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So Obama's $4 trillion in savings over 12 years computes to more like $2.9 trillion over a decade
-- and it's $2.5 trillion using more conservative CBO estimates. The $4 trillion figure is noteworthy because it's the amount claimed by Obama's deficit commission
-- except the savings recommended by the deficit panel accumulated over nine years. Biden recently said the negotiators were working toward a "real serious down payment on the commitment to four trillion bucks (of deficit cuts) over the next 10 to 12 years." And Sen. Jon Kyl, R-Ariz., also suggested recently that the savings could accrue over a time period of longer than a decade. Another area for potentially inflated claims of cuts involves the Cabinet agency budgets passed by Congress each year. This so-called discretionary spending runs the gamut from education to defense to homeland security programs. The overall cap on such programs is usually set each year by the annual budget passed by Congress. Even though the budget sets a one-year cap, policymakers invariably make inflated estimates of how much can be saved over five or 10 years, even though they're impossible to enforce and are often simply based on wishful thinking. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., an enormously influential figure, is pressing for a two-year cap set in law. But negotiators may forecast future savings based on that cap, even though prior estimates of multiyear caps have invariably proven bullish.
[Associated
Press;
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