Plus, what the Fed's rate cut means
By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey
Democrats Brawl Over Medicare for All
Health care policy dominated the first half hour of the debate among 10 Democratic presidential hopefuls Tuesday night, with much of the discussion focused on the viability of Medicare for All.
Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders defended their plan for universal health insurance against charges from moderates led by former Rep. John Delaney that their plan was too radical because it would eliminate the private insurance that roughly 150 million Americans currently rely on. âWe donât have to go around and be the party of subtraction, and telling half the country, who has private health insurance, that their health insurance is illegal,â Delaney said.
In response, Warren and Biden argued that private insurance was part of the problem, raising prices while siphoning billions of dollars from the health care system that could be used for patient care. Warren also cut Delaney down to size with a devastating retort: âI donât understand why anybody goes to all the trouble of running for president of the United States just to talk about what we really canât do and shouldnât fight for.â
How will they pay for it? The fate of private insurance isnât the only point of contention Democrats have when it comes to Medicare for All, [says]( Jeff Stein of The Washington Post. During the debate the candidates also discussed the question of how to finance an ambitious new public program. Sanders has proposed a 4% tax on all households earning more than $29,000, but other candidates were vague about financing their own proposals for universal coverage. Warren ducked the issue by claiming that overall spending for middle class families would go down once premiums and prices were taken into account.
âClearly the candidates did not want the talking point that middle-class taxes would go up,â said Larry Levitt of the Kaiser Family Foundation. âTax increases are a potent line against Medicare-for-all, though it would likely lead to the middle-class paying less for health care overall.â
Biden ready to jump in: The health care debate is likely to continue on the second night of the debates. Frontrunner Joe Biden, an opponent of Medicare for All, took aim at his more liberal competitors even before the debate had started. âMedicare for All would cost American taxpayers $30-$40 trillion over 10 years ⦠of course it'll raise middle class taxes,â a new Biden [video]( says, according to [The Hill](. The former vice president has proposed to provide a public option that would enable Americans to purchase a government-run health insurance plan while leaving much of the current health care system, including Obamacare, in place.
Biden will share the stage Wednesday with Sen. Kamala Harris, who [released a health care plan]( earlier this week that falls somewhere between Sandersâ Medicare for All and Bidenâs more modest proposal. The Harris plan would allow Americans to buy into Medicare while maintaining a role for private insurers. The expanded health care system would be paid for by a 4% tax on households earning over $100,000 and new taxes on stock trades and offshore corporate earnings.
White House âScramblingâ to Come Up with a Health Care Agenda for Trump: Report
The Washington Postâs Yasmeen Abutaleb and Josh Dawsey [report](
âWhite House advisers, scrambling to create a health-care agenda for President Trump to promote on the campaign trail, are meeting at least daily with the aim of rolling out a measure every two to three weeks until the 2020 election.â
The administration has already [announced]( an plan to allow prescription drugs to be imported from Canada and elsewhere. It is also reportedly [considering]( a sweeping executive order to lower Medicare Part D drug prices by tying them to prices in other countries.
âThe furious push reflects the administrationâs sense of vulnerability on an issue that Democrats successfully used in 2018 to win control of the House of Representatives,â Abutaleb and Dawsey write. But itâs not clear whether the administration can push through ideas that will have an effect before the 2020 elections â and if it can enact some of its ideas without Congress, where some Republicans remain skeptical about the White Houseâs approach.
âWhile Republicans have largely fallen in line with Trump on free trade and immigration even when he has blown up GOP orthodoxy, many rely heavily on donations from the pharmaceutical industry and are reluctant to sour those relationships,â the Post notes.
[Read the full story at The Washington Post.](
What the Fedâs Rate Cut Means for the National Debt
The Federal Reserve cut its benchmark interest rate for the first time since 2008 on Wednesday, lowering the target for its overnight lending rate [by a quarter point]( to between 2% and 2.25%, in an effort to protect the U.S. economy against rising risks, including those from President Trumpâs trade war.
The rate-setting Federal Open Markets Committee said in its statement that the job market remains strong and that economic growth is likely to continue, but uncertainties cloud the outlook. âAlthough growth of household spending has picked up from earlier in the year, growth of business fixed investment has been soft,â it said.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell added that the cut, a reversal of a December rate increase, wasnât âthe beginning of a lengthy cutting cycle" â a stance that sent stocks falling. Wall Street has been pricing in multiple rate cuts this year, and President Trump had repeatedly criticized the Fed and called for larger rate cuts.
What it means for the national debt: The cut is another signal that interest rates will remain lower than the Congressional Budget Office projects. But the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget warned Wednesday that even with low rates, the debt is still projected to grow as a share of the economy:
âIf interest rates stay at the low levels experienced in early 2019, primary deficitsâ â that is, before interest costs are factored in â âwould still need to be cut from 1.7 percent of GDP to 1.0 percent, the equivalent of $1.8 trillion in spending cuts or tax increases over the next ten years. Putting debt on a clear downward path under this scenario would require reducing primary deficits to about 0.5 percent of GDP, the equivalent of $3.1 trillion of spending cuts or tax increases.â Those CRFB projections donât account for the cost of extending Congressâ recent tax cuts and spending increases.
For some additional context, CBO has [projected]( that the 2017 tax cuts will add $1.8 trillion to primary deficits through 2028, while CRFB [says]( the recent budget agreement will add $1.7 trillion to projected spending over the next 10 years.
CRFB also says that the tax cuts and spending hikes enacted since 2015 will more than double the deficit in 2020 and 2021. The 2017 tax law accounts for the largest part of that increase, with an expected cost of $565 billion over the next two years, or more than a quarter of projected deficits. The two-year budget deal lawmakers and the White House just agreed to will cost about $235 billion over the next two years.
In all, recent legislation will add about $4.5 trillion to deficits over the next decade, or 35% of a projected total of $13.1 trillion.
Debt and Deficit Hardly Mentioned in Democratic Debate
The first night of the second Democratic presidential primary debate included only passing references to debt and deficit concerns.
Former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, as part of a discussion on whether candidates would continue President Trumpâs trade and tariff policies:
âTrade wars are for losers. And the bottom line is we've got to recognize, let's negotiate a better trade deal. But you're not going to win against China in a trade war when they've got 25 percent of our total debt. âAnd step back and look it. Here's Trump gives a giant tax cut and at the same time -- so we're paying in tariffs about $800 to $1,200 per household and then we give this incredible tax cut to the rich. Essentially what's happening is now he's transferred that tax obligation onto the middle class. That's what's outrageous. But tariffs are not the solution.â
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, in response to a question about Sen. Bernie Sanderâs proposals to cancel all student debt and make two- and four-year public colleges and universities tuition-free:
âI want to make it easier for kids to go to college. And I think we do it by focusing our resources on the people that need it most. And my problem with some of these plans is they literally would pay for wealthy kids, for Wall Street kids to go to college. There's no difference. ⦠I don't think that makes sense. And I'm very concerned if we do things like that, the debt we're going to pass on to the next generation and the next generation. So what I would do about student loan debt is that I would allow people to refinance it at a better rate and I would make sure that we improve those student loan repayment programs for our teachers and expand them so that you literally -- over 5, 10 years -- can get it paid for if you go into occupations where we don't have enough workers.â
A lot going on today, and in the middle of it all the Houston Astros [landed another ace](. Send your updated World Series predictions (Astros over Dodgers?), story tips and feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com. And please tell your friends they can [sign up here]( to get their own copy of this newsletter.
News
- [10 Things We Learned from Night One of the Democratic Debates in Detroit]( â Time
- [In Contentious Democratic Debate, Deep Divisions on Health Care Separate Liberals and Moderates]( â Washington Post
- [Republicans Face Tough Vote on Budget Bill Trump Supports]( â Associated Press
- [U.S. Record Debt Sales Continue as Deficits Head to $1 Trillion]( â Bloomberg
- [Trump Administration âOpen for Businessâ on Drug Imports from Canada]( â Kaiser Health News
- [Drug Industry Lashes Trump for Canada Importation Plan]( â Politico
- [The New Bipartisan Senate Bill Aimed at Making Big Pharma Lower Drug Prices, Explained]( â Vox
- [The Fight Between Kamala Harris and Bernie Sanders Over âPrivatizing Medicare,â Explained]( â Vox
- [Senate Democrats to Force Vote on Trump Health Care Moves]( â The Hill
- [What Blue States Are Doing on Health Care]( â Axios
- [The Wealth Tax That Democrats and Republican Billionaires Both Support]( â CNBC
- [Highway Bill Upping Spending by a Quarter Gets OK from Senate Committee]( â Roll Call
- [Dem Chairman Says He Strongly Opposes Potential Administration Action to Reduce Capital Gains Taxes]( â The Hill
- [Ultralow Interest Rates Bring Opportunity and Danger to States]( â Bloomberg Businessweek
- [Obama Energy Chief Ernest Moniz to Call for "Green Real Deal"]( â Axios
Views and Analysis
- [Our Health-Care Debate Is a Disaster. Hereâs How We Can Do Better.]( â Paul Waldman, Washington Post
- [Democratsâ Ideological Divisions Broke into the Open in Their Detroit Brawl]( â Dan Balz, Washington Post
- [Itâs a Center-Left Party After All]( â John F. Harris, Politico
- [Moderates Are in Desperate Need of a Messenger]( â Joshua Green, Bloomberg Businessweek
- [John Delaney Had One Good Point on Medicare for All]( â Olga Khazan, The Atlantic
- [If the U.S. Economy Is in Good Shape, Why Is the Federal Reserve Cutting Interest Rates?]( â Heather Long, Washington Post
- [Todayâs Reckless, Irresponsible, Politically-Motivated FOMC Rate Cut]( â Barry Ritholtz, Ritholtz.com
- [Did Trump Give Us Our Most Progressive Fed Chair Yet?]( â Jeff Spross, The Week
- [The Fed Canât Seem to Satisfy Bond Traders or Trump]( â Brian Chappatta, Bloomberg
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