November
14, 2009
The Obama administration
has alerted domestic agencies to plan for a freeze or even a 5 percent
cut in their budgets, part of an election-year push to rein in record
deficits that threaten the economy and Democrats' political prospects
next fall.
China, the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities, has
expressed concern about the size of U.S. deficits. U.S. policymakers
worry that alarm over deficits could push foreigners into cutting
back on their purchases of Treasury debt. President Barack Obama
will visit China as part of his current tour of Asia.
White House budget director Peter Orszag said Friday that it is
imperative to start curbing the flow of red ink in coming years
so as not to erode the fledgling economic recovery and raise interest
rates. But he called it a balancing act and said acting too fast
could undercut the recovery.Skip over this content
Orszag wouldn't comment on the specifics of the upcoming budget,
which will be unveiled in February, right after Obama's State on
the Union address in which the initiative is sure to be a major
focus.
Democratic officials in the White House and on Capitol Hill say
options for locking in budget savings include caps on the amount
of money Congress gets to distribute each year for agency operating
budgets. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity to frankly
discuss internal deliberations.
"As part of that fiscal 2011 budget, we will be putting forward
proposals that will put us back on a fiscally sustainable path and
that have lower deficits," Orszag said in a recent Associated
Press interview. "I'm not going to get into the mix between
spending and revenues. Obviously deficit reduction requires some
combination of those two."
On Thursday, the government reported that the federal deficit hit
a record for October as the new budget year began. The Treasury
Department said the deficit for October totaled $176.4 billion,
even higher than the $150 billion imbalance that economists expected.
The deficit for the 2009 budget year, which ended on Sept. 30, set
an all-time record in dollar terms of $1.42 trillion. That was $958
billion above the 2008 deficit, the previous record holder.
The budget freeze was planned before Democratic setbacks in last
week's elections. But the bad results for Democrats — independent
voters that were central to Obama's winning coalition last year
voted roughly 3 to 1 for GOP gubernatorial candidates in Virginia
and New Jersey — appear to have added urgency to the deficit-cutting
drive.
Independents, pollsters say, tend to be more concerned about the
deficit than other voters and getting them back in the Democratic
column is crucial to the party' chances in midterm congressional
elections.
The mandate to domestic agencies to limit their budget requests
for the 2011 budget year comes as an economic advisory board chaired
by Paul Volcker is debating ways to reform the tax code. Virtually
all budget experts say there will have to be revenue increases to
make any significant dent in the deficit.
The White House edict to agencies to submit spending plans at least
freezing their budgets is but one round in internal administration
deliberations on the budget. Cabinet heads are sure to seek exemptions,
and Orszag warned that firm budget decisions haven't been made.
Given Democrats' poor poll number on the deficit, cutting it may
be a case in which the adage that good policy is good politics holds
true.
Still, politicians have typically avoided politically painful deficit-cutting
steps in election years and recent history has not been kind to
politician who have tackled the issue.
Tax-raising deficit deals in 1990 and 1993 had big political consequences
for President George H.W. Bush, who lost his re-election bid, and
for President Bill Clinton, whose party lost control of Congress
the following year.