Eakinomics: Budget
Process Reform
The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (BBA) created the Joint Select
Committee on Budget and Appropriations Process Reform (“the Committee”),
a bipartisan, bicameral group comprised of 16 members, equally
divided between the House and Senate and Republicans and Democrats. The
Committee is required to report its recommendations and legislative text
by November 30, 2018. As part of the process to reach those
recommendations, The
Hill is reporting that
the Committee will release its proposed reforms today or tomorrow. A
markup of the bill — including proposed amendments from all sides — would
presumably be held on Thursday.
One of the requirements is that the recommendations must be passed out of
the Committee on a supermajority vote consisting of at least five
Democrats and five Republicans (independent of whether they are in the
House or Senate). In practice, that means amendments that cannot garner
the magic “5+5” are effectively dead because they would endanger the
basic bill.
The high threshold for passage is one reason that most are expecting the
draft legislation to fall far short of dramatic reforms and instead focus
more narrowly on technical improvements to the process. The most common
speculation is that the Committee will propose moving to a
biennial budget. As I noted in my testimony before
the Committee, Congress has passed the Bipartisan Budget Acts of
2013, 2015, and 2018, each of which was a two-year agreement on the basic
shape of the appropriations for defense and non-defense purposes. There
is good reason to assume Congress will pursue another two-year
agreement to cover 2020 and 2021. It strikes me as sensible for the
Committee to consider building on Congress’s ability to
reach these recent multiyear budget agreements, and for the
Committee to institutionalize them appropriately. In practice, this
means adopting a biennial budget.
So, expect to see a biennial budget and some other odds and ends when the
bill is released. But the really interesting possibilities will likely
occur during the markup. What will happen (if anything) to reconciliation or
other fast-track means of addressing entitlement and tax legislation?
Will the Committee move to align the fiscal year with the calendar year?
Can the Committee identify an effective carrot for passing a budget
— or a stick to penalize the failure to do so? Is there a way to
get the debt (at least as a fraction of gross domestic product) under
control?
One of the first significant votes taken by the new bipartisan-controlled
Congress in 2019 will be to raise the debt limit. With this vote looming,
will the Committee propose changing the rules for considering debt limit
increases?
Budget process reform is a far cry from getting the budget under control.
The latter requires core changes to the entitlements and social safety
net. But addressing the budget process is at least a first step toward
Congress and the president facing the rising tide of red ink in a
steadily deepening and serious way.
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