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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: An Unserious Man An Unserious Man By PAUL KRUGMAN Published: August 19, 2012 832 Comments Mitt Romneys choice of Paul Ryan as his running mate led to a wave of pundit accolades. Now, declared writer after writer, were going to have a real debate about the nations fiscal future. This was predictable: never mind the Tea Party, Mr. Ryans true constituency is the commentariat, which years ago decided that he was the Honest, Serious Conservative, whose proposals deserve respect even if you dont like him. Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times Paul Krugman Go to Columnist Page » Blog: The Conscience of a Liberal Related Both Campaigns Seize Role of Medicare Defender (August 19, 2012) Related in Opinion Editorial: Truth and Lies About Medicare (August 19, 2012) Op-Ed Columnist: Dark Road to the White House (August 18, 2012) Op-Ed Contributor: Paul Ryans Fairy-Tale Budget Plan (August 14, 2012) More on United States Elections » Opinion Twitter Logo. Connect With Us on Twitter For Op-Ed, follow @nytopinion and to hear from the editorial page editor, Andrew Rosenthal, follow @andyrNYT. Readers Comments Readers shared their thoughts on this article. Read All Comments (832) » But he isnt and they dont. Ryanomics is and always has been a con game, although to be fair, it has become even more of a con since Mr. Ryan joined the ticket. Lets talk about whats actually in the Ryan plan, and lets distinguish in particular between actual, specific policy proposals and unsupported assertions. To focus things a bit more, lets talk as most budget discussions do about whats supposed to happen over the next 10 years. On the tax side, Mr. Ryan proposes big cuts in tax rates on top income brackets and corporations. He has tried to dodge the normal process in which tax proposals are scored by independent auditors, but the nonpartisan Tax Policy Center has done the math, and the revenue loss from these cuts comes to $4.3 trillion over the next decade. On the spending side, Mr. Ryan proposes huge cuts in Medicaid, turning it over to the states while sharply reducing funding relative to projections under current policy. That saves around $800 billion. He proposes similar harsh cuts in food stamps, saving a further $130 billion or so, plus a grab-bag of other cuts, such as reduced aid to college students. Lets be generous and say that all these cuts would save $1 trillion. On top of this, Mr. Ryan includes the $716 billion in Medicare savings that are part of Obamacare, even though he wants to scrap everything else in that act. Despite this, Mr. Ryan has now joined Mr. Romney in denouncing President Obama for cutting Medicare; more on that in a minute. So if we add up Mr. Ryans specific proposals, we have $4.3 trillion in tax cuts, partially offset by around $1.7 trillion in spending cuts with the tax cuts, surprise, disproportionately benefiting the top 1 percent, while the spending cuts would primarily come at the expense of low-income families. Over all, the effect would be to increase the deficit by around two and a half trillion dollars. Yet Mr. Ryan claims to be a deficit hawk. Whats the basis for that claim? Well, he says that he would offset his tax cuts by base broadening, eliminating enough tax deductions to make up the lost revenue. Which deductions would he eliminate? He refuses to say and realistically, revenue gain on the scale he claims would be virtually impossible. At the same time, he asserts that he would make huge further cuts in spending. What would he cut? He refuses to say. What Mr. Ryan actually offers, then, are specific proposals that would sharply increase the deficit, plus an assertion that he has secret tax and spending plans that he refuses to share with us, but which will turn his overall plan into deficit reduction. If this sounds like a joke, thats because it is. Yet Mr. Ryans plan has been treated with great respect in Washington. He even received an award for fiscal responsibility from three of the leading deficit-scold pressure groups. Whats going on? The answer, basically, is a triumph of style over substance. Over the longer term, the Ryan plan would end Medicare as we know it and in Washington, fiscal responsibility is often equated with willingness to slash Medicare and Social Security, even if the purported savings would be used to cut taxes on the rich rather than to reduce deficits. Also, self-proclaimed centrists are always looking for conservatives they can praise to showcase their centrism, and Mr. Ryan has skillfully played into that weakness, talking a good game even if his numbers dont add up. The question now is whether Mr. Ryans undeserved reputation for honesty and fiscal responsibility can survive his participation in a deeply dishonest and irresponsible presidential campaign. The first sign of trouble has already surfaced over the issue of Medicare. Mr. Romney, in an attempt to repeat the G.O.P.s successful death panels strategy of the 2010 midterms, has been busily attacking the president for the same Medicare savings that are part of the Ryan plan. And Mr. Ryans response when this was pointed out was incredibly lame: he only included those cuts, he says, because the president put them in the baseline, whatever that means. Of course, whatever Mr. Ryans excuse, the fact is that without those savings his budget becomes even more of a plan to increase, not reduce, the deficit. So will the choice of Mr. Ryan mean a serious campaign? No, because Mr. Ryan isnt a serious man he just plays one on TV. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: tom007 (#0)
Krugman is a WaffenCrank and should be permanently banned from economics.
I sense a disturbance in the farce. Much gnashing will ensue.
Are you crazy or do you do this for fun? I am totally serious. Krugman does not understand economics. I sense a disturbance in the farce. Much gnashing will ensue.
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