Congress Weighs Reconciliation 3.0 With $600 Billion Savings Target
Updated
Updated · The Debt Dispatch · Jul 9
Congress Weighs Reconciliation 3.0 With $600 Billion Savings Target
1 articles · Updated · The Debt Dispatch · Jul 9
Summary
$600 billion in net savings is emerging as the minimum benchmark if Congress launches a new reconciliation package, with House Budget Chair Jodey Arrington saying it would pair defense spending with anti-fraud cuts and affordability measures.
The fast-track effort would let lawmakers pass spending and tax legislation with a simple Senate majority, but the report argues any new outlays should be fully offset and aimed at putting deficits on a path toward 3% of GDP.
$87.6 billion in White House emergency funding tied to the Iran war is cited as a prime offset target; critics say its true cost reaches about $126 billion with interest and includes non-emergency items.
Nearly $500 billion in incremental welfare-program savings and much larger long-term cuts to Medicaid, SNAP and Medicare are being floated alongside housing and healthcare tax changes as the policy menu for Reconciliation 3.0.