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Capital hill looking to spend budget surplus [CNN]
Forwarded message:
> Capitol Hill Looks Ahead To Budget Surpluses
>
> Lawmakers are already talking about what to do with dollars that haven't
> materialized yet
>
> [INLINE]
>
> WASHINGTON (AllPolitics, Oct. 24) -- With the economy cooking along
> and government analysts forecasting budget surpluses, lawmakers on
> Capitol Hill have begun debating what to do with the windfall: cut
> taxes, pay down the nation's $5.4 trillion national debt, or boost
> spending.
>
> House Speaker Newt Gingrich has a proposal that may please everyone:
> Do some of each.
>
> Gingrich, who appeared before the House Budget Committee on Thursday,
> said he favors a budget policy that produces surpluses and tax cuts
> every year, even during the next recession.
>
> "We should sustain ... the commitment to get to a balancedbudget and
> to stay balanced every year," Gingrich said. He addedlater, "It ought
> to be a surplus large enough that a reasonablerecession won't stop
> it."
>
> Gingrich also favors targeted spending increases, for transportation,
> science and defense. gingrich
>
> Of course, no surpluses have actually materialized yet, so it may be a
> case of premature giddiness. This year, officials expect a fiscal 1997
> year-end deficit of $20 billion, the smallest since 1974.
>
> White House budget chief Franklin Raines has urged a cautious
> approach, with no new spending until projected surpluses actually
> become real. Gingrich, in contrast, said he is willing to put new
> dollars into defense and science earlier than that, if the economy
> produces enough tax revenue to accelerate the schedule in the
> balanced-budget agreement for reducing the deficit.
>
> Rep. John Kasich, the Ohio Republican who heads the House Budget
> Committee, also has said lawmakers should hold off on any new tax cuts
> or new spending until the budget is actually balanced.
>
> In a related development, President Bill Clinton has signed
> legislation to keep the federal government running until Nov. 7, while
> Congress finishes work on remaining spending bills for the 1998 fiscal
> year.