New America on Fiscal Policy

Easy Access to Our Work and Experts on This Issue

Our nation’s current approach to taxation and spending is inefficient, insufficient and unfair. Our tax system punishes work and savings, raises revenues far short of what we spend, and has become less progressive at a time of widening income inequality. Our complex tax code also suffers from an overall lack of transparency and a failure of coordination between different levels of government. New America is working to reframe the national debate through concrete reform proposals -- such as replacing payroll taxes with a progressive national consumption tax -- that pave the way for a tax system that better reflects American values and a budget that better serves our most important national priorities.

Recent New America articles, events, policy papers and press coverage on this topic are available below, as is information on our staff and fellows with expertise in this area. To learn more about New America's ideas, proposals and activities, please see our Fiscal Policy Program and Center for a Responsible Federal Budget home pages.

Policy Papers

New America's latest official publications on this issue are featured below.

Financing the Productive Economy: The Heartland Development Bank

Infrastructure and Economic Opportunity

Throughout American history, infrastructure investment has played a critical role in economic development. As the nation moved west, the building of canals and turnpikes, followed by construction of railroads, expanded the field of economic opportunity. Later, investment in electricity and telephone networks facilitated the development of vast expanses of the American landscape that had previously been left behind. More recently, the national interstate highway system and now the continuing build-out of broadband telecommunications networks have enabled the de-clustering of many business endeavors that were once… more

Joel Kotkin | September 18, 2008

Promises, Promises: A Fiscal Voter Guide to the 2008 Election

The United States faces serious fiscal challenges. Large budget deficits have returned, and shifting demographics along with growing health care costs are putting intense pressure on the long-term federal budget outlook. Over time, sustained deficits will weaken the economy and adversely affect the American standard of living.

The two major political parties' presidential candidates are campaigning on a lengthy list of policy initiatives, most of which would have significant impact on the federal budget. While not all of these proposals will… more

Marc Goldwein, Maya MacGuineas | August 21, 2008

Kids' Share 2008

Children are a declining priority in the federal budget -- a trend that shows no signs of stopping. In 2007, the federal government paid out $2.7 trillion through spending programs and disbursed roughly another $1 trillion through the tax code. Rapidly expanding entitlement programs -- Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security -- and the country's defense system consumed the largest shares of the budget, while spending on children remained essentially stagnant and did not keep up with growth in the economy.

Our… more

Adam Carasso | June 23, 2008

Iraq War Spurs Growth in Vehicle Manufacturing and Fuel Supply Contracts

The ongoing wars in Iraq and Afghanistan have spurred strong growth in Pentagon prime contract awards to companies involved in armored vehicle production and fuel supply. In the mean time, major arms makers like Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman have experienced much more modest growth rates.

Armored Vehicle Makers Benefit Most

A New America Foundation analysis of the Department of Defense's top ten contractors for FY 2007 found that the greatest increase by far from the prior year was posted by… more

William D. Hartung | June 2008

Twelve Principles for Fiscal Responsibility

The United States faces a number of serious fiscal challenges. Budget deficits are back, the economy has weakened, Social Security is unsound, growing health care spending is putting immense pressure on the budget, tax policy is at a major crossroads, and borrowing is projected to reach unsustainable levels. Politicians will have to take concrete steps to confront these challenges, and some level of sacrifice will be required. The sooner decisions are made, the better-both because it will give the public… more

How Much Does the Federal Government Spend To Promote Economic Mobility, And For Whom?

In an economically mobile market economy, individuals and families are able to raise their private incomes, wealth, and ability (sometimes referred to as human capital) over time and across generations. In the United States, many associate economic mobility with the pursuit of the American Dream. Education, work experience, and saving enhance the opportunity for upward economic mobility. To this end, many federal spending and tax expenditure or tax subsidy programs aim to enhance economic mobility. But exactly how much does the… more

Adam Carasso | April 17, 2008

Fiscal Year 2009 Budget Resolutions

This Budget Update looks at the budget resolutions passed by both the House (H. Con. Res. 312) and Senate (S. Con. Res. 70), compared to each other as well as to the CBO March baseline and the President’s budget as reestimated by CBO.

Major Points The House-passed budget should be commended for complying with pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) rules without exception. The budget plan assumes that all changes to revenues and mandatory spending would be offset so that deficits would not be increased over… more
Maya MacGuineas | April 8, 2008

Taking Back Our Fiscal Future

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… more

Maya MacGuineas | April 2008

Letter On the Budget Resolution And Taxes

Thank you for your inquiry concerning whether the budget plan reported by the House Budget Committee increases taxes. The budget resolution does not raise taxes. Both tax rates and tax revenues as a share of GDP will increase under the budget resolution because tax increases are part of current law, not because of policies introduced as part of the budget resolutions currently under consideration.

Barring changes, taxes will increase beginning in 2011 due to the way in which the original 2001… more

Maya MacGuineas | March 18, 2008

The Assets Report 2008

The purpose of this annual report is to summarize and take stock of the current state of federal policy through an asset-building lens, especially as it affects the asset base of families with lower incomes and fewer resources, which is the focus of our work. The report is divided into three sections. The first is a review of policy developments from the past year related to asset building, highlighting administration action and significant legislation, including assets-related bills introduced in… more

A Primer on the Budget Resolution’s Impact on Education Funding

The budget resolution put forward by Congress each year -- which sets out the congressional budget plan for the next five years -- and the ensuing budget process itself are enormously significant for education funding. However, the arcane procedures under which Congress produces and acts upon the budget resolution are often confusing to the media and education advocates alike. This confusion is made worse by political rhetoric and partisan spin. This brief by the New America Foundation’s Federal Education Budget… more

Jason Delisle | March 11, 2008

The President's Medicare Proposal

Last week, the Bush administration released a proposal to

raise the Medicare premiums for wealthy Americans enrolled in the prescription drug program; reform medical liability laws; and introduce "value-based health care" measures to improve Medicare efficiency.

The proposal was issued in compliance with the "trigger" provision of the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003. This provision states that the President must present a plan when, for two consecutive years, the Medicare program's trustees estimate that funds taken from general revenues will exceed… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 21, 2008

More Details on the President's FY2009 Budget

As the Committee pointed out in its earlier release (FY 2009 Budget), the President’s Budget reaches balance in 2012 only through a number of questionable assumptions regarding future fiscal policy. This update will extend that analysis by looking in more detail at the policy and baseline assumptions that underlie the Administration’s budget request.

This paper has pointed out places where the policy assumptions made by the Administration have made the 2012 deficit seem smaller than it likely will be.… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 21, 2008

Rethinking Social Insurance

The single greatest threat to the fiscal health of the United States is the runaway growth of the nation’s major retirement and health care entitlement programs. Social Security and Medicare are projected to grow from 7.5 percent of GDP today to almost 13 percent of GDP by 2030. Already, the two programs consume over a third of the federal budget. The total present value of costs that will exceed earmarked revenues of Social Security and Medicare over the next 75 years is $41 trillion, or,… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 19, 2008

Analysis of Bush’s Education Budget Request

President George W. Bush submitted his eighth and final budget request to the Congress on Monday. Under the proposal, fiscal year 2009 discretionary spending—spending subject to annual appropriations—would be at the same level as in the prior year for domestic programs and agencies not involved in homeland security efforts. The budget request for the Department of Education fits this general theme. Fiscal year 2009 discretionary spending at the Department of Education would total $59.2 billion, the same level of funding… more

February 7, 2008

As the Stimulus Negotiations Continue...

While we believe that fiscal stimulus done right would be likely to help the economy, we also believe that a good stimulus package is hard to come by. We have expressed concern that fiscal stimulus might come too late to help the stalling economy and that a package might be loaded up with costly and unrelated items.

Initially, we were gratified as negotiations between the White House and the House of Representatives led to what we found to be a… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 4, 2008

An Alternate Baseline

As the Committee noted in an earlier release, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) currently projects that—after three consecutive years of decline—the deficit will increase to $219 billion in fiscal year 2008. The CBO baseline also shows the budget returning to surplus in 2012.

CBO projections reflect current law, which does not reflect many likely budget scenarios. Accordingly, this budget update calculates an alternate baseline that incorporates alternate budget scenarios. This baseline does not necessarily reflect the policy path… more

Maya MacGuineas | February 4, 2008

A First Look at the President's FY 2009 Budget

The White House released the budget for FY 2009 today. The budget assumes revenues of $2.7 trillion, expenditures of $3.1 trillion, and a deficit of $407 billion in 2009. Our initial impressions of the budget are...

 

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

 

 

February 4, 2008

CBO Baseline: The Deficit is Growing Again

The Congressional Budget Office released its new January baseline today. Assuming current laws and policies, the CBO forecasts that in FY 2008, revenues will total $2.7 trillion, expenditures will be $2.9 trillion, the deficit will be $219 billion (up from $163 billion in 2007), and the on-budget deficit will be $414 billion. As a share of GDP, revenues will be 18.7%, expenditures will be 20.2%, the deficit will be 1.5%, and the on-budget deficit will be 2.9%.

For the full… more

Maya MacGuineas | January 23, 2008

Articles & Books

Recent New America-authored articles, op-eds and books on this topic are featured below.

Financial Leadership, the Missing Ingredient

As the financial crisis went from bad to worse last week, policymakers and business executives fussed and fretted over the drying up of credit around the world. The bigger problem, though, is a severe shortage of something else entirely: leadership. Peter Drucker--who began writing on the topic in the 1940s, long before it became fashionable--considered true leaders those who bring accountability, consistency, and a sharp sense of what must be accomplished to all they do. When it comes to the current mess, those in charge on… more

Rick Wartzman | October 15, 2008 | BusinessWeek

How Will McCain or Obama Pay for This Mess?

The agreement on the $700 billion bailout package begs the question, "How are we going to pay for all this?"

In the three presidential and vice presidential debates to date, the candidates have done their best to dodge the question. But it is not an issue that can be ignored for long. For anyone who needs to be reminded of the dangers of excessive borrowing, they need not look any further than the crisis we are currently in the midst of.

One of the many lessons from… more

Maya MacGuineas | October 14, 2008 | New York Daily News

Tax Refunds Deposited onto Prepaid Cards Could Provide Financial Access to Unbanked

Two critical questions exist for the prepaid industry. What will it take for prepaid cards to achieve widespread awareness and acceptance among a critical mass of consumers? When will prepaid users turn to the prepaid card as an ongoing financial tool? The prepaid industry has been working hard to identify which consumer segments are most likely to use the product, to develop product features that meet consumers’ financial needs, and to employ marketing strategies and distribution for wider and… more

Melissa Koide | September 23, 2008 | Prepaid Trends

California's Ballot Billions

There's little chance that the state budget eventually passed in Sacramento will actually rid California of its stubborn $15.2-billion deficit. But in the improbable event that the Legislature and governor balance the budget without resorting to such gimmicks as raiding other accounts, enjoy the moment. In just 10 weeks, California voters will likely throw it out of whack again. California has two budgets. One is passed by lawmakers. The other is improvised at the ballot box. The state's Constitution requires that the budget put together in Sacramento… more

Mark Paul | August 21, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Grabbing Remote Vendors

As far back as 1872, when Montgomery Ward issued its first mail-order catalog, vendors have sold to customers without being physically present in the customer’s state. Although sales taxes have existed since the 1920s, we have no effective system for collecting sales-and-use tax on sales by remote sellers.

Today we’ll look closer at the history of the remote sales tax issue, clarify New York’s law change and note possible solutions.

Interstate Sales Tax History

As a 1965 congressional report noted: “The present system of State taxation as it affects… more

Annette Nellen | July 31, 2008 | AICPA Tax Insider

A Tax Commission for California? How It Can Be Made to Work

Both Governor Schwarzenegger and Assembly Speaker Bass have stated that they would like to form a bipartisan commission to find ways to improve California’s tax system. They seek to modernize our tax system, make the state more economically competitive, and have a system that produces stable revenues.

These are great goals. California’s tax system was designed decades ago in a manufacturing era when borders were important and tangible goods ruled. Our tax system was not designed for the current information age with its mobile capital, worldwide-based workforce,… more

Once Again Social Security's on the Table

After a two-year hiatus, Social Security has made its way back onto the political stage. Both presidential candidates, recognizing that the program is insolvent over the long-run, are claiming that they will confront the system’s $4 trillion long-term shortfall. Senator Barack Obama has made a specific proposal to finance part of the shortfall through a tax on people making over $250,000 a year, while Senator McCain has pledged that he’ll "fight to save the future of Social Security” and “won't leave office without doing everything [he] can… more

X+3(Y)politics = Prop. 98

Twenty years ago, with just under 51% of the vote, California voters approved Proposition 98, a constitutional amendment establishing a minimum funding guarantee for education. For years afterward, officials at the California Teachers Assn. (the initiative's main backer) and other proponents made a habit of describing Proposition 98 as having receiving "overwhelming support" from voters.

Today, the education funding guarantee is as popular as the teachers union has long wished -- a true third rail of California government that zaps politicians who dare to suggest altering it. So… more

Joe Mathews | July 13, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Why the State Budget Never Adds Up

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger says he wants more than a balanced budget this year. He wants budget reform too.

For a state that has already laced itself into straitjackets of spending mandates and formulas, Schwarzenegger proposes new constitutional chains: a combined rainy-day fund and spending limit, to be added on top of the rainy-day fund and spending limit that voters have already approved separately. His implicit message: The Legislature and I have chosen badly, so please restrict our ability to choose again.

As… more

Mark Paul | June 29, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Taxing Some Services Could Help if It's Fair and Simple

California State Board of Equalization Chair Judy Chu believes it is time to address our deficit and modernize our sales tax by applying it to services. Her call to modernize our sales tax would be a good start in addressing an underlying cause of our budget problems.

Taxing services is not an outlandish idea. Most states already tax more types of services than does California.

Taxing services is also not a bad idea. Lifestyle changes have led us to spend less on… more

Not Flat

PL 86-272 provides that if the only in-state activities a business has is the solicitation of orders for tangible personal property that is approved and filled from outside the state, the state may not impose a net income tax on the business. States set the rules, within due process and commerce clause constraints of the U.S. Constitution, for businesses that sell services or intangibles.

States tend to take broad approaches. A 2007 Illinois Department of Revenue ruling notes that… more

Time To End Waste At the Pentagon

As Congress prepares to consider the annual Department of Defense authorization bill and other military spending legislation totaling more than $700 billion, the need for more aggressive scrutiny is abundantly clear. At a time when we have a $9.3 trillion national debt and large unmet social needs, oversight of these enormous and ever-increasing sums has failed to keep up.

The Pentagon’s procurement and budgeting processes are rife with problems. For example, the Government Accountability Office has identified $295 billion in cost… more

William D. Hartung | June 24, 2008 | The Politico

Betting On the Lottery

Californians could be forgiven for worrying that an important state asset -- the state lottery -- is in grave danger. In recent weeks, a rhetorical barrage, bordering on the hysterical, has been directed at Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's proposal to borrow against future lottery receipts to help close a $15.2-billion budget gap.

The Contra Costa Times darkly suggested that the governor's idea would mortgage the lottery's future and "saddle future generations with irresponsible debt." The top Democrat in the state Senate, Don… more

Joe Mathews | June 22, 2008 | Los Angeles Times

Trouble at the Pentagon

The Pentagon is in crisis: The war in Iraq is entering its fifth hot summer. And while U.S. troop casualties are down, the light at the end of the occupation tunnel is no closer and no brighter.

Headaches mount on the home front as well. The head of the Air Force was recently embarrassed and forced from the cockpit. Billions of dollars have been misplaced or misspent. Huge cost overruns bedevil weapons contractors. And, private contractors have… more

Thirty Years After Prop 13, California Voters Supported Tax Increases In Tuesday’s Election

Voting just three days before the 30th anniversary of the passage of Proposition 13, the landmark Jarvis-Gann initiative that cut property taxes and triggered a tax revolt across the country, voters in the primary election approved dozens of tax increases in local communities around the state.

By my count from semi-official election results available the day after the election, they passed 26 of 32 proposals to issue school and community college bonds; each of these measures, which raise local property taxes… more

Battle Of the Budget Slide Shows

"Saving our future requires tough choices today" may be a banal sentiment, but it's not an easy one to challenge. That is the headline on the "Fiscal Wake-Up Tour," a slide show created by David M. Walker, formerly head of the Government Accountability Office. In hopes that it will be to the long-term budget deficit what Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth" slide show has been to climate change, Pete Peterson has set aside a billion dollars out of his recent… more

Making a Transaction and Savings Account a Certainty, Just Like Taxes

In the Feb. 20 issue of Paybefore Update, my colleague, Melissa Koide, discussed a proposal to use prepaid cards to deliver tax refunds through a unique alliance of government and industry, Viewpoints: A Convergence of Opportunities: Delivering Prepaid Accounts at Tax Time (February 2008). We believe the prepaid sector can and should play a major role in working with government to provide an "assets and transactions account" (ATA), a low-cost, high-value transaction account that facilitates savings for… more

Gross Receipts Taxes

In recent years, concern over declining corporate tax collections, aggressive tax planning and state revenue needs have led a few states to consider and even enact a gross receipts tax (GRT) on companies that do businesses within its borders. On the surface, a GRT is simple since it allows no deductions. The broad base allows for a very low rate that can make the tax more palatable. Further, all businesses are typically subject to the GRT, with the result that… more

Goodbye State Tax Deduction

The 1984 Treasury Department report (PDF) that laid the foundation for the base broadening and rate reductions of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, called for complete repeal of the itemized deduction for state and local taxes. Citing similar reasons, the 2005 final report of the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform also called for repeal. Yet, there are also proposals to make permanent the ability to deduct either state income or sales tax (for… more

Gross Receipts Taxes

Recent tax reform efforts in Ohio, Texas and Michigan have led to an increase in the number of states imposing gross receipts taxes (GRT). Let's take a closer look at GRT and some important legal issues surrounding it.

Overview

The Multistate Tax Compact defines a GRT as "a tax, other than a sales tax, which is imposed on or measured by the gross volume of business, in terms of gross receipts or in other terms, and in the determination of which no… more

Events

Related New America events, both recent and upcoming (if any), are featured below.

Experts

Maya MacGuineas

Maya MacGuineas

As President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which is housed at the New America Foundation, and the Director of the Fiscal Policy Program, Maya MacGuineas oversees the Foundation's efforts to bring accountability to the budget process, address the challenges presented by the nation's underfunded entitlements programs, and… more

MacGuineas is New America's primary contact for this issue. All fellows and staff with expertise in this area are listed below in alphabetical order.

Michael Calabrese

Michael Calabrese

As Vice President of the New America Foundation, Michael Calabrese directs the Wireless Future Program and helps to guide the Foundation's work related to retirement security and the Next Social Contract Initiative. Previously, Mr. Calabrese served as Director of Domestic Policy Programs at the Center for National Policy, as General… more

Michael Dannenberg

Michael Dannenberg

The founding director of New America's Education Policy Program, Michael Dannenberg is now a senior fellow. While director, he launched the Federal Education Budget Project, which generates and analyzes new, fiscally responsible ideas on the size, distribution, and efficiency of federal education funding. He also created and edited the… more

David Friedman

David Friedman

David Friedman was a New America Senior Fellow from March 2000 through March 2007.Friedman is an attorney, political scientist, economic development specialist, author, and columnist. In addition to his law degree, he holds a Ph.D. from MIT in international politics, where he won an award for the “Best… more

Marc Goldwein

Marc Goldwein

As a Policy Analyst in the Fiscal Policy Program at the New America Foundation, Marc Goldwein focuses on tax policy, the budget process, and entitlement reform.

Mr. Goldwein is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of The Johns Hopkins University, with a B.A. in political science, and is currently pursuing a master’s… more

Areas of Expertise: Fiscal Policy

Leif Wellington Haase

Leif Wellington Haase

Leif Wellington Haase is Director of New America's California Program, which aims to improve the state's public debate by sponsoring a wide range of research, writing, and events on issues of critical importance to the future of California. His primary responsibilities include promoting the work of New America's programs and… more

Michael Lind

Michael Lind

Michael Lind is the Whitehead Senior Fellow at the New America Foundation. He is the author, with Ted Halstead, of The Radical Center: The Future of American Politics (Doubleday, 2001). He is also the author of Made in Texas: George W. Bush and the Southern Takeover of American Politics (New… more

Barry C. Lynn

Barry C. Lynn

Barry C. Lynn is a business and political journalist, and an expert on global industrial systems, corporate organization, trade, energy, emerging technology, and the development of middle-income nations. He is the author of the groundbreaking work End of the Line: The Rise and Coming Fall of the Global Corporation (Doubleday,… more

Maya MacGuineas

Maya MacGuineas  

As President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which is housed at the New America Foundation, and the Director of the Fiscal Policy Program, Maya MacGuineas oversees the Foundation's efforts to bring accountability to the budget process, address the challenges presented by the nation's underfunded entitlements programs,… more

Paul McLaughlin

Paul McLaughlin

Paul McLaughlin is a Program Associate at the New America Foundation. He graduated from Yale University in 2006 with a degree in English and Economics. While at Yale, he wrote articles and editorials for several campus publications and received the Glenn E. DeChambert prize for distinguished contribution to the University.… more

Areas of Expertise: Fiscal Policy

Annette Nellen

nellen-sm.jpg

Annette Nellen is a professor in the department of accounting and finance at San José State University, where she teaches graduate-level tax courses. She speaks and writes frequently on tax policy matters, tax reform, tax accounting, and high-technology tax issues. In 2000, she served on the academic panel that advised… more

Len Nichols

Len Nichols

Len Nichols, a highly respected healthcare economist, directs the Health Policy Program at the New America Foundation, which aims to expand health insurance coverage to all Americans while reining in costs and improving the efficiency of the overall health care system. Before joining New America, Dr. Nichols was the Vice… more

Mark Paul

Mark Paul is an award-winning writer, editor, and policy expert with wide experience in journalism and California state government and politics. He covered California for 24 years, first as Editorial Page Editor and National Editor of the Oakland Tribune, then as Deputy Editorial Page Editor and columnist for… more

James Pinkerton

James Pinkerton

James P. Pinkerton worked in the White House under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush. Since leaving government in 1993, he has been a columnist for Newsday, a contributor to the Fox News Channel, and a regular on Fox’s Newswatch show. He has also been a member of… more

Mark Schmitt

Mark Schmitt

Mark Schmitt is a noted voice on reform of the political process and an expert on campaign finance, congressional procedure, and state-level politics. He has written extensively on budget and tax policy, and on the history and role of ideas in politics. In 2005, Mr. Schmitt began a monthly column,… more

Press

Press Release/Media AppearanceDate
Maya MacGuineas in Newsweek | 'Demur, Dodge, Punt'October 20, 2008
Maya MacGuineas in USA Today | 'McCain Wants to Chop More Taxes'October 15, 2008
Maya MacGuineas in McClatchy News | 'Trillion-Dollar Deficit Looms, but Candidates Lack Clear Plans'October 14, 2008
Maya MacGuineas in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | 'Economy a Top Reason Americans Getting Tuned in to Presidential Elections'October 13, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget | 'Campaign Check: Lies and Half-Truths Outed'October 12, 2008
Maya MacGuineas in the Chicago Tribune | 'Fiscal Fairyland'October 12, 2008
Maya MacGuineas on CBN News | 'Markets End Week of Volatile Losses'October 11, 2008
Maya MacGuineas in McClatchy Newspapers | 'Time Works Against Candidates on Social Security, Medicare Fixes'October 10, 2008
CRFB Event in CongressNow | 'Experts: Main Focus for New President, 111th Congress Will Be Economy'October 9, 2008
Maya MacGuineas in Lake County News | 'FactChecking Debate No. 2: Nonsense in Nashville'October 9, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in The Washington Times | 'Nix the Promises'October 9, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in Roll Call | 'McCain, Obama Again Dodged Priority Questions'October 9, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in USA Today | 'Fact Check: What Was Said, What's True'October 8, 2008
Committee for a Responsbile Federal Budget in The New York Times | 'Check Point: The Second Presidential Debate'October 8, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in Associated Press | 'Fact Check: Obama, McCain Twist Records' October 8, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget on CBS News | 'Debunking The Candidates' Debate Claims'October 8, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget event in Dow Jones SmartMoney | 'Economists: Another Stimulus Bill Likely'October 8, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget on Fox News | 'Fox Special Report with Brit Hume: Political Headlines'October 7, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in The Washington Times | ' Obama Leaves a Bigger Deficit'October 6, 2008
Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget in CQ Weekly | ‘The Deficit: Facing up to Reality’October 4, 2008