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The Budget Control
Act Lives!
In 2022, the most conspicuous element of the Budget Control Act of 2011
(BCA), statutory caps on discretionary spending, expires. These limits were
imposed as part of a compromise between congressional Republicans and the
Obama Administration to raise the debt limit in exchange for spending
restraint. While the discretionary spending limits did reduce projected
discretionary spending, the caps were amended five separate times to allow
Congress to spend more than the caps would otherwise allow. Congress did not,
it turns out, have much of an appetite for abiding by these limitations, and
so it increased them for, as the Congressional Research Service aptly
observes, “almost every
fiscal year in which they were effect.” Congress will happily let
these caps expire. But Congress has shown a remarkable affinity for one other
aspect of the BCA – mandatory sequestration.
Briefly, recall that the BCA created the Joint Select Committee on Deficit
Reduction, also referred to as the “Super Committee,” charged with coming up
with a plan to reduce the deficit by at least $1.2 trillion. They failed,
which meant under the BCA, a fallback mechanism, variously referred to as the
“Joint Committee Reductions,” “Automatic Spending Reductions,” or more
colloquially just as the “sequester,” was imposed. This mechanism was
designed to achieve the $1.2 trillion in deficit savings (including interest
costs) that the Super Committee failed to deliver, by lowering the existing
discretionary caps further and reducing funding for certain mandatory
programs, largely Medicare. These mandatory savings amounted to about $17 billion
when first imposed in 2013. According to the administration, these reductions
will amount to about $24 billion in FY2022.
And Congress barely batted an eye. Coming up with $20 billion in annual
budget savings is a challenge, and when Congress finds such a mechanism, they
tend to revisit it. And that’s exactly what Congress has done here. Where
these annual savings were supposed to expire along with the rest of the BCA
at the end of FY2021, they have been extended six separate times such that
they will now be imposed through FY2030.
Whenever Congress needs to come up with $20 billion or so to offset new
spending, this is one of the first cushions they look under. To be sure,
these extensions have nothing to do with reducing the deficit, but rather
just offsetting (usually only partially) new spending. Indeed, the
Senate-passed bipartisan infrastructure bill would extend this policy an
additional year, through FY2031.
So, as Congress embarks on what will be a busy fall that will require 1.)
funding the government, 2.) debating a partisan $3.5 trillion tax and
spending reconciliation bill, and 3.) increasing the debt limit, it is
remarkable to reflect on the fact that the product of 10-year-old debt limit
negotiations, the BCA, will still be around 10 years from now.
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