Have you heard about the fiscal cliff? If not, it's time for a quick
explanation. It's big, it's important, and you need to know about it.
If everything goes according to plan, Jan. 1 will cause one of the biggest shocks to the economy since the financial crisis four years ago.
How can we be so sure? Because on that day, policy changes will cause federal spending to fall, and federal taxes
to rise, by a combined $607 billion in 2013 alone. The magnitude and
abruptness of the changes gave rise to the name "fiscal cliff."
This isn't the result of new laws. The impending changes reflect how
existing laws, some passed more than a decade ago, were designed to play
out. Dozens of policy changes await, the big ones being:
1. Expiration of the Bush-era tax cuts
Congress
and President Bush signed tax cuts into law in 2001 and 2003. The
legislation was championed as tax reform but came with a distinct
limitation: Rather than being made permanent, each round of cuts was
designed to expire at the end of 2010 to conform to budget rules. In
late 2010, Congress and President Obama extended the tax cuts for two
years to avoid the looming expiration. Now both are set to expire again
on Jan. 1. If they do, federal taxes will increase by $221 billion next
year, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
2. Expiration of the payroll tax cut
A
one-year payroll tax cut was passed in Dec. 2010, reducing taxes on the
majority of working Americans by 2%. The cut was extended for an
additional year last December and expires again on Jan. 1. It will raise
taxes by $95 billion next year.
3. Budget-deal spending cuts
As part of last summer's deal to raise the debt
ceiling, both parties agreed to form a bipartisan "supercommittee"
tasked with cutting $1.2 trillion in spending over a decade. If the
committee failed that task, $1.2 trillion in automatic spending
sequestration would take effect over nine years. The sequestration
slashes indiscriminately across government programs in an attempt to
prod legislators into action. Alas, it didn't work. The supercommittee
didn't reach a deal, so sequestration begins Jan. 1. The White House
estimates it will reduce federal spending by $109 billion in 2013.
On top of those, an expiration of extended unemployment benefits, a big cut to Medicare providers, and a laundry list of expiring tax deductions
are set to hit Jan. 1. Add it all up, and we're talking policy changes
equal to about 4% of the economy. This is quite literally one of the
biggest alterations to how the federal government operates in modern
history. And it starts in about 90 days.
Regardless of ideology, virtually all economists agree that going over the fiscal cliff will tip us back into recession. The CBO predicts it would cause the economy to contract 0.5% in 2013, pushing the unemployment rate
above 9%. That's particularly dangerous right now, as millions of
Americans in precarious financial conditions from the last recession
have little or no buffer against bad times. It's not even a smart way to
fix our debt problem. Another recession and higher unemployment mean
shrinking the taxpayer base, offsetting a big chunk of the deficit
reduction.
Now, almost no one wants the fiscal cliff to happen, particularly in
its entirety. There's something in it for everyone to hate: tax hikes if
you're conservative and spending cuts if you're left-leaning. Both
parties have voiced their desire to avoid the cliff by making a deal to
extend current policies, if only in parts. Odds are that will happen
with a last-minute deal hammered out just like last summer's
debt-ceiling deal. Goldman Sachs puts the odds that a deal won't be made
at just 35%. Moody's puts the odds of failure at 15%. Even if Jan. 1
rolls around without a deal, one could be made soon after, even
retroactively. It's in neither party's interest to so flagrantly cause another recession.
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