Sunday talk shows preview coming budget battle
The CBO announced on Friday that federal deficits would rise an additional $4.8 from 2010-2019, $2.3 trillion more than the Administration's estimates. The difference stems in large part from a disagreement over how fast the economy will grow after it escapes from recession.
"When you get out five, 10 years, they’re assuming that real GDP is only going to grow about 2.2 or 2.3 percent a year," said Christina Romer, chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, on Fox News Sunday. "And that’s just lower than private forecasters. It’s lower than the Federal Reserve. And we think it’s just too pessimistic."
Congressional Republicans, including several powerful moderates, said that the deficits were unacceptably large and would need to be scaled back in the final budget.
Senator Susan Collins of Maine said on ABC's This Week that the debts were "not sustainable," and that they posed "a threat to the basic health of our economy." Senator Judd Greg, who declined to serve as President Obama's Commerce Secretary, called the debts "staggering," and said that deficits of "4 percent to 5 percent of GDP" were "not sustainable under any form of government."
"The practical implications of this," Judd continued, "is bankruptcy for the United States. There’s no other way around it. If we maintain the proposals which are in this budget over the 10-year period that this budget covers, this country will go bankrupt. People will not buy our debt; our dollar will become devalued."
Policymakers also demonstrated their support for Treasury Secretary Timothy Geitner, who received widespread criticism after it was revealed that A.I.G. used part of its bailout money to pay for $165 million in employee bonuses.
"If you’re asking me should he resign," said Senator Chuck Grassley on CBS' Face the Nation, "I don’t think anybody after two months has been tested enough that I would say he should resign. I think he ought to be given some time."
Romer characterized calls for the Secretary's resignation as "really silly."
Members of Congress continued to fume over the A.I.G. bonuses, though it seemed far from certain that the President would sign a House-passed bill reclaiming the bonuses through the tax code.
"Retention bonuses are, to a great extent, extortion," Congressman Barney Frank said. "It is people saying... I’ve got the combination to the safe, and if you don’t bribe me, I’m going to leave and you’ll never be able to open the safe."
Vice Presidential advisor Jared Bernstein responded on This Week that the bill might be "dangerous," saying: “The president would be concerned that this bill may have some problems in going too far – the House bill – may go too far in terms of some legal issues, constitutional validity, using the tax code to surgically punish a small group of people."
Over on NBC's Meet the Press, Governors Ed Rendell and Arnold Schwarzenegger joined with New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg to discuss their new group, Building America's Future, which will call for substantial investments in the nation's infrastructure.
"This country desperately needs to build a high-speed rail passenger system." Governor Rendell said. "We need to improve our rail freight system. But it's not just transportation. It's the levees that failed in Cedar Rapids and New Orleans. It's dams, it's water and wastewater systems. It's so much more."
— Tricia Perry









