U.S. Chamber Of Commerce Says Accounting Trickery Hiding True Costs Of Spending Bill
The United States Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to members of Congress explaining how the progressive-backed reconciliation bill contains several gimmicks and arbitrary sunsets that would add another $1 trillion to the total cost of the package.
“As you await scoring from the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office on the latest iteration of the reconciliation bill, we request that you seek a complete accounting of the budgetary and economic impacts of the current proposal,” the letter begins. It then lists four major concerns that would add significantly to the cost of the final law: spending and tax provisions which arbitrarily sunset to give the appearance of lower cost, the impact of sunsetting those programs on state governments and the private sector, inflation costs, and workforce participation.
Without the arbitrary sunsets, some as short as one year, on the new entitlement programs and tax credits the bill would introduce, the cost of those programs would jump significantly, the Chamber explains. “Given that the bill’s proponents clearly intend for these programs to continue past their sunset, lawmakers should be provided with a Congressional Budget Office estimate of the true cost of the bill if these programs were permanent.”
The letter then shows a comparison between the estimated proposed funding for three programs, as well as an estimated cost of the programs, made by experts at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business. Under the proposed reconciliation bill, $390 billion would be allocated for universal child care and preschool through 2027. But if the program were made permanent, the cost would be around $700 billion dollars. The proposed spending for health care coverage under the reconciliation bill is estimated at $126 billion and sunsets in 2025, but the experts at Wharton estimated that the cost of making it permanent would be $386 billion.
The bill’s expanded Child Tax Credit and Earned Income Tax Credit sunsets in 2022, and is estimated to cost about $170 billion, but according to the experts at Wharton, the total cost of making the program permanent would amount to an astonishing $1.96 trillion.
The Chamber also took issue with the proposed involvement of states, specifically the burdens of cost-sharing. Under the bill’s childcare provision, states would be required to bear 10% of the costs, beginning in year four, if they choose to participate in the program. In addition, private childcare providers are required to meet a series of federal requirements, which would increase
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