News The Back to Work Budget
Newsflash:
Wednesday, 13 March 2013 22:00

The Back to Work Budget

Written by  The Congressional Progressive Caucus

7 million new jobs in one year

$4.4 trillion in deficit reduction

We're in a jobs crisis that isn't going away. Millions of hard-working American families are falling behind, and the richest 1 percent is taking home a bigger chunk of our nation's gains every year. 

Americans face a choice: we can either cut Medicare benefits to pay for more tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires, or we can close these tax loopholes to invest in jobs. We choose investment. 

 

The Back to Work Budget invests in America's future because the best way to reduce our long-term deficit is to put America back to work. In the first year alone, we create nearly 7 million American jobs and increase GDP by 5.7%. We reduce unemployment to near 5% in three years with a jobs plan that includes repairing our nation's roads and bridges, and putting the teachers, cops and firefighters who have borne the brunt of our economic downturn back to work. 

 

We reduce the deficit by $4.4 trillion by closing tax loopholes and asking the wealthy to pay a fair share. We repeal the arbitrary sequester and the Budget Control Act that are damaging the economy, and strengthen Medicare and Medicaid, which provide high quality, low-cost medical coverage to millions of Americans when they need it most. This is what the country voted for in November. It's time we side with America's middle class and invest in their future.

 

Here are specific highlights of the Back to Work Budget:

 

Job Creation

 

Infrastructure – substantially increases infrastructure investment to the level the American Society of Civil Engineers says is necessary to close our infrastructure needs gap

Education – funds school modernizations and rehiring laid-off teachers     

Aid to States – closes the recession-caused gap in state budgets for two years, allowing the rehiring of cops, firefighters, and other public employees

Making Work Pay – boosts consumer demand by reinstating an expanded tax credit for three years

Emergency Unemployment Compensation – allows beneficiaries to claim up to 99 weeks of unemployment benefits in high-unemployment states for two years

Public Works Job Programs and Aid to Distressed Communities – includes job programs such as a Park Improvement Corps, Student Jobs Corps, and Child Care Corps

 

Fair Individual Tax

 

Immediately allows Bush tax cuts to expire for families earning over $250K     

Higher tax rates for millionaires and billionaires (from 45% to 49%)     

Taxes income from investments at the same rates as income from wages

 

Fair Corporate Tax

 

Ends corporate tax bias toward moving jobs and profits overseas 

Enacts a financial transactions tax

Reduces deductions for corporate jets, meals, and entertainment

 

Defense

 

Returns Pentagon spending to 2006 levels, focusing on modern security needs

 

Health Care

 

No benefit cuts to Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security

Reduces health care costs by adopting a public option, negotiating drug prices, and reducing fraud

 

Environment

 

Prices carbon pollution with a rebate to hold low income households harmless     

Eliminates corporate tax subsidies for oil, gas, and coal companies

 

The Back to Work Budget creates nearly 7 million jobs in its first

For more information, please see: http://cpc.grijalva.house.gov/back-to-work-budget

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