WASHINGTON Its a microcosm of the budget battling that has consumed Congress all year: The Obama administration wants federal agencies to save money while Republicans push for additional savings to take a substantial bite out of the governments towering pile of IOUs.
White House budget chief Jacob Lew has ordered agency heads to submit spending plans for the upcoming budget at least 5 percent below this years levels. He also wants them to propose ways to trim a total of at least 10 percent of their spending.
Michael Steel, a spokesman for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, said Thursday that Lews directive was a good way to start finding spending cuts that are required under the recent debt-ceiling agreement between the two sides.
But the White House must get serious about real structural reform of our entitlement programs if were going to get our debt under control to help our economy grow and create jobs, Steel said, referring to huge and fast-growing benefit programs like Social Security and Medicare that help drive annual deficits skyward.
Lews letter did not rule out, or even address, the possibility of finding savings from benefit programs. But Steels remark pointed directly at the major fault line that has blocked a sweeping debt-cutting deal between the two parties: Democrats have resisted paring benefits from Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, while Republicans have refused to consider tax increases.
The Obama administration has asked agencies in years past to propose similar savings. But Lews order comes just two weeks after Obama and congressional Republicans ended an epic debt ceiling battle that has left both sides eager to demonstrate a willingness to trim red ink ahead of a fierce autumn battle over the economy and the debt and just as the 2012 presidential and congressional elections approach.
By requesting two sets of potential savings from agencies, Lew is moving toward fulfilling the debt-ceiling deal, which created a series of annual spending targets and would save tens of billions of dollars a year.
By providing budgets pegged to these two scenarios, you will provide the president with the information to make the tough choices necessary to meet the hard spending targets in place and the needs of the nation, Lew wrote to agency heads.
The American Federation of Government Employees, which represents more than 625,000 federal workers and employees of the District of Columbia, also jumped into the fray.
In a written statement, national president John Gage said the cuts mean just one thing: more job destruction in the midst of a jobs crisis. He said that with millions of Americans already unemployed or too discouraged to seek work, why on earth would the administration be trying to dig an even deeper hole?
The spending that Lew ordered federal agencies to trim will consume more than $1 trillion of this years $3.8 trillion federal budget. The rest of the budget covers benefit programs and interest payments on the governments $14.3 trillion debt.
Lews letter suggests that savings can be found by eliminating unneeded programs and making agencies more efficient. It also invites agency heads to propose initiatives that would spark economic growth.
Finding the savings to support these investments will be difficult, but it is possible, Lew wrote.
In a White House blog on Thursday, Lew said his request for savings was designed to help the administration make decisions about living within overall spending limits. He said it did not mean every agency will necessarily see budget cuts.
Republicans say tax and spending cuts are needed to blow life back into the flagging economy and create jobs. Obama plans to unveil a jobs proposal next month mixing tax reductions, construction initiatives and deficit reduction.
When Congress returns from its summer recess in September, also generating political heat will be the special bipartisan panel of 12 lawmakers that the debt-ceiling agreement created to try to craft a compromise $1.5 trillion, 10-year debt reduction package.
As another part of the debt-cutting deal, the two sides agreed to a separate $900 billion in 10-year savings from agency budgets. The details of those cuts will have to be worked out every year, but they will be evenly divided between national security and domestic programs.
Earlier this year, Obama and Congress also battled down to the wire over spending cuts and came within hours of forcing a partial government shutdown. In the end, they agreed to pare agency spending by $38 billion.
Lew asked agency chiefs for the two spending scenarios as the administration plans for the 2013 budget year, which begins in October 2012. That budget will be released early next year.