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Press Release

Fox News Op-Ed: Stop the insanity. Our national debt now tops $35 trillion…

October 3, 2024 by Mike

By: Paul Ryan & Matt Weidinger

The buck never stops with either political party. That has to end

America’s political leaders have a spending problem. 

They know entitlement programs feature benefit promises far exceeding their tax base, but have done nothing to make them sound. Meanwhile, both parties demand more spending increases — despite the national debt soaring to $35 trillion, or more than $100,000 for each American, rich and poor alike. Under rosy assumptions, over $20 trillion in debt is projected to be added over the next decade.  

Yet despite the foreboding outlook, the major presidential campaigns have no plan to deal with current structural deficits and are outbidding each other to make them worse. For them, the buck stops elsewhere. That may be good short-run politics, but it will only make the inevitable bill bigger and even harder for everyday Americans to pay. 

Some argue tax cuts are to blame for the soaring debt. But as data from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office shows, revenue has remained largely stable while spending has grown significantly above prior levels.

Much of the growing debt is baked into the budgetary cake, and experts have long warned about rising costs when the Baby Boom generation retires. But growing Social Security payouts — long ago engineered to rise faster than prices — are only part of the problem. Soaring health spending, driven by the same demographic factors and compounded by exploding medical costs, is an even bigger challenge. 

America’s mountain of debt has been exacerbated by massive so-called emergency spending enacted by both parties. During the pandemic, legislation added over $5 trillion to the debt. Now the nearly $1 trillion in annual interest on the debt exceeds all federal spending on children, and defense spending, too. 

Efforts to balance the budget are repeatedly dismissed. As chairman of the House Budget Committee, one of us regularly proposed and passed balanced budgets, only to see hope for such discipline overcome by a desire for ever-greater spending. Important-sounding commissions (including one dubbed the “supercommittee”) issued detailed recommendations that were mostly ignored.  

Experts produced reams of data showing nations deep in debt inevitably reach a financial crisis, even as proponents of modern monetary theory (MMT) argued no amount of spending is too great. According to MMT advocates, the federal government can always print more money.    

Americans have already experienced where inaction and that illogic lead. During the pandemic, former Obama Treasury Secretary Larry Summers warned that massive new federal spending would lead to significant inflation, which is exactly what happened, with prices growing 20% since the start of the Biden-Harris administration.  

The Federal Reserve’s response led to the highest interest rates in two decades, helping drive the monthly mortgage payment for a median-priced home up by over $1,000. Lower-income Americans spend a greater share of their income on housing, so such rising costs are just one example of why they tend to suffer most from inflation and higher interest rates. 

Yet despite expressing concerns about inflation, both presidential tickets propose even bigger deficits. In fact, they seem to be in a bidding war to make them worse. Former President Donald Trump proposed exempting tip income from federal taxes, and Vice President Kamala Harris quickly followed suit. Both ignored the 10-year costs of this proposal, which stretch into hundreds of billions of dollars.  

Republican vice-presidential nominee JD Vance suggested more than doubling today’s $2,000 child tax credit to $5,000, which Harris one-upped by proposing $6,000 payments in a child’s first year. Senator Vance hasn’t spelled out important details of his plan, but we know most of Harris’s plan comprises bigger benefit spending instead of tax relief. Both proposals would cost over $1 trillion during the next decade. 

Neither campaign has a plan to cover the new costs. According to the Penn Wharton Budget Model, counting their economic effects, Trump’s plans would increase deficits by $4 trillion versus Harris’s $2 trillion. But that assumes Harris doesn’t revive the massive spending plans she promoted as one of the most liberal members of the Senate. Her plans included a ruinously expensive Medicare-for-all proposal, along with $2,000-per-month stimulus checks for most Americans costing $21 trillion. If you believe a Harris administration wouldn’t revive such proposals during the next economic crisis, you haven’t paid attention to recent Washington policymaking. 

While both campaigns suggest we can have higher spending and debt alongside lower prices and interest rates, recent experience suggests otherwise. So where does the buck really stop? That is, who will ultimately pay for all this?  

The reality is every American will pay, especially those with modest incomes and younger Americans who will suffer the longest from higher taxes, inflation and interest rates. We should demand more from our leaders than promises of bigger giveaways, followed by empty handwringing about the soaring debt and financial pain that inevitably result.     

Matt Weidinger is the Rowe Fellow in poverty studies at the American Enterprise Institute. He is a former deputy staff director of the House Committee on Ways and Means. Paul Ryan is the former Speaker of the House and a visiting fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. He is a member of the Fox Corporation Board of Directors.

Filed Under: In The News, Press Release

Ryan issues 2024 grants to 8 poverty-fighting groups advancing evidence-based solutions

July 29, 2024 by Mike

By: AIF Staff

JANESVILLE, WI – Today, AIF President and former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan announced 8 non-profit organizations across the United States will receive financial support and strategic assistance from the American Idea Foundation in 2024 as they work to fight poverty and spur upward mobility.

Since 2022, the American Idea Foundation has issued annual grants to organizations developing evidence-based solutions to challenges like homelessness, educational access, vocational training, literacy, and child welfare. Throughout the year, Ryan and his Foundation will offer strategic advice, policy expertise, and visibility to these amazing groups in furtherance of their work.

In announcing the American Idea Foundation’s 2024 grant recipients, Paul Ryan said:  

“Our grant recipients are making a profound impact in their communities. They are improving people’s lives every single day. My foundation and I are honored to partner with these groups as they develop evidence-based solutions to some of America’s biggest challenges.

“These organizations are doing the hard but necessary work to make progress in the War on Poverty. They are helping people and doing so in a data-driven way. With the American Idea Foundation’s assistance, my hope is these groups will identify scalable solutions with demonstrated track records of success and provide policymakers with clear evidence about what works – and what doesn’t – when it comes to fighting poverty. I cannot wait to partner with these groups and assist them deepen their impact.”

Started by Ryan in October 2019, the American Idea Foundation believes by taking the politics out of poverty-fighting and focusing on outcomes and results, successful programs can be scaled, elevated, and replicated. The Foundation believes this approach – prioritizing what works and validating these interventions with evidence — will provide policymakers with a better blueprint to address the challenges facing individuals and communities across the United States.

The 2024 American Idea Foundation grant recipients are….

            – ACE – CUNY (Accelerate, Complete & Engage – City University of New York)

            – Downtown Boxing Gym

            – Family Promise of West Michigan

            – Found Village

            – Future Forward

            – I.C.Stars

            – NPower

            – Safe Families for Children

Past recipients of grant funding from the American Idea Foundation include: Gatekeepers, Corner to Corner, Child First, Merit America, The Joseph Project, Bernie’s Book Bank,  Bottom Line, Brigid’s Path, Friends of the Children, Per Scholas, Wisconsin Inmate Education Association, and the Women’s Bean Project.

Filed Under: In The News, Press Release Tagged With: Community Organizations Making a Difference

Bloomberg: Paul Ryan discusses advice for CEOs, China, Tax Rates, and the 2024 Election

June 19, 2024 by Mike

By: AIF Staff

London, UK – This morning, former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan talked with Bloomberg’s Francine Lacqua in a wide-ranging interview about his advice for executives as they think about a potential 2nd Trump or Biden term, the future of the U.S. economy and the U.S. tax code, and the 2024 election. Video of the interview is accessible here and some excerpts of Ryan’s responses follow.

2024 Election is “too close to call”

“I’m here in London as Vice Chairman of Teneo, a CEO advisory firm, and we’re basically advising our clients who see a lot of unpredictability on the horizon and they’re trying to scenario-plan for which way various governments are going to go.

It’s a little easier to predict here [in the UK], than it is in my country which has a razor-thin polling margin in our election. It’s just hard to determine who’s going to win the election [in the U.S.] so therefore, you have to scenario plan for two very different potential administrations.

I think it’s just too close to call. If you really want to look at it, this thing is tied in polling and will be going into the election. This is probably the likeliest of scenarios because, right now, Trump is polling at his peak and Biden is polling below his peak performance and let’s just assume Democrats come home at the end of the day, as they typically do, so it’s probably going to be a few hundred thousand voters in about five or six states that will determine the outcome of this election. My state of Wisconsin is one of those. Trump won it by 25,000 votes out of 1.61 million cast in 2016 and then in 2020, he lost it to Biden by 20,000 votes. It’s just that close and this is where campaigning makes the difference.

At the end of the day, it comes down to the new swing voter in America which is a suburban college-educated swing voter and let’s go back to Wisconsin, for example. Out of 1.61 million cast, 53,000 Wisconsinites — that’s what we call ourselves — in the suburban parts of Wisconsin didn’t vote for Trump but voted for every other Republican on the ballot and then 20,000 of those 53,000 voted for Biden giving him the 20,000-vote margin of victory that he got.

It’s just that close. It’s probably going to be Arizona, Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan, Georgia, and Pennsylvania.”

The future of tax and trade policy

“On tax policy, personally, I think [a Trump Administration] would be much better and a lot of executives see it that way, because you have to remember that the tax law we wrote in 2017, the individual side of that tax code has many expiring provisions, some of which hit small and medium-sized businesses, and then we have some corporate provisions like the research and development tax credit and expensing provisions, those are all up for grabs.

The next presidency will help determine what happens there, so Trump’s going to be more pro-business on taxes. Biden is proposing to get rid of those things. And then, when it comes to tariffs, Trump is proposing a lot of tariff increases. Biden hasn’t reduced the Trump tariffs. He’s continued those tariffs, but I don’t think he’s proposing a whole new range of tariffs with respect to everything but China. On China, you basically have a bipartisan consensus.”

Concerns about nominees’ inaction on fiscal policy

“One of the reasons why I’m frustrated, like many Americans, about our choices for President is neither is proposing to do anything about the coming debt crisis in our country. Our debt is already as large as our economy. It’s going to go nowhere but twice as big as that. And so, we have an entitlement problem which is these entitlement programs are going bankrupt by the end of the decade and no one’s proposing to solve that.  We have to get ahead of that, otherwise we’re going to have a debt crisis in America and it’s not inconceivable to have a treasury auction failure in a short period of time — like in the next 6-12 months probably after we’re done cutting interest rates….

Right now, both of our candidates for President aren’t proposing to do a single thing about it. I think the only shot we have, given the political reality, is an entitlement commission but one with teeth that requires Congress to vote on it.  

I served on the Bowles-Simpson Commission, which was the last time we had one of these things, and it could be ignored by the President and Congress, and it was. So, you have to have an entitlement commission that says Congress is going to have to vote on this, up or down, no filibuster, no amendments, and then hopefully you have a President that’s willing to accept its results provided they’re substantial. That is, in my opinion, the best way we get out of this, short of Congress actually doing its job and fixing this problem in a way that gets us out of the ditch.

Uncertainty is the biggest challenge for business leaders

“I think uncertainty is the number one problem. There is so much uncertainty. There’s geopolitics. There’s NATO. There’s Ukraine. There’s Putin. There’s conflict with China. You have a war in the Middle East and then also, by the way, you have a bunch of tariffs that are being proposed, so you just don’t know what’s going to happen. We don’t know what anti-trust laws are going to look like if Biden gets a second term. Is he going to double down on a lot of regulations? You just don’t know.Not to mention all the geopolitical risks that are outside of any government’s control so that’s what CEOs are trying to prepare for.

You tell them to just be nimble and prepared for: Here’s what Door Number 1 looks like. Here’s what Door Number Two looks like. You want a contingency plan for both scenarios.”

Future of the Republican Party

“Well, I am still a Republican, of course. I consider myself an anti-establishment Republican. Trump has taken over the Republican Party and it’s really a populism without any anchor to principles.

I’m a big believer that you want your party pledging fidelity to a set of principles and policies that solve problems, versus a person, and I don’t think a personality-type populism is durable, so I do think at the end of the day, our party, like we have in the past, will have a big discussion about what we stand for, what are our ideas, what are our principles, and who are the best people capable of carrying those ideas forward.

That’s not the conversation we’re having right now but if Trump wins, he’s a one-term president. He cannot have a second term because he already had one, so I just don’t think it’s durable and I think we’re going to have to have a real calling as to what we stand for and if he doesn’t win, that conversation happens sooner rather than later.”

Stablecoins as a mechanism to help avert a debt crisis

“I think blockchain has a lot of use cases, so what I proposed the other day is that we should advance stablecoin legislation because stablecoins actually create a lot of new demand for US debt. We talked just a minute earlier about potential Treasury auction failures, well, it would be nice if we created more demand for our debt and if we had a law, which there is bipartisan support for in Congress, to advance stablecoins, I think that helps put the dollar in the digital world.  It helps give people, who have bad currencies in some counties, digital dollars, and it creates new demand for our debt. So, I think there are a lot of good, interesting and exciting use cases for blockchain and for Web3, stablecoins are one of them and I think it actually helps solve some of our fiscal problems as well.”

Filed Under: In The News, Press Release

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