Ryan budget actually INCREASES the debt
House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan (R-WI) released the GOPs new budget this morning, and in doing so, he touted it as a plan to make Americas level of debt more sustainable. Weve shared with Americans a specific plan of action that cuts spending, pays off the debt and gets our economy back on the path to prosperity, Ryan said.
The problem with Ryans rhetoric is that his plan fails to match it. By giving massive tax breaks to corporations and the top one percent and preserving unsustainable levels of defense spending, the House GOPs plan to reduce the debt would fail to reduce the debt. In fact, because it assumes levels of revenue that are pure fantasy under his tax proposals, the plan would actually increase the debt, according to an analysis by Center for American Progress Tax and Budget Policy Director Michael Linden:
But the House budgets entire claim to deficit reduction is built on the foundation of those fantasy revenue levels. Without them, the debt goes up, not down. In fact, with all the House budgets tax cuts properly accounted for, revenue would average just 15.3 percent of GDP from 2013 through 2022, not 18.3 percent. The result: deficits would never drop below 4.4 percent of GDP, and would rise to more than 5 percent of GDP by 2022.
The national debt, measured as a share of GDP, would never decline, surpassing 80 percent by 2014, and 90 percent by 2022. By comparison, President Barack Obamas budget proposal, released in February, would stabilize the debt by 2015, and bring it down to 76 percent by 2022.
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/03/20/448664/gop-fails-to-reduce-the-debt/