs of concern emerge in the U.S. bond market in the coming years, some of these tax cuts could be partially repealed. Previous presidents—Reagan, Bush 41, Clinton and Obama—all raised taxes to generate revenue while maintaining generally lower tax rates amidst fiscal imbalances in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2010s. Reagan’s initial tax cuts were so expensive that his administration later proposed raising taxes to offset some of the initial cuts. By compromising on these offsets, Republicans also gained leverage over a Democratic-controlled Congress, combining tax increases with spending cuts.

Similarly, the OBBB will create positive path dependencies for future Congressional negotiations on deficit reductions by simultaneously lowering both government spending and tax levels. As a result, future agreements will likely involve less aggressive tax increases and deeper spending cuts than they would have otherwise.
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Your last sentence is very intriguing. Thank you for posting
CedricH · 22-25, M
@BiasForAction You‘re welcome :)
@BiasForAction What that paragraph is actually saying is that if tRump keeps boosting the deficit enough, it'll force the other party to reduce the deficit. Of course, the other party could adopt the same philosophy, leading to a giant game of chicken.

After all the noise we heard from "deficit hawks" during the Biden admin, it sure is funny how silent those hawks have become🤣😂
CedricH · 22-25, M
@ElwoodBlues No, that‘s not what it says. It says that whatever administration will have to deal with a genuine fiscal crisis is likely going to address the crisis with less aggressive tax hikes and deeper spending cuts than they otherwise would, if this bill isn’t passed.
@CedricH Taking your statement at face value, that's almost the same thing.
and deeper spending cuts than they otherwise would,

Cutting spending is always the most difficult job; for example Elon originally promised $2 trillion in spending cuts and maybe delivered $180 billion. Passing on the tough job of spending cuts to a future admin is the same game of chicken that I mentioned.

In short, tax cuts are easy; spending cuts are very hard. This bill refuses to do the hard part.
CedricH · 22-25, M
@ElwoodBlues Look, I don’t see it as a game of chicken because the fiscal crunch is inevitable. The collision of the two cars is already factored in. But the future Congress and WH that will be stuck with the crisis will then be forced to do something, after all, the two metaphorical cars have already collided in this scenario. This means Congress and the administration will be tasked with damage control. All I‘m saying is that the future damage control measures will entail less aggressive tax increases and deeper spending cuts due to this bill because of the path dependencies (the new spending and tax baselines) it creates.

And as for not doing the hard part. You‘re right, this bill isn’t deficit neutral but that certainly doesn’t mean it’s not partially offset by real, immediate spending cuts. Roughly half of the tax reform‘s revenue losses are compensated by spending reductions. That’s $2.5 trillion over 10 years. As I‘ve said before, that probably makes it the largest spending reduction in a single bill in the history of the United States and certainly the first genuine spending reduction measures in this century.

Prior Republican tax cuts (in particular Trump‘s TCJA and the two Bush tax cuts) weren’t offset by spending cuts at all.
@CedricH says
You‘re right, this bill isn’t deficit neutral but that certainly doesn’t mean it’s not partially offset by real, immediate spending cuts
So why not make this bill deficit neutral? It's rather hypocritical to spend four years bashing Biden's deficits and then add more deficits, don't you think?

Prior Republican tax cuts (in particular Trump‘s TCJA and the two Bush tax cuts) weren’t offset by spending cuts at all.
Whereas, Obama actually cut spending and reduced the yearly deficit. Why won't republicans demand the same from their congressmen??
CedricH · 22-25, M
@ElwoodBlues
So why not make this bill deficit neutral? It's rather hypocritical to spend four years bashing Biden's deficits and then add more deficits, don't you think?

It is peak hypocrisy. That’s definitely a fair characterization. But I‘m not Sen. John Thune, nor am I Speaker Johnson, I‘m not even a Republican.

If I had complete legislative control, I would‘ve stayed clear of certain tax cuts and aimed for more comprehensive deficit reduction measures, including structural reforms to Social Security and Medicare. I was certainly hoping for a better outcome but Chip Roy in the House and Ron Johnson in the Senate don’t have infinite power and they‘re checked by more vulnerable Senators and Congressmen from swing states and swing districts. Their majorities are thin.

It‘s funny, by insulating Social Security and Medicare from any serious modernization, any non-military deficit reduction that isn’t achieved by tax increases was bound to be more regressive (or anti-egalitarian in its distributional effects) because the remaining programs aren’t all-society entitlements but welfare programs for the poor and lower-income Americans (Medicaid, Chip, Snap).

Whereas, Obama actually cut spending and reduced the yearly deficit.
Obama‘s spending cuts were largely fictitious. The budget control act of 2011 introduced spending caps and a sequestration process but only to contain the future growth of spending. You can call that a spending cut if you want but I don’t. Obama and Congress did set up a commission (called supercommittee) to work on real spending cuts by designing an entitlement reform but that was merely a cosmetic concession. No reform was ever actually passed. He kicked the can further down the road. Plus, most of his spending caps and sequestration cuts affected the DoD which was extremely foolish because it further weakened the defense industrial base and the US military at a time when both China and Russia were rapidly growing their respective defense budgets in the 2010s. (The OBBB, on the other hand, fortunately appropriates an additional $150 billion to the DoD)

As for Obama‘s supposed deficit reduction measures. I can tell you exactly why the deficit fell. Obama entered into office when US spending peaked due to counter-cyclical stimulus spending and bailouts. He himself increased the deficit in his early fiscal years. Mind you, there‘s nothing wrong with that, Bush and Obama had to stimulate the economy.

But all of that (the Bush and Obama spending) amounted to emergency spending. That meant it would naturally decline unless it’s renewed. It was a series of one-off spending measures and automatic stabilizers. Once the one-off expenditure is made, it won’t contribute to next year’s budget deficit. So the deficit will naturally recede even without real spending cuts or tax increases. Therefore, Obama did little to address the structural deficit (the long-term, persistent mismatch of revenues and outlays). The last President who seriously addressed the structural deficit was Bill Clinton, working with a Republican Congress led by Newt Gingrich.
@CedricH If tRump's BBB were to be blocked, we would instead get a continuing resolution. We would abandon minor spending cuts and MAJOR revenue cuts. I think that's a better alternative than the BBB. Of course, a continuing resolution leaves republicans with egg on their faces and they can't have that. But it would be better for the nation.
CedricH · 22-25, M
@ElwoodBlues If it were to be blocked there‘d be basically no spending cuts, after all, those would have do go through the ordinary budget or appropriations process which means Democrats could veto any major spending cuts.

At the same time, the TCJA would mostly expire which would substantially increase federal revenues with a considerable effect on the US economy, likely precipitating a short and mild recession.

Still, it’s absolutely defensible to oppose the bill on distributional or fiscal grounds.
@CedricH I don't know all the details of the budget reconciliation process. If this BBB fails maybe it's the only reconciliation this year. But if they abort it before final vote, maybe they could try in the autumn for a more modest bill with fewer spending cuts and a smaller tax increase.
CedricH · 22-25, M
@ElwoodBlues It‘ll pass. I‘m fairly confident that it‘ll pass. They have the votes. But if it doesn’t, they could just try again after the Summer recess. Congressional rules basically say that you can pass one reconciliation bill a year.
It‘s because the reconciliation process is tied to the annual budget resolution and there’s only one budget resolution each year.

The second half of this year is probably reserved for the actual budget/appropriations for FY2026. That’s quite an effort in and of itself.