Taking Back Our Fiscal Future

The Brookings Institution and The Heritage Foundation | April 2008

The authors of this paper are longtime federal budget and policy experts who have been drawn together by a deep concern about the nation’s long-term fiscal outlook. Our group covers the ideological spectrum. We are affiliated with a diverse set of organizations. We have been meeting informally for over a year, under the auspices of The Brookings Institution and The Heritage Foundation, to define the dimensions and consequences of the looming federal budget problem, examine alternative solutions, and reach agreement on what should be done. Despite our diverse philosophies and political leanings, we have found solid common ground. We agree that:

  • Unsustainable deficits in the federal budget threaten the health and vigor of the American economy.
  • The first step toward establishing budget responsibility is to reform the budget decision process so that the major drivers of escalating deficits -- Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid -- are no longer on autopilot.

More specifically, we recommend that:

  • Congress and the president enact explicit long-term budgets for Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security that are sustainable, set limits on automatic spending growth, and reduce the relatively favorable budgetary treatment of these programs compared with other types of expenditures.
  • The programs be reviewed on a regular schedule by the Social Security and Medicare Trustees or the Congressional Budget Office to determine whether they will remain within budgeted amounts.
  • Significant long-term deviations from budgeted amounts trigger automatic adjustments in benefits, premiums, provider payments, or other revenues. These adjustments could only be over-ridden by an explicit vote of Congress and acceptance by the president.

We provide examples of specific policies that might be adopted to bring the programs in line with their long-term budgets but believe that the first action needed to restore long-term fiscal balance is a change in the way budget decisions are made...

For the full text of the paper, please see the PDF attached below.

This Paper was Jointly Authored by the Following Individuals:

  • Joseph Antos
    American Enterprise Institute
  • Robert Bixby
    The Concord Coalition
  • Stuart Butler
    The Heritage Foundation
  • Paul Cullinan
    The Brookings Institution
  • Allison Fraser
    The Heritage Foundation
  • William Galston
    The Brookings Institution
  • Ron Haskins
    The Brookings Institution
  • Julia Isaacs
    The Brookings Institution
  • Maya MacGuineas
    The New America Foundation
  • Will Marshall
    The Progressive Policy Institute
  • Pietro Nivola
    The Brookings Institution
  • Rudolph Penner
    The Urban Institute
  • Robert Reischauer
    The Urban Institute
  • Alice Rivlin
    The Brookings Institution
  • Isabel Sawhill
    The Brookings Institution
  • C. Eugene Steuerle
    The Urban Institute