By Sari Heidenreich, Contributing Writer
On Tuesday, at the first meeting of the congressional super committee tasked with reducing national spending, Sen. Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) said the group must look to reform the tax code and address “the big entitlement programs that we all know are driving this fiscal problem.”
“It’s not easy for any of us to do that,” Toomey said. “It means that we’d have to make some real changes, but we can do it in a way that protects the vulnerable members of our society … and still put these programs on a viable, sustainable path.”
Toomey is one of three Republican Senators to sit on the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, which is tasked with finding at least $1.5 trillion in savings over the next ten years by late November.
The 12-member committee is comprised of three Republicans and three Democrats from each chamber of Congress.
Created in early August by The Budget Control Act of 2011, the committee is required to send Congress its recommended spending cuts by November 23. If Congress – or the committee – fails to act within a month, the Budget Control Act mandates across-the-board spending cuts. Half of these cuts would come from defense spending and the other half from non-defense spending.
Calling the current code tax code a “national embarrassment,” Toomey said reforming it was critical since a “simpler, fairer system that has lower marginal rates would encourage economic growth.”
This, in turn, would generate extra tax revenue, he said.
“If we can find a way to create policies that will encourage annual growth to expand just one percent per year faster than it otherwise would, that alone generates three trillion dollars in additional revenue over ten years. Three trillion dollars in smaller deficits, three trillion dollars less in debt and millions of additional jobs.”
Toomey discouraged the group from only looking to redundant and obsolete programs for savings.
“You know, we could choose to just nibble around the edges of this problem … But if that’s all we do then I would suggest, as I think Senator Portman observed, that we really wouldn’t be doing all that is necessary to put us on a pro-growth and sustainable path.”
The committee will meet again on Tuesday, September 13.
2 Responses
Unintended consequence if a flat tax is created. Since an IRS employee cannot be fired unless they do a serious event, we will have too many irs audits, hurting businesses that have to deal with all the irs employees doing audits. The flat tax will only work if an irs can be terminated without cause.
great article!