Andre Damon
On Monday, President Barack Obama presented his budget proposal for fiscal 2016, described by the New York Times as an “unfettered case for spreading the wealth.”
In
reality, the budget proposal, cynically packaged and promoted as a
populist boon to the middle class at the expense of the rich, is
dominated by corporate tax cuts, expanded military spending, and cuts to
Medicare.
These are accompanied by a grab bag of social and
infrastructure spending proposals, trivial in and of themselves, which
are proposed solely to make the budget appear to favor the “middle
class.” As Obama and the Democrats know perfectly well, the supposedly
“progressive” elements of his budget will be rejected by the Republican
Congress, while the pro-corporate and militarist meat of the proposal
will be enacted.
The real character of Obama’s budget was signaled
by the location he chose to unveil it. The president gave the press
conference announcing the budget at the Department of Homeland Security
in Washington, where he emphasized that he would significantly expand
spending on the military and domestic security.
Obama declared,
“We need to fund the department [of Homeland Security], pure and simple.
We’ve got to put politics aside, pass a budget that funds our national
security priorities at home and abroad.” The budget, he added, “gives us
the resources to confront global challenges, from ISIL to Russian
aggression.”
This was a reference to his proposal to lift caps on
military, intelligence and domestic security spending imposed as part of
across-the-board cuts mandated by the so-called “sequester” law that
came into effect in early 2013.
Obama’s budget proposal would
increase Pentagon spending by seven percent, adding an additional $38
billion to bring the total defense budget to $534 billion. Obama is
separately proposing $51 billion in additional funding for the wars in
Iraq and Syria, including money to back the so-called “moderate”
opposition in Syria, as well for as the ongoing US troop presence in
Afghanistan.
The budget calls for the corporate tax rate to be cut
to 25 percent for manufacturers and 28 percent for other corporations,
down from the current rate of 35 percent.
The proposal would also
allow US corporations to repatriate past profits generated overseas at a
tax rate of only 14 percent. Foreign profits would be taxed at 19
percent in the future. Currently, US corporations pay a rate of 35
percent on foreign profits, which many corporations avoid by keeping
their foreign earnings abroad.
These tax cuts are accompanied by
$400 billion in cuts to Medicare, Medicaid and the Department of Health
and Human Services. The budget proposes to raise $66 billion over ten
years by charging higher Medicare premiums to upper-income patients, a
move that would undermine Medicare’s status as a universal entitlement
and open the door to means testing and the transformation of the
government health insurance program for seniors into a poverty program.
The
plan would cut another “$116 billion in Medicare payments to drug
companies for medicines prescribed for low-income patients,” according
to the New York Times. It would also slash $100 billion for the
treatment of Medicare patients following their discharge from the
hospital, affecting primarily the elderly.
The increases in
military and security spending, corporate tax reductions and entitlement
cuts, which form the core of the budget proposal, are coupled with a
series of social spending increases and tax hikes on the wealthy which
are certain to be stripped away by the Republican-controlled Congress.
The
proposed tax increases include a 0.07 percent fee on some 100 large
financial corporations and an increase in the capital gains tax from
24.2 percent to 28 percent for couples making more than $500,000 per
year.
These would ostensibly be used to finance a plan to pay
tuition—but not increase per-pupil funding—at community colleges, which
would cost $60 billion, as well as an $80 billion proposal for
increasing child care tax credits. The budget also proposes $478 billion
in infrastructure spending over six years. These projects would be
contracted out to private for-profit companies and would not take the
form of government-run public works programs.
In announcing his
budget, Obama claimed that his proposal would undo the effects of the
sequester budget cuts. Since their implementation, Obama and Congress
have taken measures to shift the burden of the cuts to social programs
and away from the military.
Obama made clear that he would not
allow sequester cuts to defense spending, declaring that “if Congress
does nothing to stop sequestration, there could be serious consequences
for our national security, at a time when our military is stretched on a
whole range of issues.” He added, “I’m not going to accept a budget
that locks in sequestration going forward.”
The token social
spending measures in the budget are aimed at perpetuating the fraud that
the Democrats are the party of the “middle class”—as opposed to the
pro-business Republicans—in preparation for the 2016 presidential
election.
Despite the constant talk in the media about “partisan
gridlock,” the two parties represent different factions of the same
ruling oligarchy and pursue a common agenda of austerity, militarism and
the build-up of the repressive powers of the state.
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