There they are again, coming up over the horizon.
As predictable as congressional gridlock, they march forward arm in arm, bearing white papers, policy prescriptions, and panel discussions in well-appointed event spaces: the trans-partisan, solutions-oriented saviors who promise to rise above the fray of the squabbling children on Capitol Hill.
This time, they’re part of a group called “No Labels,” which has convinced more than 80 congressional lawmakers and high-ranking former officials to rally around four national policy goals: Create 25 million jobs over the next decade; make American “energy secure” by 2024; secure Medicare and Social Security for 75 years; and balance the federal budget by 2030.
The group hasn’t filled in the details yet for its plan. That’s coming soon — well, a year from now, after a series of discussions with ordinary Americans. But No Labels insists that its campaign is nothing short of a revolution in politics and policymaking.
“Nothing like this has ever been tried before. Many of our leaders say they want to unite our country, but they never tell us how,” said No Labels founder Nancy Jacobson. Having come up with its policy recommendations through a nationwide survey, the group now wants its agenda to shape the 2016 presidential debate and the next presidency, Jacobson said.
“Nobody tells you how they’re going to do it. Nobody tells you,” added No Labels co-chair Jon Huntsman, the former Utah GOP governor and presidential candidate who unveiled the policy plan on Wednesday. “This is the how. What you’re all gathered here to do is the how.”
But while the No Labels plan may look good on paper — or sound good from the campaign stump— budget experts on both left and right are skeptical that the group’s core fiscal goals are the best policy prescriptions, or are even smart politically when the details are finally worked out.
Achieving a balanced budget by 2030 would be particularly tough, given the dramatic changes to both tax revenue and spending that such a plan would necessarily entail to receive bipartisan support from lawmakers.
“Once you start laying out the realistic options for achieving those goals, they’re just going to have a coronary,” says Stuart Butler, the former Heritage Foundation analyst now at the Brookings Institution. “It does mean staggeringly difficult decisions, not just politically, but technically. You’d have to raise payroll taxes substantially, to raise income taxes. Once you told one town hall meeting how much their taxes would go up, that would be the end of it.”
A balanced budget in and of itself doesn’t mean long-term fiscal sanity and economic health, Butler added.
“Most economists don’t think that a balanced budget per se is necessarily the best economic target,” he said. “You want to get debt to GDP to a reasonable ratio, and the deficit to 2 percent of GDP. But there’s nothing economically magical about a balanced budget.”
Marty Sullivan, a former Treasury official who spoke at the No Labels event, said the goal of a balanced budget is “emotionally appealing” but not realistic.
“I would be ecstatic if we could get to a 3% [deficit to GDP ratio] in the long term, but to place the bar so high to say we need a balanced budget almost makes the whole exercise a fantasy,” Sullivan said in an interview with msnbc.
What’s more, the year 2030 might not be the right moment for a balanced budget anyway.
“To set a specific deadline like that makes no sense economically, It’s entirely possible that 2030 is the wrong year. Perhaps the deficit should be eliminated sooner — it’s an arbitrary number that makes no economic sense whatsoever,” says Stan Collender, a former Democratic budget aide.
By comparison, both Simpson-Bowles and Domenici-Rivlin — bipartisan deficit reduction plans that No Labels and like-minded groups have embraced — focus on reducing the debt-to-GDP ratio as the best way to rein in long-term deficits. A small but vocal minority of deficit owls don’t believe such targets are meaningful or useful at all.
Some budget experts are also skeptical of No Labels’ goal to keep Medicare “strong and solvent” for the next 75 years. While they believe it’s important to rein in entitlement costs, they point out that achieving such a goal would entail dramatic changes to the program.









