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THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release February 7, 2000
THE CLINTON-GORE ADMINISTRATION FY2001 BUDGET:
MAINTAINING FISCAL DISCIPLINE WHILE MAKING KEY INVESTMENTS
Summary Documents
February 7, 2000
Table of Contents
I. Summary
II. Overall Framework for the FY2001 Budget
- Budget Framework
- Medicare
- Social Security
- New Opportunity Agenda
- Health Insurance Coverage
- Targeted Tax Relief
III. Clinton-Gore Economic Record
- The Economy Then and Now
- Paying Off the Debt
- A Smaller, But More Progressive Government
IV. Highlights of the FY2001 Budget
- Education and Training
- Child Care
- Health Care
- Environment
- Working Families
- Community Empowerment
- From Digital Divide to Digital Opportunity
- Research & Development
- Safe Communities
- United States Leadership in the World
- America's Armed Forces
- Restoring Fairness to Legal Immigrants
- Tobacco Policy
- Farm Safety Net
- Building One America
V. Charts
I. SUMMARY
THE CLINTON-GORE ADMINISTRATION'S FY2001 BUDGET: MAINTAINING FISCAL
DISCIPLINE WHILE INVESTING IN THE AMERICAN PEOPLE
When President Clinton was elected, he implemented an economic plan
which consisted of restoring fiscal discipline, investing in people, and
opening markets abroad. The Clinton-Gore Administration are submitting
their eighth budget -- and their fourth balanced budget. Like the
previous budgets, this one not only maintains fiscal discipline but
continues to make important investments in the American people.
FISCAL DISCIPLINE: CONTRIBUTING TO THE LONGEST EXPANSION IN U.S. HISTORY
President Clinton entered office determined to unleash the productive
potential of the American people by putting the government's fiscal
house back in order. As a result of fiscal discipline, interest rates
have fallen and private investment has boomed, contributing to the
longest expansion in U.S. history.
- Record budget deficits have been erased. In 1992 the deficit was a
record $290 billion and CBO projected that it would grow to $455 billion
by 2000. Instead we have a projected $167 billion surplus, the third
one is a row. That is $622 billion less savings drained by the
government in one year alone.
- The largest pay-down of debt in history: $297 billion. In 1998 and
1999, the debt held by the public was reduced by $140 billion. OMB is
projecting that the government will pay down an additional $157 billion
in debt held by the public this fiscal year. That will bring the total
debt pay down to $297 billion -- the largest three-year debt pay down in
American history. In contrast, under Presidents Reagan and Bush, the
debt held by the public quadrupled.
- Smallest government in over three decades while increasing key
investments in our people. Government spending has declined from 22.2
percent of the economy in 1992 to 18.7 percent of the economy in 1999 --
the lowest share since 1966. At the same time, the government has made
important investments, including nearly doubling investments in
education and training.
- Tax burden for typical families is the lowest since the 1970s. At the
same time, the typical American family will shoulder the lowest Federal
tax burden since 1978.
- Investment has boomed. The benefits of fiscal discipline for our
economy have been enormous. Interest rates are lower than they would
have been otherwise, helping to fuel seven consecutive years of
double-digit investment growth for the first time in our Nation's
history. That is a 12.1 percent real annual increase in investment in
business equipment and software since 1993 -- compared to 4.7 percent
annual growth from 1981 to 1992.
- Unemployment is the lowest in a generation. The unemployment rate in
January 2000 was 4.0 percent -- the lowest in 30 years -- and America
has created 20.8 million jobs since January 1993, with 92 percent --
19.2 million -- of these in the private sector. At the same time, the
underlying core rate of inflation was 1.9 percent in 1999 -- the lowest
rate since 1965.
- The longest economic expansion in history. The economy is entering
its 107th month of economic expansion -- the longest economic expansion
in U.S. history.
A BALANCED AND FISCALLY RESPONSIBLE BUDGET
The Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget provides a balanced and
fiscally responsible framework to eliminate the debt by 2013, strengthen
the solvency of Social Security and Medicare, and invest in key
priorities like health and education. Under the President's budget:
- The debt would be paid off by 2013. President Clinton has proposed to
use the entire Social Security surplus, $2.2 trillion over 10 years, for
debt reduction. In addition, over the next 10 years he would dedicate
$350 billion of the $746 billion non-Social Security surplus to debt
reduction, with the vast majority of it being used to extend Medicare
solvency. That is nearly half of the non-Social Security surplus for
debt reduction. The President's budget is projected to pay off the debt
held by the public by 2013, the first time America will have been debt
free since 1835.
- Discretionary spending would be kept at tight but realistic levels.
The President's Budget is Based on a realistic, fiscally conservative
plan that maintains our domestic priorities, including national defense,
education, law enforcement, public health, the environment, and veterans
programs. The President's budget precludes the use of emergency
spending except in the case of truly unforeseen emergencies, and it
makes sure that all spending is accounted for in the appropriate year.
The budget proposes to keep the growth of spending slightly below the
rate of inflation.
- Medicare solvency would be extended for over a decade to at least
2025. The President's FY2001 budget dedicates $432 billion over 10
years -- an amount equivalent to over half the on-budget surplus -- to
strengthen and modernize Medicare to prepare it for the health,
demographic, and financing challenges of the 21st Century.
- Social Security solvency would be extended to at least 2050. The
President would ensure that the benefits of the debt reduction that are
due to Social Security are used to extend the life of Social Security.
He would do this by devoting the entire Social Security surplus to debt
reduction and then earmarking the interest savings from this debt
pay-down to Social Security. These transfers would extend the life of
Social Security to 2050. If a prudent portion of the transfers were
invested for higher returns, solvency would be extended to 2054.
- Health coverage would broaden. The President's budget also invests
$110 billion over 10 years in a number of policies that would
efficiently expand coverage to at least 5 million uninsured Americans
and expand access to millions more by building on current options.
Together with the State Children's Health Initiative enacted in 1997,
that would cover 10 million uninsured people.
TAX RELIEF FOR WORKING FAMILIES
President Clinton and Vice President Gore proposing significant new tax
relief for America's working families as part of a budget framework that
maintains our fiscal discipline, makes investments in key priorities,
strengthens the solvency of Social Security and Medicare, and pays down
the debt by 2013. The President proposes $351 billion of gross tax cuts
over 10 years - of which $256 billion are paid for out of the surplus
and $96 billion are paid for with corporate loophole closers and other
measures. Highlights of the tax package include:
- Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs). The President proposes a tax cut
to provide generous and progressive incentives to encourage families to
save and invest. (Cost: $54 billion over 10 years.)
- Tax Incentives to Encourage Small Businesses to Offer High-Quality
Pensions. The President would propose a 50 percent tax credit for
employer's contributions to high-quality pensions. (Cost: $17
billion.)
- College Opportunity Tax Cut. A College Opportunity Tax Cut to provide
a choice between a tax deduction or a 28 percent tax credit on up to
$10,000 in tuition in order to make college, graduate school, and
courses taken for a job more affordable. (Cost: $30 billion.)
- School Construction. Tax credits for $25 billion of bonds for the
construction and modernization of up to 6,000 schools. (Cost: $8
billion.)
- Earned Income Tax Credit. The President's budget would increase and
expand the Earned Income Tax Credit to better reward work and family,
reducing poverty for families with three or more children. (Cost: $23
billion.)
- Marriage Penalty and Broad Tax Relief. The President's proposal would
reduce the marriage penalty by increasing the standard deduction by more
than $2,000 for married, two-earner couples. (Cost: $45 billion.)
- Alternative Minimum Tax Relief. The President proposes to ensure that
the Alternative Minimum Tax does not penalize large families who play by
the rules. (Cost: $33 billion.)
- Long-term Care. A $3,000 long-term care tax credit to compensate
people with long-term care needs or their caregivers for the cost of
care. (Cost: $27 billion.)
- Tax Credits for Medicare 55-65 and Americans In Between Jobs. The
President's budget would provide tax credits to help make his Medicare
buy-in proposal affordable and to for people in between jobs. (Cost:
$12 billion.)
- Child Care. The President's proposal would expand the child care tax
credit to defray up to 50 percent of expenses and make it refundable in
order to help working families afford child care. (Cost: $30 billion.)
- New Markets Tax Credit. More than double the proposed New Markets tax
credit to spur $15 billion of private investment in New Markets. (Cost:
$5 billion.)
- Empowerment Zones. The President's proposes to extend and expand
Empowerment Zone tax cuts and to give all Empowerment Zones the same
wage and business tax incentives. (Cost: $4.4 billion.)
- Better America Bonds. The President proposes to establish $10.75
billion of Better America Bonds to allow State, local, and tribal
governments to borrow interest free in order to preserve green space,
create or restore urban parks, protect water quality and clean up
brownfields. (Cost: $3 billion.)
- Energy Efficiency. In order to improve energy efficiency and help the
environment, the President proposes $9 billion in tax credits for
energy-efficient cars, homes, and appliances. (Cost: $9 billion.)
- Philanthropy. Encouraging philanthropy by allowing non-itemizers to
take a tax deduction for charitable giving, improving the tax treatment
of foundations, and allowing larger donations of stock and assets by
individuals. (Cost: $14 billion.)
MOVING FORWARD ON AN INVESTMENT AGENDA
Education and Training:
- Largest Head Start Expansion in History. An increase in Head Start's
funding by $1 billion - the largest funding increase ever proposed for
the program - to provide Head Start and Early Head Start to
approximately 950,000 children.
- Universal After-School for Students in the Most Need. $1 billion in
the 21st Century Community Learning Centers program to help ensure that
every child in every failing school can have a safe place to learn
during the after school and summertime hours.
- Accountability Fund. An increase in funding from $134 million to $250
million to turn around failing schools.
- Class Size Reduction. $1.75 billion -- an increase of $450 million --
to hire 49,000 teachers in our public schools.
- Teaching to High Standards. A new $1 billion teacher quality plan to
recruit, train and reward good teachers.
- School Construction and Modernization. $24.8 billion in tax credit
bonds to build or modernize up to 6,000 schools. And a new $1.3 billion
initiative to provide urgent repairs for 5,000 schools each and every
year.
- College Opportunity Tax Cut. A $29.8 billion tax cut over the next 10
years to make college, graduate school, and job training more affordable
for millions of families.
- Increasing Support for College Access. A nearly $1 billion increase
for initiatives such as the Pell Grant, SEOG, and Work Study programs.
- Keeping Young People On Track for Success. An increase of more than
$200 million for programs such as GEAR UP, TRIO, and College Completion
Challenge Grants that prepare students to take full advantage of
post-secondary educational opportunities.
- Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) School Construction and Repair. $300
million, more than double last year's level, to replace and repair
BIA-funded schools on reservations.
Child Care:
- Tax Cuts to Enable Child Care. A variety of measures offering tax
relief so that good child care becomes affordable for working families.
- Helping Low-Income Families Afford Child Care. Expansion of the Child
Care and Development Block Grant by $817 million in FY2001, enabling the
program to provide child care subsidies to nearly 150,000 more children
next year.
- Largest Head Start Expansion in History. An increase in Head Start's
funding by $1 billion -- the largest funding increase ever proposed for
the program -- to provide Head Start and Early Head Start to
approximately 950,000 children.
- Promoting Early Learning. $3 billion over five years for the Early
Learning Fund to help improve child care quality and early childhood
education for children under five years old.
Health Care:
- Addressing the Nation's Multi-Faceted Long-term Care Needs. A $28
billion, 10-year investment in long-term care, the centerpiece of which
is a $3,000 tax credit for people with long-term care needs or their
caregivers -- tripling the credit over last year's proposal.
- Patients Bill of Rights and Medical Privacy. Assuring the Quality of
Health Care through a Patients' Bill of Rights and by Protecting Medical
Privacy.
- Preventing Medical Errors and Improving Quality of Care. Funds to
improve medical errors prevention, patient safety research, and
reporting and information dissemination.
- Supporting Biomedical Research. Almost $19 billion, an increase of $1
billion over last year's funding level, for biomedical research at the
National Institutes of Health.
- Combating the Spread of HIV / AIDS and Other Diseases. A variety of
initiatives to curtail HIV/AIDS and other diseases abroad and at home.
Environment:
- Protecting our Environment and Public Health: Overall, President
Clinton and Vice President Gore propose a record $42.5 billion in FY2001
-- an 11 percent increase over FY2000 and a 36 percent increase over FY
1993 -- to protect our natural resources, communities and families.
- A Permanent Lands Legacy for America. $1.4 billion, the largest
one-year investment ever in helping communities protect wildlife and
open space; saving natural and historic treasures; and providing special
assistance to coastal areas. In addition, the President is proposing a
new, protected budget category to preserve this higher level of funding
in future years.
- Meeting the Challenge of Global Warming. The President is proposing
$2.4 billion -- a 42 percent increase -- to combat global climate
change, and $1.7 billion for scientific research into factors
influencing climate and the likely consequences of global warming.
- Protecting Forests and Biodiversity Around the World. $150 million
for a new Greening the Globe initiative to help stem the loss of forests
worldwide.
- Building Livable Communities. $9.3 billion, a 14 percent increase,
for the Administration's Livable Communities initiative to help
communities grow in ways that enhance quality and strong economies.
Working Families:
- Helping Low-Income Families Get to Work. The President's budget will
make it easier for working families to own a reliable vehicle and
receive food stamps by allowing states to conform their food stamp
vehicle policy with a more generous TANF vehicle policy. The budget
also proposes to double Access to Jobs transportation funding to $150
million to expand grants to communities to develop innovative public
transportation solutions that help people get to work.
- Helping Millions Move from Welfare to Work. Since January 1993, the
welfare rolls have fallen by more than half, from 14.1 million to 6.9
million. Three years after enactment of the welfare reform law, the
number of Americans on welfare is at its lowest level since 1969. The
President and Vice President will continue these policies and work to
see that the federal government fills its job openings with former
welfare recipients when appropriate.
- Ensuring Equal Pay. $27 million for the Equal Pay Initiative, an
increase of $12 million over Fiscal Year 2000, to provide training and
assistance to employers on how to comply with equal pay requirements, to
launch a public service announcement campaign on wage issues, to train
women in nontraditional jobs, and other measures.
- Fathers Work/Families Win Grants. $255 million in new competitive
grants to promote responsible fatherhood and support working families,
critical next steps in reforming welfare and reducing child poverty.
Community Empowerment:
- The New Markets Initiative. Significant new tax credits and loans
guarantee incentives to stimulate $22 billion of new private capital
investments in economically distressed communities and build a network
of private investment institutions to funnel credit, equity and
technical assistance to businesses in America's new markets. In
addition, the budget proposes a new initiative, known as First Accounts,
to provide low-cost bank accounts to working families.
- Empowerment Zones. The President's proposes to extend and expand
Empowerment Zone tax cuts and to give all Empowerment Zones the same
wage and business tax incentives. The Administration will also fight
for the full $150 million in annual funding for the Second Round of
Empowerment Zones.
- Creation of the Delta Regional Authority. $153 million for the
creation of a new Delta Regional Authority to bring the resources of a
Federal-state partnership to the fight for economic growth in the
Mississippi Delta region.
- Expanding Housing Vouchers. $690 million for 120,000 new housing
vouchers to subsidize the rents of low-income families.
- Encouraging Philanthropy. $14 billion over 10 years for a
comprehensive package of new tax proposals to encourage philanthropy.
From Digital Divide to Digital Opportunity:
- Private Sector Involvement in Bridging the Digital Divide: $2 billion
over 10 years in tax incentives to encourage private sector donation of
computers, sponsorship of community technology centers, and technology
training for workers.
- Teacher Training: $150 million to help train all new teachers
entering the workforce to use technology effectively in the classroom.
- Community Technology Centers: $100 million to create up to 1,000
Community Technology Centers in low-income urban and rural communities.
- Public-Private Partnerships for Home Access: $50 million for a
public/private partnership to expand home access to computers and the
Internet for low-income families.
Research & Development:
- Biomedical Research. $1 billion increase in biomedical research at
the National Institutes of Health.
- Nanotechnology. $495 million for the National Nanotechnology
Initiative -- an increase of 83 percent.
- National Science Foundation. A $675 million increase in the NSF's
budget -- double the largest dollar increase in its history.
Safe Communities:
- 21st Century Policing Initiative. The initiative funds: 50,000 more
police for our streets by FY2005; access for law enforcement to the
latest crime-fighting technologies; collaboration between new
prosecutors and local law enforcement; and public-private partnerships
to prevent crime.
- Stopping Crime by Stopping Drugs. $215 million -- doubling current
funding -- to move more offenders off of drugs and away from crime.
- Safe Schools. $250 million -- a $100 million increase -- for the Safe
Schools/Healthy Students Initiative to help communities develop
community-wide responses to school and youth violence.
- Supervising Released Offenders: Project Reentry. $60 million for a
community supervision initiative to create "reentry partnerships" and
"reentry courts" to address community safety concerns, lower recidivism
rates, and promote responsible fatherhood among offenders returning to
communities.
- Reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. The President's
budget also includes $516 million to combat domestic violence.
- Improving Law Enforcement in Indian Country. $439 million, an
increase of $103 million over FY2000, for the Departments of Justice and
Interior for the third year of the President's Indian Country Law
Enforcement Initiative.
- Largest National Gun Enforcement Initiative in History. $280 million
for the largest national gun enforcement initiative in history,
including funding for: 500 ATF agents and inspectors; 1,000 gun
prosecutors; comprehensive crime gun tracing; a new national integrated
ballistics information network; and local anti-gun violence media
campaigns.
- Funding Innovative Smart Gun Technology. $10 million to fund the
expansion, testing and replication of "smart" gun technologies that can
limit a gun's use to its adult owner or other authorized users.
- Strengthening Brady Background Checks. Doubling funding to $70
million for improvements in state criminal history records and in the
speed and accuracy of Brady background checks.
United States Leadership in the World:
- Kosovo. $175 million to bolster democracy in Kosovo and help the
democratic opposition in Serbia.
- Southeast Europe Initiative. $428 million to promote the political
and economic integration of the Balkans into Europe and into the global
community and economy.
- Middle East Peace. $1.8 billion from the Economic Support Fund (ESF)
and $3.4 billion from Foreign Military Financing (FMF) to support the
next phase of negotiations between Israel and its neighbors.
- Expanded Threat Reduction Initiative (ETRI). $974 million to contain
the spread of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) from the former Soviet
Union and to promote stability.
- Colombia Assistance. $954 million in FY2000 emergency supplemental
appropriations plus $318 million in new FY2001 for drug interdiction in
Colombia.
- Debt Forgiveness. $600 million for a U.S. contribution to the Heavily
Indebted Poor Country trust fund over three years, including a $210
million supplemental request in FY2000. The budget also includes $37
million for the Tropical Forest Initiative, to use debt relief funds in
support of conservation.
- AIDS/Vaccines. To combat AIDS and other infectious diseases,
especially in the developing world, the budget proposes $100 million for
AIDS prevention, $50 million for the Global Alliance for Vaccines and
Immunizations, increased funding for vaccine research, and a new tax
credit that will encourage the development of vaccines.
- Expanding the Fight Against Abusive Child Labor. More than double
combined investments in child labor from customs enforcement to helping
children move out of dangerous work situations and into schools.
America's Armed Forces:
- Increased Funding. Discretionary funding of $292.2 billion in budget
authority and $278.6 billion in outlays for 2001 to strengthen our armed
forces, an increase in $11.3 billion over the proposed 2000 level and
$4.8 billion over the 2001 level assumed in the 2000 budget.
- Enhancing Military Readiness. The current high level of readiness is
the Administration's top defense priority. Increased funding will
enable the Services to support unit operations and joint exercises, meet
their required training standards, maintain their equipment in top
condition, recruit and retain quality personnel, and procure sufficient
spare parts and other equipment.
- Modernizing Weapons Systems. $60.3 billion for the procurement
program, which is $6.1 billion more than the 2000 level, to maintain our
status as the best equipped armed force in the world.
- Developing Missile Defenses. $1.9 billion in 2001 for an National
Missile Defense system plus $2.8 billion for other missile defense
technologies and systems.
Restoring Fairness to Legal Immigrants:
- Overall, $2.5 billion over five years to restore critical disability,
health, and nutrition benefits to additional categories of legal
immigrants.
Tobacco Policy:
- A 25 cents per pack excise beginning in FY2001 to raise further the
price of tobacco products from the 45-cent increase agreed to by the
states and the industry in 1998.
- $3,000 assessment charged to the tobacco industry for every smoker
under age 18 starting in 2004 if youth smoking has not been cut in half
and to remain in effect until the youth smoking reduction goal has been
met.
Farm Safety Net:
- Farm Safety Net for Family Farmers. Overall, an $11 billion package
to strengthen the farm safety net through 2002, when the next farm bill
will be enacted to repair the weaknesses of the 1996 Farm Bill.
- Income Assistance. An estimated $2.5 billion for the 2000 crop and
$3.1 billion for the 2001 crop on counter-cyclical farm income support
payments.
Building One America:
- Civil Rights Enforcement. $698 million -- a 13 percent increase --
for civil right enforcement agencies.
- Ensuring Equal Pay. $27 million for the Equal Pay Initiative, an
increase of $12 million, to fund a variety of measures aimed at reducing
disparities of pay between men and women who perform similar jobs.
- Hate Crimes. $20 million to train Federal, state, and local law
enforcement to prevent and respond to hate crimes and to promote police
integrity.
- Native American Initiative. $9.4 billion -- an increase of $1.2
billion -- to fund school construction and repair and infrastructural
upkeep on Indian reservations as well as budgetary increases for tribal
colleges, the Indian Health Service, the President's Indian Country Law
Enforcement Initiative, and other programs as well.
II. OVERALL FRAMEWORK FOR THE FY2001 BUDGET
- Budget Framework
- Medicare
- Social Security
- New Opportunity Agenda
- Health Insurance Coverage
- Targeted Tax Relief
BUDGET FRAMEWORK
President Clinton and Vice President Gore's propose a balanced and
fiscally responsible budget that eliminates the debt, strengthens the
solvency of Social Security and Medicare, and invests in key priorities
like health and education. By balancing competing needs and maintaining
fiscal discipline, the Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget
continues the successful strategy that has fostered the longest economic
expansion in the Nation's history. Over 10 years, it uses the entire
$2.2 trillion Social Security surplus for debt reduction and devotes
nearly half of the $746 billion non-Social Security surplus to debt
reduction. Under the President's budget:
- The debt held by the public would be paid off by 2013, resulting in
lower interest rates and a stronger economy.
- Medicare solvency would be secured for at least 10 years to 2025,
Medicare would be reformed to make it more efficient and competitive,
and its benefits modernized with a new prescription drug benefit.
- The Social Security surplus would be dedicated to paying down the
debt, and Social Security solvency would be extended to at least 2050.
- The budget framework is based on realistic discretionary spending
levels that include investment in key priorities like education, health
care, environment, public safety, and national security, while keeping
overall spending growth slightly below inflation.
- A set of fair and responsible targeted tax cuts would provide tax
relief for middle-class Americans while helping them save for
retirement.
The President's Balanced and Responsible Budget Will Help Keep the
Economy Strong, Building on the Progress That He Has Made in Bringing
America's Fiscal House Back in Order. According to the Office of
Management and Budget, in 2000 the debt held by the public will be $2.4
trillion lower than it was projected to be when the President came into
office. This achievement has kept interest rates down and confidence
and investment up, contributing to the strongest American economy and
fiscal position in generations.
- The $167 billion surplus this year will be the largest on record. In
1992 the deficit was $290 billion and projected to grow to $455 billion
this year. As a result of the President's seven year record on fiscal
discipline, and particularly the major deficit reduction in 1993 and
1997, and the strong economy to which it contributed, the budget surplus
for this year is projected to be $167 billion, the largest dollar
surplus on record. Compared with the original projections, that is $622
billion less borrowing drained by the government in one year alone.
- The largest pay-down of debt in history: $297 billion. In 1998 and
1999, the debt held by the public was reduced by $140 billion. OMB is
projecting that the government will pay down an additional $157 billion
in debt held by the public this fiscal year. That will bring the total
debt pay-down to $297 billion -- the largest three-year debt pay-down in
American history. In contrast, under Presidents Reagan and Bush, the
debt held by the public quadrupled.
- Investment has boomed. The benefits of fiscal discipline for our
economy have been enormous. Interest rates are lower than they would
have been otherwise, helping to fuel seven consecutive years of
double-digit investment growth for the first time on record.
- Unemployment is the lowest in a generation. The unemployment rate in
January 2000 was 4.0 percent -- the lowest in thirty years -- and
America has created 20.8 million jobs since January 1993.
President Clinton's Budget Would Pay Off the National Debt by 2013.
President Clinton has proposed to use the entire Social Security
surplus, $2.2 trillion over 10 years, for debt reduction. In addition,
over the next 10 years he would dedicate $350 billion of the $746
billion non-Social Security surplus to debt reduction. That is nearly
half of the non-Social Security surplus being used for debt reduction.
The President's budget is projected to pay off the debt held by the
public by 2013, the first time America will have been debt free since
1835. Debt reduction will continue to benefit the economy and American
families:
- Keeps investment and growth strong. With the government no longer
draining resources from capital markets, interest rates are lower and
businesses have more funds for productive investment. Paying off the
debt would continue to help fuel investment and productivity growth
while increasing productive capacity and restraining inflation.
- Saves money for families. Because of the deficit and debt reduction
we have already done, it is estimated that a typical family with a home
mortgage might expect to save roughly $2,000 per year in mortgage
payments.
- Saves money for taxpayers. Currently we spend 13 cents of every
Federal dollar on net interest payments. These payments, which were
once projected to grow to 26 percent of all federal spending in 2013,
would be completely eliminated under the President's plan.
- Prepares for the retiring baby boomers. By paying off the debt,
eliminating interest payments, and dedicating the resulting benefits to
extending Medicare and Social Security solvency, debt reduction will
free up funds for investment and boost workers' productivity and
incomes, helping the Nation prepare for the challenge of the retiring
baby boomers.
The President's Budget is Based on a Realistic, Fiscally Conservative
Plan That Maintains Our Domestic Priorities, Including National Defense,
Education, Law Enforcement, Health, the Environment, and Veterans
Programs. The President's budget precludes the use of emergency
spending except in the case of truly unforeseen contingencies, and it
makes sure that all spending is accounted for in the appropriate year.
The budget proposes realistic, fiscally conservative levels of spending
that respond to the Nation's most pressing needs.
- Smallest government as a share of the economy since 1966. The
President's proposal builds on a record of fiscal discipline. President
Clinton's fiscal discipline has helped bring spending down from 22.2
percent of the economy in 1992 to 18.7 percent of the economy in 1999 -
the lowest share since 1966. Non-defense discretionary spending is now
smaller as a share of the economy than any time on record (comparable
data go back to 1962). In contrast, Federal government spending
increased from 21.6 percent of GDP in 1980 to 22.2 percent in 1992.
- Spending growth slightly below inflation. The President's budget is
based on spending plans that are tight but realistic, keeping overall
discretionary spending growth slightly below inflation.
- Invests in expanding health insurance to working Americans. The
President's budget also invests $110 billion over 10 years in a number
of policies would efficiently expand coverage to at least 5 million
uninsured Americans and expand access to millions more by building on
current options. Together with the State Children's Health Initiative
enacted in 1997, that would cover 10 million uninsured people.
President Clinton Will Strengthen and Modernize Medicare, Extending Its
Solvency, While Paying Down the Debt to Prepare for Our Future
Obligations. The President's FY2001 budget dedicates $432 billion over
10 years -- an amount equivalent to over half the on-budget surplus --
to strengthen and modernize Medicare to prepare it for the health,
demographic, and financing challenges of the 21st Century.
- Making Medicare more efficient, competitive and fiscally sound. The
President's plan will dedicate $299 billion of the non-Social Security
surplus over 10 years to shore up Medicare's Hospital Insurance trust
fund and pay-down publicly held debt. Coupled with reforms to add price
competition and successful private-sector management tools to Medicare,
these resources will extend Medicare solvency by at least a decade,
extending its life until at least 2025.
- Modernizing benefits, including adding a prescription drug benefit.
Over 3 in 5 Medicare beneficiaries lack dependable prescription drug
coverage. The President's plan creates a voluntary prescription drug
benefit that is accessible and affordable for all beneficiaries, managed
competitively and efficiently, and provides high-quality, needed
medications. It also creates a $35 billion reserve fund that permits
the Administration to work with Congress to design protections for
catastrophic drug costs. If no consensus emerges, the reserve would be
used for debt reduction.
President Clinton Has a Fiscally Responsible Plan to Extend the Solvency
of Social Security. The President would ensure that the benefits of the
debt reduction that are due to Social Security are used to extend the
life of Social Security:
- Keeping Social Security surpluses for Social Security. The President
proposes to lock away all of the Social Security surplus, a step that
would pay down debt and prepare the government, and the Nation, for the
retirement of the baby boomers.
- Social Security solvency and debt reduction transfers. After a decade
of debt reduction, the President's plan earmarks the interest savings
resulting from this debt reduction to the Social Security Trust Fund.
By themselves, these fiscally prudent steps will pay down the government
debt, reduce interest payments in the future, and provide resources to
extend the solvency of the Social Security trust fund to 2050. If a
prudent portion of the transfers were invested for higher returns,
solvency would be extended to 2054. In contrast, the Republican
so-called lockboxes would not extend the life of Social Security by a
single day.
The President Is Committed to Fair and Responsible Targeted Tax Cuts for
American Families. As part of a balanced and fiscally responsible
framework, the President believes that we should have targeted tax cuts
for working American families.
- Providing tax relief. The President proposes $351 billion of gross
tax cuts over 10 years - of which $256 billion are paid for out of the
surplus and $96 billion are paid for with corporate loophole closers,
elimination of tax shelters, and other measures.
- Targeted tax cuts for American families. The President's targeted tax
cuts would address a variety of urgent national needs, including
promoting progressive retirement savings, making higher education more
affordable, increasing the reward to work and family in the Earned
Income Tax Credit, helping families meet child care needs and provide
long-term care for ill relatives, expanding health insurance options,
helping communities build modern schools, promoting energy efficiency to
mitigate global climate change, and encouraging investment in areas of
our country which have not fully participated in our expansion.
MEDICARE
The Clinton-Gore Administration budget dedicates $432 billion over 10
years - the equivalent of over half of the non-Social Security surplus -
to strengthen and modernize Medicare. It includes a new, multi-billion
dollar reserve fund that can be used to add protections against
catastrophic drug costs to the President's prescription drug benefit.
This financing commitment is part of the comprehensive reform plan that
the President unveiled last June which is also included in the budget.
This plan makes Medicare more fiscally sound, competitive, and efficient
and it modernizes Medicare's benefits, including the provision of a
long-overdue prescription drug benefit. The reforms coupled with the
surplus dedication would extend the life of its trust fund by at least
10 years to at least 2025.
Making Medicare More Fiscally Sound, Competitive and Efficient. Since
taking office, President Clinton has worked to pass and implement
Medicare reforms that, coupled with the strong economy and the
Administration's aggressive anti-fraud and abuse enforcement efforts,
have saved hundreds of billions of dollars and helped to extend the life
of the Medicare Trust Fund from 1999 to 2015. Yet, the doubling of
Medicare enrollment with the retirement of the baby boom generation,
coupled with the potential return of higher health cost growth in the
future, will create unavoidable financing challenges for Medicare.
Because the President is committed to not passing this burden on to the
next generation, he has proposed a strong plan that not only provides
the needed, new financing but provides the program with new
private-sector tools and injects competition into the program.
Specifically, the plan:
- Allocates Nearly Three-fourths of Medicare Investment to Trust Fund
Solvency. It would be impossible to pay for a doubling in Medicare
enrollment through competition, provider payment savings or beneficiary
premium increases alone. To address the future financing shortfall, the
budget dedicates $299 billion of the surplus to Medicare over 10 years
which not only helps to extend the financial health of the Trust Fund
through 2025, but reduces publicly held debt since these funds will not
be available for tax cuts or other spending.
- Gives Traditional Medicare New Private Sector Purchasing and Quality
Improvement Tools. The President's proposal would make the traditional
fee-for-service program more competitive through the use of
market-oriented purchasing and quality improvement tools to improve care
and constrain costs. It would provide new, broader authority for
competitive pricing for current Medicare services, use of private
disease management services that have demonstrated higher quality,
coordinated care for beneficiaries with chronic illnesses, and other
best-practice private sector tools.
- Improves Price Competition in Medicare through the "Competitive
Defined Benefit" Program. The Competitive Defined Benefit proposal
would, for the first time, inject true price and quality competition
into Medicare. While keeping the same Part B premium for those
remaining in the traditional program, the policy would allow
beneficiaries to pay lower premiums for choosing efficient private
plans. Specifically, beneficiaries would have their Part B premium
reduced by 75 cents of every dollar of savings that the private plan
generates. For example, if a person chose a plan that saved $10 they
would get $7.50 reduced from their premiums every month. Price
competition would make it easier for beneficiaries to make informed
choices about their plan options and would, over time, save money for
both beneficiaries and the program.
- Constrains Out-year Medicare Spending Growth and Continues to Ensure
Program Integrity. Since President Clinton took office, the life of the
trust fund has been extended from 1999 to 2015 and spending growth has
been reduced by two-thirds. But as health inflation increases, experts
suggest that average Medicare spending growth per beneficiary will
almost double for 2003-2010 compared to 1998-2002. The FY2001 budget
includes the anti-fraud and waste proposals from the FY2000 budget and
moderated out-year savings proposals to protect against a return to
excessive growth rates.
Savings from Medicare total $70 billion over 10 years. The budget
preserves its commitment to the Balanced Budget Refinement Act,
recognizing that in some cases Balanced Budget Act payment reductions
were excessive. This budget's savings are about 33 percent less than
the budget and reform plan savings proposed last year.
Modernizing Medicare's Benefits. Unlike virtually all private health
plans, Medicare does not cover prescription drugs. Over three in five
lack dependable insurance coverage for drugs. As such, those with the
highest need pay the highest prices. The President's budget adds a
long-overdue prescription drug benefit, and also improves preventive
services and rationalizes cost sharing. Specifically, the plan:
- Establishes a New Voluntary Medicare Prescription Drug Benefit that is
Affordable to All Beneficiaries and the Program. The drug benefit costs
$160 billion over 10 years; including savings, the net cost of the
President's Medicare proposals would be $98 billion over 10 years. The
voluntary prescription drug benefit would be:
- Accessible and voluntary. Optional for all beneficiaries. Provides
financial incentives for employers to develop and retain their retiree
health coverage
- Affordable for beneficiaries and the program. Premiums of $26 per
month in the first year with lower or no premiums for low-income
beneficiaries. Provides privately-negotiated discounts, gained by
pooling beneficiaries' purchasing power, for all drug expenses. Has no
deductible and pays for half of each beneficiary's drug costs from the
first prescription filled each year up to $5,000 in spending when fully
phased in. Discounts continue after limit is reached.
- Competitively and efficiently administered. Competitively selects
private benefit manager to deliver benefit to enrollees in traditional
program. No price controls, no new bureaucracy. Integrated into
current eligibility and enrollment systems.
- High-quality and provide necessary medications. Private entities that
use formularies must ensure access to medications off formulary if
physician deems medically necessary. Requires use of state-of-the-art
quality improvement tools.
- Creates a Medicare Reserve Fund to Add Protections for Catastrophic
Drug Costs. To build on the President's prescription drug benefit, the
budget includes a reserve fund of $35 billion for 2006 through 2010,
available to design protections for beneficiaries with extremely high
drug spending. This reserve will permit the Administration to work in
collaboration with Congress to design this enhanced prescription drug
benefit. If no consensus emerges, the reserve would be used for debt
reduction.
- Improves Preventive Benefits in Medicare. This proposal would:
- Eliminate the existing deductible and copayments for preventive
services, including colorectal cancer screening, bone mass measurements,
pelvic exams, prostate cancer screening, diabetes self management
benefits, and mammographies.
- Develop and design a 3-year demonstration project on smoking cessation
services.
- Rationalizes Cost Sharing. As proposed last year, the plan would
rationalize the current cost sharing requirements for Medicare by:
- Re-instating 20 percent coinsurance and the Part B deductible for
clinical laboratory services. The modest lab copayment would help
prevent overuse and reduce fraud.
- Indexing the Part B deductible for inflation. Over time, inflation
decreases the amount of the deductible in real terms. The deductible
has been $100 since 1991 and has only been increased three times since
Medicare was created. The deductible would keep pace with inflation
under this proposal.
- Reforms Medigap. The plan would reform private insurance policies
that supplement Medicare (Medigap) by: (1) working with the National
Association of Insurance Commissioners to add a new option with low
copayments and to revise existing plans to conform with the President's
proposals; (2) directing the Secretary of HHS to determine the
feasibility and advisability of reforms to improve supplemental cost
sharing in Medicare; (3) providing easier access to Medigap if a
beneficiary is in an HMO that withdraws from Medicare; and (4) including
people with disabilities and end stage renal disease (ESRD) in the
initial 6 month open enrollment.
SOCIAL SECURITY
The Clinton-Gore Administration FY2001 budget proposes a plan to extend
the solvency of Social Security. For almost 65 years, Social Security
has been an unshakable covenant among generations. It provides a bond
between workers and retirees, between the disabled and the able bodied.
The President's proposal would build on this historic period of
prosperity and budget surpluses to strengthen Social Security. The
President's plan reserves the entire Social Security surplus for Social
Security and debt reduction, and earmarks the benefits of paying down
the debt held by the public to extend the solvency of Social Security.
According to projections by the independent Office of the Actuary at the
Social Security Administration, the President's proposed transfers would
extend the solvency of Social Security to 2050. If a prudent portion of
the transfers were invested for higher returns, solvency would be
extended to 2054. The President's plan to strengthen Social Security is
a central part of his fiscally disciplined framework to pay off the debt
held by the public by 2013.
Social Security is the Cornerstone of our Retirement System. Social
Security is the principal source of retirement income for two-thirds of
the elderly. In 1959, the poverty rate for senior citizens was 35.2
percent. In 1998, it was 10.5 percent -- the lowest on record. Last
year, Social Security benefits lifted roughly 15 million senior citizens
out of poverty, but it must be noted that poverty remains too high for
widows and other groups. And Social Security is more than just a
retirement program. One in five beneficiaries is under the age of 62,
receiving either disability benefits or survivors benefits.
Social Security is Projected to Become Insolvent By the End of 2034 As a
Result of Demographic Pressures. Currently, Social Security takes in
more payroll taxes than it pays out in benefits, and is building up its
trust fund to pay future beneficiaries. But, as the baby boomers retire
and life expectancies continue to rise, the number of people age 65 and
over is projected to double -- from 35 million in 1998 to 72 million in
2035. In 1960, there were 5.1 covered workers for every Social Security
beneficiary. In 1999 there were only 3.4 workers for every beneficiary.
And by 2035, there are projected to be only 2.0 workers for every
beneficiary.
The President's Plan Devotes Social Security Surpluses to Debt
Reduction. The President's proposal devotes the entire Social Security
surplus to paying down the debt held by the public. This is projected
to reduce the debt held by the public by $2.2 trillion over the next 10
years and produce interest savings.
The President Uses the Interest Savings To Extend the Solvency of Social
Security. Although the so-called lockboxes proposed by Republicans
would have used any interest savings to pay for an exploding tax cut,
the President proposes to use the interest savings for the purpose of
extending the solvency of Social Security. As an additional safeguard
for fiscal responsibility, the President proposes to limit the amount of
the transfers to the available on-budget surpluses that are currently
projected to result from the President's fiscally disciplined framework.
The President's Plan Transfers the Interest Savings to the Social
Security Trust Fund From 2011 to 2050. The Social Security actuaries
project that the interest savings that would occur from the reduction in
publicly held debt due to transfers alone would total $99 billion in
2011 and grow to $205 billion in 2016. Under the intermediate
projections of the Social Security Trustees, these potential interest
savings would be transferred in full to the Social Security trust fund.
Transfers would stay at the 2016 level through 2050. The total
transfers in the first 5 years (2011-2015), as projected by the Social
Security actuaries, would be $690 billion.
The President's Plan Extends Solvency to at Least 2050. The Social
Security trust fund is currently expected to be unable to pay benefits
in full on a timely basis starting in 2034. According to projections by
the Social Security actuaries, the President's proposes interest savings
transfers would extend solvency to 2050. This is an extra 16 years
added to the life of the trust fund. To put Social Security on an even
firmer financial footing, the President also provides the option of
allowing a limited and prudent portion of the transfers to be invested
independently and without political interference in broad-based equity
indexes. Under this plan, the Social Security actuaries project that
the Social Security trust fund would hold about 3 percent of the total
market value, on average, over the 30-year period 2011 through 2040.
The combination of prudent investment in equities and the transfers is
projected to extend the life of the trust fund to 2054.
Addressing Widow Poverty and Eliminating the Retirement Earnings Test.
The President believes that, in the context of longer-term reforms, it
is essential to improve the effectiveness of Social Security in
combating widow poverty and to modernize it by eliminating the outdated
retirement earnings test.
The President's Plan Provides a Foundation on Which to Build. The
President remains committed to working together with Congress on a
bipartisan basis to enact reforms that make Social Security solvent for
at least 75 years. The President's proposal provides a sound starting
point for such an agreement.
NEW OPPORTUNITY AGENDA
The Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget proposes a coherent
program to build on the Nation's economic prosperity and expand its
reach to every corner of America through an agenda rooted in three core
values: community, opportunity and responsibility. It comprises a range
of programs designed to ensure that working families have the tools and
the opportunity to succeed.
REWARDING WORK AND HELPING FAMILIES
- Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to Reward Work and
Family. President Clinton proposes a $23 billion plan to expand the
Earned Income Tax Credit to reward work and family, including more
relief with families with three or more children often facing the
highest poverty rates. According to estimates by the Department of the
Treasury, this EITC expansion would provide tax relief for 6.8 million
working families.
- Increasing the Minimum Wage. The President again proposes a $1
increase in the minimum wage. This proposal, which builds upon
President Clinton's 1996 minimum wage increase, would help 10 million
Americans - 70 percent of whom are adults and 60 percent of whom are
women. For a full-time, year-round worker at the minimum wage, this
would mean an additional $2,000 per year.
- Expanding and Improving the Child Care Tax Credit for Working
Families. President Clinton will include in his FY2001 budget tax
relief for families struggling to pay for child care. As part of a
comprehensive child care initiative that includes subsidy assistance and
new investments in child care quality, the President will propose to 1)
make the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit refundable for the first
time; 2) increase the level of the credit; and 3) extend the credit to
parents who stay at home to take care of their infants. The President
will also propose tax incentives to encourage businesses to provide
child care for employees. The child care package would benefit an
estimated 8.1 million families and would cost $30 billion over 10 years.
- Helping Families Afford Child Care. The President's budget boosts the
Child Care and Development Block Grant by $817 million in FY2001,
enabling the program to provide child care subsidies to nearly 150,000
more children next year. These new funds, combined with the child care
funds provided in welfare reform, will enable the program to serve over
2.2 million children in 2001, an increase of nearly one million since
1997.
- Promoting Progressive Savings Through Retirement Savings Accounts.
Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) would give 76 million low- and
moderate-income Americans the opportunity to build wealth and save for
their retirement through a progressive tax cut. A person who
participated in this savings program for 40 years could accumulate over
$266,000 -- enough to produce $24,000 a year of income in retirement.
- Expanding Health Insurance Coverage to Uninsured Americans. The
President and Vice President will propose a 10-year, $110 billion
initiative that would dramatically improve the affordability of and
access to health insurance for people under 200 percent of the poverty
line. The proposal would expand coverage to at least 5 million
uninsured Americans and expand access to millions more. Together with
the State Children's Health Initiative enacted in 1997, that would cover
10 million uninsured people. The Program includes a new, affordable
insurance option for families through the State Children's Health
Insurance Program. In addition, in order to ensure that people do not
lose their health insurance coverage between jobs, the President will
propose a new 25 percent tax credit for COBRA continuation coverage.
- Expansion of Housing Vouchers and Tax Credits for Hard Pressed Working
Families. The President's budget will include $690 million for 120,000
new housing vouchers to subsidize the rents of low-income families, and
increase and index the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC) which
provides incentives to build and make available affordable housing to
working families.
- Additional Initiatives to Help Working Families. The President's
budget will contain $255 million to promote responsible fatherhood and
support working families as well as provisions that will make it easier
for working families to own a car without jeopardizing their food stamps
eligibility. These proposals are both critical steps in reforming
welfare and emphasizing work.
PROMOTING OPPORTUNITY AND RESPONSIBILITY IN EDUCATION
- Expanding on Early Childhood and Pre-School Programs. High quality
early learning childhood programs can significantly improve educational
achievement, especially among low-income children. President Clinton
and Vice President Gore are proposing a number of different initiatives
to support this goal including:
- Creation of the Early Learning Fund. The President's budget includes
$3 billion over five years for the Early Learning Fund to help improve
child-care quality and early childhood education for children under five
years old. The Early Learning Fund will provide community grants for
activities that foster cognitive development, improve childcare quality
and readiness for school.
- The Largest Head Start Expansion in History. President Clinton and
Vice President Gore have nearly doubled Head Start - expanding funding
by 90 percent since 1993. The FY2001 budget boosts funding for Head
Start by $1 billion - the largest funding increase the program has ever
experienced - to provide Head Start and Early Head Start slots to
approximately 950,000 children, nearing the President's goal of serving
one million children in 2002. This builds the foundation for the
long-term goal of universal pre-school. The proposed increase for Early
Head Start is $144 million.
- Fixing Failing Schools, Rewarding Success and Universal After School.
The President and Vice President are committed to a comprehensive
approach to improve student achievement by investing in raising
standards and increasing accountability. President Clinton's budget
will more than double the support for the Universal After-School program
for students most in need; increase support for the Accountability Fund
to $250 million, boost funding for the Class Size Reduction program to
$1.75 billion, and include $120 million for a Small Schools Initiative
to reinvent high schools on a smaller and more human scale.
- Expanding Opportunities to Make College More Affordable for
Disadvantaged Youth by Nearly $1 Billion. In FY2001, President Clinton
budget will propose nearly $1 billion in increases to Pell Grants, SEOG
and Work Study programs and for the creation of the College Completion
Challenge Grants and Dual Degree Programs for Minority-Serving
Institutions to help students have access to and stay in college.
- Increasing Resources to Keep Youth on the Track to Success by Over
$400 Million. President Clinton and Vice President Gore are dedicated
to supporting critical investments in education and will propose over
$400 million in program increases to keep youth on the track to success
in their FY2001 budget. These include: an expansion of GEAR UP,
increased support of the TRIO Programs, expansion of Youth Opportunity
Grants and Youth Training Formula Grants, additional funding for
Youthbuild, expanding Job Corps, and a new $20 million initiative known
as Rewarding Achievement in Youth to support comprehensive training and
education services to over 9,000 high achieving, low-income youth.
OPENING NEW MARKETS AND STRENGTHENING COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT
- Spurring $22 Billion in New Investment in Economically Distressed
Areas. The President proposes a package of tax credits and loan
guarantees to more than double the New Markets Tax Credit from last year
(at a cost of $5 billion over 10 years) to spur $15 billion dollars in
new investment in community development in economically distressed
areas.
- Expanding and Improving the Empowerment Zones Tax Incentives. In
addition, the budget proposes to expand the Empowerment Zone tax
incentives to improve economic growth in the 31 existing Empowerment
Zones, as well as create a third round of 10 new empowerment zones at a
cost of $4 billion over ten years. The President will also propose
creation of new investment vehicles to help leverage private equity
capital as well as expand existing programs to promote investments and
provide greater access to capital in these distressed areas.
- Creating First Accounts for Low-income Americans. The President's
budget will propose $30 million to: encourage the creation of low-cost
bank accounts known as First Accounts; to expand access to ATMs; and
provide education low-income Americans about personal financial
management.
- Increasing Funding for Native Americans Communities. In order to
better serve Native American communities in the 21st Century, the
President's budget includes an increase of $1.2 billion over Fiscal Year
2000 for key new and existing programs assisting Native Americans and
Indian reservations. This initiative brings together several agencies
in order to address the needs of Native American communities
comprehensively.
- Moving From Digital Divide to Digital Opportunity. There is strong
evidence of a "digital divide" - unequal access to technology by income,
education level, race, and geography. To address this troubling trend,
the President's budget proposes a comprehensive package to help bridge
the Digital Divide and to help create more digital opportunity for all
Americans. To increase private-sector involvement in bridging the
digital divide, the President proposes $2 billion over 10 years in tax
incentives to encourage private sector donation of computers,
sponsorship of community technology centers, and technology training for
workers. The President has an $150 million Teacher Training initiative
to help train all new teachers entering the workforce to use technology
effectively in the classroom. The Digital Divide initiative also
includes $100 million to create up to 1,000 Community Technology Centers
in low-income urban and rural communities and $50 million for a
Public-Private Partnerships for Home Access to expand access to
computers and the Internet for low-income families.
HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE
The Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget includes a 10-year, $110
billion initiative that would dramatically improve the affordability of
and access to health insurance. Over 44 million Americans lack health
insurance, and this has serious consequences. The uninsured are three
times likelier than the privately insured not to receive needed medical
care, and 50 to 70 percent more likely to need hospitalization for
avoidable hospital conditions like pneumonia or uncontrolled diabetes.
The President's proposal would expand coverage to at least 5 million
uninsured Americans and expand access to millions more. Together with
the State Children's Health Initiative enacted in 1997, that would cover
nearly a quarter of all the uninsured people in America. It addresses
the nation's multi-faceted coverage challenges by building on and
complementing current private and public programs. Specifically, the
initiative will: (1) provide a new, affordable health insurance option
for families; (2) accelerate enrollment of uninsured children eligible
for Medicaid and S-CHIP, which helps children in families with income
too high to be eligible for Medicaid but too low to afford private
insurance; (3) expand health insurance options for Americans facing
unique barriers to coverage; and (4) strengthen programs that provide
health care directly to the . In addition, the President has proposed a
$28 billion initiative to address the Nation's long-term care needs
which, together with the health coverage initiative, would bring the
cost to $138 billion over 10 years.
Providing a New, Affordable Health Insurance Option for Families ($76
billion over 10 years, about 4 million uninsured covered). Over 80
percent of parents of uninsured children with incomes below 200 percent
of poverty (about $33,000 for a family of four) are themselves
uninsured. Yet, while states have aggressively expanded insurance
options for children through Medicaid and the State Children's Health
Insurance Program (S-CHIP), parents are often left behind. There are
about 6.5 million uninsured parents with income in the Medicaid and
S-CHIP eligibility range for children. These parents frequently do not
have access to employer-based insurance, and when they do, cannot afford
it. Recognizing that family coverage not only helps a large proportion
of the nation's uninsured adults but also increases the enrollment of
children, the President, Vice President, the National Governors'
Association, and a wide rage of groups including Families USA and the
Health Insurance Association of America have called for building on
S-CHIP to cover parents. The Administration's budget adopts this
approach by:
- Creating a New "FamilyCare" Program. Under FamilyCare, states would
have the option to cover parents in the same plan as their children.
States would use the same systems and follow most of the same rules as
they do in Medicaid and S-CHIP today, and the program would be overseen
by the same state agency. State spending for FamilyCare would be
matched at the same higher matching rate as S-CHIP (up to 15 percentage
points higher than the Medicaid rate). To ensure adequate funding, $50
billion over 10 years would be added to the current state S-CHIP
allotments. To access this option, states would have to first cover
children to 200 percent of poverty as 30 states now have done. Given
states' enthusiastic response to S-CHIP and the NGA support for this
option, we expect strong state response and significant expansions to
parents under FamilyCare. If after 5 years, some states have not
expanded coverage of parents to at least 100 percent of poverty ($16,700
for a family of 4), a fail-safe mechanism would be triggered to require
states to expand coverage to that level.
- Assisting Families in Affording Private Employer-Based Coverage.
FamilyCare would also facilitate the option to pool state funding with
employer contributions toward private insurance, which can be a
cost-effective way to expand coverage. Under this option, families
otherwise eligible for FamilyCare coverage could get assistance in
purchasing their employers' health plan if it meets FamilyCare
standards, is cost effective, and their employer pays for at least half
of the premium. This minimum employer contribution, along with the
S-CHIP crowd-out policies, should discourage employers from reducing or
dropping coverage. This option is supported by the National Governors'
Association as well.
Accelerating Enrollment of Uninsured Children Eligible for Medicaid and
S-CHIP ($5.5 billion over 10 years, an additional 400,000 uninsured
children covered). Enrollment in S-CHIP doubled to 2 million children
in 1999. Despite this encouraging trend, millions of children remain
eligible but unenrolled in both S-CHIP and Medicaid. The
Administration's budget includes ideas advocated by the Vice President
that would give states needed tools to increase coverage by:
- Allowing School Lunch Programs to Share Information with Medicaid
($345 million over 10 years). Since 60 percent of uninsured children
are in the school lunch program, sharing eligibility information can
efficiently help outreach efforts.
- Expanding Sites Authorized to Enroll Children in S-CHIP and Medicaid
($1.2 billion over 10 years). This includes schools, child care
resource and referral centers, homeless programs, and other sites.
- Requiring States to Make their Medicaid and S-CHIP Enrollment Equally
Simple ($4.0 billion over 10 years). Most states have carried over
their S-CHIP simplification strategies like eliminating assets tests and
using mail-in applications into the Medicaid program. This proposal
would have all states do so to make enrollment easier for both programs.
Expanding Health Insurance Options for Americans Facing Unique Barriers
to Coverage ($28.5 billion over 10 years, about 600,000 uninsured people
covered). Some vulnerable groups of Americans often lack access to
employer-sponsored insurance and insurance programs like Medicare or
Medicaid. These include older Americans, people in transitions (between
jobs, turning 19 and entering the workforce, leaving welfare for work),
and workers in small businesses. This plan addresses these specific and
other problems by:
- Establishing a Medicare Buy-In Option and Making It More Affordable
Through a Tax Credit ($5.2 billion for both the buy-in and credit over
10 years). The rate of uninsured is growing fastest among people ages
55 to 65 and is expected to increase even faster in the future.
Recognizing this, the President and Vice President have called on
Congress to pass legislation that allows people ages 62 through 65 and
displaced workers ages 55 to 65 to pay premiums to buy into Medicare.
The proposal also would require employers who drop previously-promised
retiree coverage to allow early retirees with limited alternatives to
have access to COBRA continuation coverage until they reach age 65 and
qualify for Medicare. This year, to make this policy more affordable,
the President proposes a tax credit, equal to 25 percent of the premium,
for participants in the Medicare buy-in. Coupled with the tax credit
for COBRA (described below), this policy will address both access to and
the affordability of health insurance for this vulnerable group.
- Making COBRA Continuation Coverage More Affordable ($10.3 billion over
10 years). The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (COBRA),
passed in 1985, allows workers in firms with greater than 20 employees
to pay a full premium (102 percent of the average cost of group health
insurance) to buy into their employers' health plan for up to 18 to 36
months after leaving their job. However, fewer than 25 percent of
people eligible for this coverage participate, in part due to cost. The
Administration's budget includes a 25 percent tax credit for COBRA
premiums to reduce the number of Americans who experience a gap in
coverage due to job change.
- Improving Access to Affordable Insurance for Workers in Small
Businesses ($313 million over 10 years). Nearly half of uninsured
workers are in firms with fewer than 25 employees. The President
proposes to give small firms that have not previously offered health
insurance a tax credit equal to 20 percent their contribution -- twice
the credit he proposed last year -- towards health insurance obtained
through purchasing coalitions. In addition, tax incentives would be
given to foundations to help pay for start-up costs of these coalitions,
and the Federal Employees' Health Benefits Program would make available
technical assistance to purchasing coalitions.
- Expanding State Options to Insure Children Through Age 20 ($1.9
billion over 10 years). Nearly one in three people ages 18 to 24 are
uninsured mostly because they age out of Medicaid or S-CHIP or no longer
are dependents in private plans. However, they often do not have jobs
that offer affordable coverage. The budget would gives states the
option to cover people ages 19 and 20 through Medicaid and S-CHIP.
- Extending Transitional Medicaid ($4.3 billion over 10 years). Many
people leaving welfare for work take first jobs that do not offer
affordable health insurance. Recognizing this, Congress passed a
requirement in 1988 that extends Medicaid coverage for up to a year for
those losing it due to increased earnings. This provision was extended
in the welfare reform law to 2001. The budget makes this provision
permanent and simplifies the state and family requirements to promote
enrollment.
- Restoring State Options to Insure Legal Immigrants ($6.5 billion over
10 years). States are prohibited from providing health insurance for
certain legal immigrants who entered the U.S. after the enactment of
welfare reform. The uninsured rate for people of Hispanic origin, some
of whom are legal immigrants, was 35 percent in 1998 -- over twice the
national average of 16 percent. The proposal would give states the
option to insure children and pregnant women in Medicaid and S-CHIP
regardless of their date of entry. It would eliminate the 5-year ban,
deeming, and affidavit of support provisions. The proposal would also
provide Medicaid coverage to disabled immigrants who would be made
eligible for SSI by the FY2001 budget's SSI restoration proposal.
Strengthening Programs that Provide Health Care Directly to the
Uninsured (At least $1 billion over 10 years). Public hospitals,
clinics, and thousands of health care providers give health care of the
uninsured and receive inadequate compensation for doing so. Despite a
rising need, reductions in government spending and aggressive cost
cutting by private insurers has left less money in the health care
system to address these needs. The President will renew his commitment
to helping these providers by:
- Increasing Funding for Increasing Access to Health Care for the
Uninsured (+$100 million for FY2001, $1 billion over 5 years). Last
year, the President and Secretary Shalala proposed an historic new
program to coordinate systems of care, increase the number of services
delivered and establish an accountability system to assure adequate
patient care for the uninsured and low-income. The Congress funded an
initial $25 million investment for this program. This year, the
President proposes funding this initiative at $125 million, a $100
million increase over 2000, representing a down payment on the
President's proposal to invest $1 billion in this initiative. The
Administration will also aggressively pursue an authorization to ensure
that the program addresses health care safety net needs.
- Investing in Community Health Centers (+$50 million for FY2001). The
budget proposes a $50 million increase to $1.0690 billion in FY2001 to
support and enhance the network of community health centers that serve
millions of low-income and uninsured Americans.
TARGETED TAX RELIEF
President Clinton has worked to deliver tax relief to America's working
families. In 1993, the President delivered a tax cut to 15 million
working Americans through an expanded EITC. Then, in 1997, the
President delivered a $500 child tax credit, $1,500 Hope Scholarships to
make the first years of college universally available, and expanded
IRAs. The result: the lowest Federal tax burden in more than two
decades for a typical middle-income family. To build on this record of
tax relief for working families, President Clinton is proposing
significant new tax relief for America's working families as part of a
budget framework that maintains fiscal discipline, makes investments in
key priorities, strengthens the solvency of Social Security and
Medicare, and pays down the debt by 2013. The President proposes $351
billion of gross tax cuts over 10 years -- of which $256 billion are
paid for out of the surplus and $96 billion are paid for with corporate
loophole closers and other measures.
MAKING RETIREMENT MORE SECURE BY ENCOURAGING SAVINGS
- Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) To Help Families Save and Invest
And Expand Pension Coverage for Small Businesses. The President's
Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) proposal will give 76 million
Americans the opportunity to build wealth and save for their retirement
through a progressive tax cut. This proposal builds on the successful
model of Individual Development Accounts (IDAs), extending generous
matches to all low- and moderate-income families to encourage them to
develop savings and assets. A person who participated for 40 years in
this savings program could accumulate over $266,000 -- enough to produce
$24,000 a year of income in retirement. This proposal would cost $54
billion over 10 years.
- Tax Incentives For Small Businesses To Offer High-Quality Pension
Coverage. In an effort to encourage more small businesses to offer
pensions for their employees, the budget provides for a 50 percent tax
credit for three years of qualified contributions to employees'
pensions. This provision would cost $17 billion over 10 years.
REWARDING WORK AND FAMILY
- Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC): The President is
proposing a $23 billion plan to expand the EITC. According to estimates
by the Department of the Treasury, the President's proposed EITC
expansion would deliver tax relief for 6.8 million families, providing
up to $1,155 in additional tax relief. The President's proposal builds
on the 1993 expansion signed into law by the President, which provided a
tax cut for 15 million families.
- Reducing the Marriage Penalty for Married, Two-Earner Couples By
Increasing the Standard Deduction by More Than $2,000. The President
will propose to increase the standard deduction for two-income married
couples to twice that of single filers, providing substantial tax relief
for 9.1 million married couples. When fully phased in, this change
would result in a $2,150 increase in the standard deduction. The
President's proposal would also increase the standard deduction by $500
for single-earner married couples and by $250 for single filers. Both
elements of the President's plan would cost $45 billion over 10 years
and benefit 42.1 million families.
- Alternative Minimum Tax Relief: The President will propose in his
budget a $33 billion proposal over 10 years to correct serious design
flaws in the individual Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) that increasingly
hurt middle-income families with children who play by the rules. It
complicates their tax preparation and raises their tax bills. The
President's proposal will take over 9 million families per year off the
AMT when fully phased in.
EXPANDING EDUCATION INCENTIVES
- College Opportunity Tax Cut: The President will propose a College
Opportunity Tax Cut costing $30 billion over 10 years to, for the first
time, make tax deductible up to $10,000 of tuition and fees for any
post-secondary education (includes training and graduate school).
Families would also have the option to take a 28 percent credit, which
would be worth almost twice as much as a deduction for families in the
15 percent tax bracket. In general, the proposal would provide up to
$2,800 annually in tax relief per family.
- Tax Credits For School Construction and Modernization: To address
this critical need, President Clinton is renewing his commitment to
provide $24.8 billion in tax credit School Modernization Bonds and
Qualified Zone Academy Bonds over two years to modernize up to 6,000
schools. The cost would be $8 billion over ten years.
MAKING HEALTH CARE MORE AFFORDABLE
- Long-term Care Credit: As part of a 10-year initiative that helps
address the nation's multifaceted long-term care challenge, the
President proposes a $3,000 tax credit to compensate people with
long-term care needs or their caregivers for the cost of care. The cost
is $27 billion over 10 years.
- Expanding Health Coverage Through Targeted Tax Credits: As part of his
initiative to dramatically improve the affordability of and access to
health insurance for at least 5 million uninsured Americans, the
President will propose $12 billion in targeted tax cuts to expand health
insurance options for Americans facing unique barriers to coverage.
HELPING FAMILIES AFFORD CHILD CARE
- Child Care Tax Credit. President Clinton will include in his FY2001
budget tax relief for families struggling to pay for child care. As
part of a comprehensive child care initiative that includes subsidy
assistance and new investments in child care quality, the President will
propose to 1) make the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit refundable
for the first time; 2) increase the level of the credit; and 3) extend
the credit to parents who stay at home to take care of their infants.
The President will also propose tax incentives to encourage businesses
to provide child care for employees. The child care package would
benefit an estimated 8.1 million families and would cost $30 billion
over 10 years.
OPENING NEW MARKETS & EMPOWERING COMMUNITIES
- A Major Expansion of the New Markets and Empowerment Zone Tax Credits:
As part of the President's New Markets initiative, which will spur at
least $22 billion in new capital investment in businesses in
economically-distressed areas, the President has proposed to more than
double the proposed New Markets tax credit at a cost of about $5 billion
over 10 years and expand Empowerment Zone Tax Incentives at a cost of
$4.4 billion.
- New Markets Tax Credit. The budget more than doubles the proposed New
Markets tax credit to spur $15 billion in new private investment. An
entity making new equity investments in a selected community development
projects would be eligible for a tax credit worth up to 25% of the cost
of the investment. A variety of vehicles providing equity and credit to
businesses in underserved areas would also be eligible.
- Empowerment Zone Tax Incentives. The President is proposing to expand
the Empowerment Zones tax incentives to promote economic growth in
underserved areas through expanding business investment incentives,
ensuring that all Empowerment Zones get the wage tax credit, and the
creation of a Third Round of 10 new Empowerment Zones.
- Better America Bonds. The President is proposing Federal tax credits
to pay the interest on $10.75 billion in bonds over 5 years for
investments by State, local, and tribal governments. The bonds can be
used to preserve green space, create or restore urban parks, protect
water quality and clean up brownfields (abandoned industrial sites).
The cost is $3.1 billion over 10 years.
- Increase the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit. To expand and improve the
supply of available low-income housing, the budget raises the allocation
of low-income housing tax credits to States. The President proposes to
raise the State per capita cap from $1.25 to $1.75 beginning in 2001 and
index it for inflation thereafter at a cost of $5.7 billion over 10
years. This proposal would provide additional incentives to build and
make an additional 180,000 units of affordable housing available to
working families over the next five years.
INCREASING ENERGY EFFICIENCY & IMPROVING THE ENVIRONMENT
- Tax Credits For Energy-Efficient Cars, Homes, and Appliances. Cars
and light trucks currently account for 20 percent of U.S. greenhouse gas
emissions. The budget provides for tax incentives to help curb these
emissions by moving advanced technologies for the purchase of qualifying
hybrid vehicles from the laboratory to the highway. Tax credits would
be offered for the purchase of qualifying hybrid vehicles from 2003
through 2006; and the current tax credit for electric vehicles and fuel
cell vehicles would be extended through 2006. The President is also
proposing tax credits for the purchase of energy-efficient homes; for
solar energy systems, for the purchase of energy-efficient heating and
cooling equipment; and for wind and biomass power. The cost of these
proposals would be $9 billion over 10 years.
ENCOURAGING CHARITABLE GIVING
- Encouraging Philanthropy. President Clinton will unveil a package of
new tax proposals to encourage philanthropy. First, he will propose
allowing non-itemizers to take a tax deduction for charitable giving.
Second, he will propose new rules to make it easier for charitable
foundations to make gifts in times of need. And third, he will propose
to raise the limit for individual donations of appreciated assets like
securities and real property. These proposals would cost $14 billion
over 10 years.
CURBING CORPORATE SHELTERS AND REDUCING UNWARRANTED TAX SUBSIDIES
The President also proposes sound tax policies, including proposals to
curb corporate tax shelters and reductions in unwarranted tax subsidies,
which pay for $96 billion of the targeted tax cuts over 10 years. Tax
shelters require taxes for everyone else to be higher and create
perceptions of unfairness and disrespect for the system. The budget
increases disincentives for entering into abusive transactions and
attacks specific tax shelter transactions. The Department of the
Treasury will continue to study additional remedies for corporate tax
shelters and will work with Congress to address this issue.
III. THE CLINTON-GORE ECONOMIC RECORD
- The Economy Then and Now
- Paying Off the Debt
- A Smaller, But More Progressive Government
THE CLINTON-GORE ECONOMIC RECORD:
WHAT A DIFFERENCE SEVEN YEARS MAKES
After seven years, the results of President Clinton and Vice President
Gore's economic leadership for the American people are clear. In 1992,
when Bill Clinton was elected President, the American economy was barely
creating jobs and wages were stagnant. His bold, three-part economic
strategy focused on establishing fiscal discipline; investing in
education, health care, science and technology; and opening foreign
markets so that American workers have a fair chance to compete abroad.
Seven years later the results of this strategy are clear:
Deficits Replace By Surpluses: Keeping Us On Track to Be Debt Free by
2013
- 1992. The deficit was $290 billion -- the highest dollar level in
history. When President Clinton took office, the Congressional Budget
Office projected the deficit would grow to $404 billion in 1999 and $455
billion in 2000.
- Today. In 1999, we had a budget surplus of $124 billion -- the
largest dollar surplus on record (even after adjusting for inflation)
and the largest as a share of our economy since 1951. This year the
Administration forecasts a surplus of $167 billion. With the
President's plan, we are now on track to eliminate the nation's publicly
held debt by 2013.
Government Spending: Lowest in Over Three Decades
- 1981-92. Under Presidents Reagan and Bush, Federal government
spending as a share of the economy increased from 21.6 percent in 1980
to 22.2 percent in 1992.
- Today. Under President Clinton, Federal government spending as a
share of the economy has been cut from 22.2 percent in 1992 to 18.7
percent in 1999 -- its lowest level since 1966.
Taxes for Typical Families: Lowest in Over Two Decades
- 1981-92. The total Federal tax rate rises for middle-income families
from 23.7 percent in 1980 to 24.5 percent in 1992. (Total tax rates
include both the employer and employee portion of the Social Security
and Medicare payroll taxes.)
- Today. Under President Clinton, the total Federal tax rate for
middle-income families has dropped from 24.5 percent in 1992 to 22.8
percent in 1999 -- that's the lowest tax rate since 1978. For families
at one-half the median income, the effective Federal tax rate has been
slashed from 19.8 percent in 1992 to 14.1 percent in 1999 -- that's the
lowest tax rate since 1968.
Jobs Are Up: Nearly 21 Million Created Since January 1993
- 1981-1992. In their three terms combined, Presidents Reagan and Bush
created only 18.5 million new jobs despite the growth of the labor force
from the maturation of the baby boom. Only 2.5 million jobs were
created under President Bush, with nearly half of them in the public
sector.
- Today. The economy has created 20.8 million new jobs since January
1993. This is the most jobs ever created under a single President.
There have been an average of 248,000 jobs created per month -- a faster
rate than any President. And 19.2 million -- 92 percent -- of the new
jobs were created in the private sector, the highest share since Harry
Truman was President.
Faster Economic Growth: 3.9 Percent Per Year
- 1981-1992. The economy grew an average 1.7 percent per year under
President Bush and 2.8 percent per year during the Reagan-Bush years.
- Today. Since President Clinton took office, growth has averaged 3.9
percent per year.
Private-Sector Growth Is Up: 4.4 Percent Per Year
- 1981-1992. The private sector of the economy grew 2.9 percent
annually from 1981-1992.
- Today. The private sector of the economy has grown 4.4 percent
annually since 1993.
Equipment and Software Investment Is Growing Faster Than Ever
- 1981-1992. Real equipment and software investment rose just 3.8
percent annually during the previous Administration and only 4.7 percent
annually for the entire Reagan-Bush period.
- Today. Real equipment and software investment is up 12.1 percent per
year under President Clinton -- faster than any Administration on
record. We have seen seven consecutive years of double digit growth in
equipment and software investment, for the first time on record.
Homeownership Is Up: The Highest in American History
- 1981-1992. The homeownership rate fell from 65.4 percent in 1981 to
64.2 percent in 1992.
- Today. In 1999, the homeownership rate was 66.8 percent -- the
highest ever recorded.
Inflation is Down: The Lowest Core Rate In 35 Years
- 1981-1992. The underlying core rate of inflation averaged 4.7 percent
annually.
- Today. In 1999, the underlying core rate of inflation was 1.9 percent
-- the lowest since 1965.
Welfare Rolls Dropped Dramatically: Lowest Since 1969
- 1981-1992. The number of welfare recipients increased by almost 2.5
million (a 22 percent increase) to 13.6 million people.
- Today. Between January 1993 and June 1999, the number of welfare
recipients dropped by 7.2 million (a 51 percent decline) to 6.9 million
-- the lowest level since 1969.
Unemployment Is Down: The Lowest Rate in 30 Years
- 1981-1992. The unemployment rate averaged 7.1 percent and rose to
more than 10 percent in 1982 and 1983.
- Today. In January 2000, the unemployment rate was 4.0 percent -- the
lowest rate in 30 years. The unemployment rate has been below 5 percent
for 31 consecutive months.
Unemployment for African Americans the Lowest on Record
- 1981-1992: African American unemployment reached 21.2 percent in
January 1983 - a record high, and never dropped below 10 percent.
- Today. The African-American unemployment rate has fallen from 14.2
percent in 1992 to 8.0 percent in 1999 -- the lowest rate on record.
Unemployment for Hispanics Recovered From Record Highs to Achieve Record
Lows
- 1981-1992. Hispanic unemployment hit a record high of 15.7 percent in
December 1982.
- Today. The Hispanic unemployment rate has dropped from 11.6 percent
in 1992 to 6.4 percent in 1999 -- the lowest rate on record.
Real Wages Rising Again: Fastest Growth in Two Decades
- 1981-1992. Real average hourly earnings fell 4.3 percent under
Presidents Reagan and Bush.
- Today. Real wages have grown 6.6 percent under President Clinton.
Real wages have grown for five consecutive years -- for the first time
since the 1960s.
Poverty For African-Americans Dropped to Lowest On Record
- 1981-1992. Between 1980 and 1992, the poverty rate for African
American remained at 30 percent or more.
- Today. Since 1993, the African-American poverty rate has dropped from
33.1 percent to 26.1 percent in 1998 -- the lowest level recorded, and
the largest five-year drop in African-American poverty since 1967-1972.
Poverty For Hispanics Dropped to Lowest Since 1979
- 1981-1992. Between 1980 and 1992, the poverty rate for Hispanics
increased from 25.7 percent to 29.6 percent.
- Today. Since 1993, the Hispanic poverty has dropped to 25.6
percent - the lowest since 1979.
Poverty For Single Mothers is the Lowest On Record
- 1981-1992. Between 1980 and 1992, an additional 2.1 million families
with single mothers were pushed into poverty.
- Today. Under President Clinton, the poverty rate for families with
single mothers has fallen from 46.1 percent in 1993 to 38.7 percent in
1998 - the lowest level on record.
Family Income Up More Than $5,000 Since 1993
- 1988-1992. Median family income, adjusted for inflation, fell by
$1,864, dropping from $44,354 in 1988 to $42,490 in 1992.
- Today. Since 1993, real median family income has increased by $5,046,
rising to $46,737 in 1998.
THE CLINTON-GORE ADMINISTRATION:
PAYING OFF THE DEBT BY 2013
The Clinton-Gore Administrations' FY2001 budget proposes a plan to keep
America on track to pay off the debt by 2013. An era of deficits has
given way to an era of surpluses, with the unified budget surplus
projected to rise to $167 billion this year - the largest surplus ever
and the third unified surplus in a row. The budget also projects the
on-budget surplus, which excludes Social Security, to be $19 billion in
FY2000 - the second consecutive on-budget surplus. The President's
budget builds on this historic fiscal strength with a plan to invest in
key priorities like education and health, strengthen Social Security and
Medicare, and pay down the debt by 2013.
LARGEST UNIFIED SURPLUS EVER
- Instead of a $455 billion deficit, a $167 billion surplus this year -
the largest ever. In 1992, the deficit was $290 billion - the largest
dollar deficit in American history. In January 1993, the Congressional
Budget Office projected that the deficit would grow to $455 billion by
2000. Today, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is projecting a
$167 billion surplus -- the third consecutive surplus and the largest
surplus ever, even after adjusting for inflation. Compared with
original projections, that is $622 billion less in government drain on
the economy and $622 billion more available for private investment in
one year alone.
- Largest surplus as a share of the economy since 1951. The 2000
surplus is projected to be 1.7 percent of GDP - the largest surplus as a
share of GDP since 1951.
- Three surpluses in a row -- for the first time in over 50 years. The
$167 billion projected surplus in FY2000 follows a surplus of $124
billion in FY 1999 and $69 billion in FY 1998. The last time America
had three surpluses in a row was over fifty years ago in 1947-49. The
FY2000 surplus marks the eight consecutive year of fiscal improvement,
for the first time in American history --surpassing the pre-Clinton best
of five straight years.
- A projected on-budget surplus of $19 billion in 2000-- the second
consecutive on-budget surplus. OMB projects that the on-budget surplus,
which excludes Social Security, will be $19 billion in 2000. This
follows an on-budget surplus of $0.7 billion in 1999. The last time
America balanced the budget without using Social Security funds was in
1960. The President is committed to continuing to ensure that the
entire Social Security surplus is protected for debt reduction.
LARGEST DEBT REDUCTION EVER
- The President's plan would eliminate the debt by 2013 -- 2 years
earlier than planned. The President's plan to use the entire Social
Security surplus for debt reduction, to devote the interest savings from
this debt reduction to extend the life of Social Security to at least
2050. The
President's plan also uses nearly half of the non-Social Security
surplus over the next decade for debt reduction and to extend the life
of Medicare by shoring up the Hospital Insurance trust fund, would put
America on the path to eliminate the debt in 2013. This is two years
earlier than projected in the President's June 1999 plan.
- Interest payments would be eliminated. Currently we spend 13 cents of
every Federal dollar on interest payments. These payments, which were
once projected to grow to 26 percent of all federal spending in 2013,
would be eliminated under the President's plan.
- On track to pay down $297 billion in debt held by the public over
three years. In 1998 and 1999, the debt held by the public was reduced
by a combined $140 billion. OMB is projecting that the United States
will pay down an additional $157 billion in debt held by the public this
fiscal year. That will bring the total debt pay down to $297 billion -
the largest three-year debt pay down in American history.
- The debt held by the public is on track to be $2.4 trillion lower in
2000 than was projected when the President took office. In 1993, the
debt held by the public was projected by the Office of Management and
Budget to balloon to $5.9 trillion by 2000. Instead, shrinking deficits
and surpluses in the last three years are projected to bring the debt
down to $3.5 trillion in 2000 -- $2.4 trillion better than expected. In
1993, the debt held by the public was 49.5 percent of GDP and projected
to rise to 64.7 percent of GDP in 2000. Instead, it has been slashed to
a projected 36.3 percent of GDP.
- As a result, interest payments on the debt in 2000 are $128 billion
lower than projected. In 1993, the net interest payments on the debt
held by the public were projected to grow to $348 billion in 2000.
Fiscal discipline has slashed this figure to a projected $220 billion --
a $128 billion improvement for one year alone.
REDUCING SPENDING WHILE CUTTING TAXES FOR MIDDLE-INCOME FAMILIES
- Federal spending as a share of the economy is the lowest since 1966.
The spending restraint under President Clinton has brought spending down
from 22.2 percent of GDP in 1992 to 18.7 percent of GDP in 1999 -- the
lowest in over thirty years. At the same time, President Clinton has
increased investments in education, technology and other areas that are
vital to growth.
- While balancing the budget and paying down the debt, President Clinton
has provided tax relief for working families. The tax cuts signed into
law by the President in 1993 and 1997 -- for example, the expanded
Earned Income Tax Credit, the $500 child tax credit, the $1,500 HOPE
Scholarship Tax Credit, and the expanded IRAs have reduced taxes for
American families. The total Federal tax rate for middle-income
families has dropped from 24.5 percent in 1992 to 22.8 percent in 1999
-- that's the lowest tax rate since 1978. For families at one-half the
median income, the effective Federal tax rate has been slashed from 19.8
percent in 1992 to 14.1 percent in 1999 -- that's the lowest tax rate
since 1968.
WHAT FISCAL DISCIPLINE MEANS FOR AMERICA
- Lower interest rates have already cut mortgage payments by $2,000 for
families with a $100,000 mortgage. Because of the policy of deficit and
debt reduction, it is estimated that a family taking out a home mortgage
of $100,000 expects to save roughly $2,000 per year in mortgage
payments. This has helped raise the homeownership rate to 66.8 percent
in 1999 --the highest rate on record.
- Lower interest rates cut car payments by $200 annually for families
taking out a typical car loan.
- Lower interest rates cut student loan payments by $200 annually for a
person with a typical student loan.
- Lower debt will help maintain strong economic growth. With the
government no longer draining resources out of capital markets,
businesses have more funds for productive investment. This has helped
to fuel a 12.1 percent real annual increase in productive equipment and
software investment since 1993 -- the seventh consecutive year of double
digit growth, the strongest period of growth on record. This compares
to 4.7 percent annual growth from 1981-92, a period that saw the debt
held by the public quadruple.
- Rising investment has contributed to a pickup in productivity growth.
Non-farm business productivity has grown at a 2.7 percent average annual
rate for the last four years. This compares to 1.5 percent growth from
the 1970s through the early 1990s.
WHAT THE EXPERTS SAY
Experts agree that President Clinton's 1993 economic plan helped reduce
the deficit, lower interest rates, spur business investment, and
strengthen the economy. The economy and the budget are now working in a
virtuous circle -- lower deficits have led to lower interest rates which
have led to faster business investment which led to faster growth which
led to even lower deficits. Experts agree that the President's 1993
Economic Plan helped create this virtuous circle:
- Alan Greenspan, Federal Reserve Board Chairman, 1/04/00 with President
Clinton at Chairman Greenspan's re-nomination announcement: "My
colleagues and I have been very appreciative of your [President
Clinton's] support of the Fed over the years, and your commitment to
fiscal discipline "has been instrumental in achieving what in a few
weeks-- will be the longest economic expansion in the nation's history."
- Paul Volcker, Federal Reserve Board Chairman (1979-1987), in Audacity,
Fall 1994: "The deficit has come down, and I give the Clinton
Administration and President Clinton himself a lot of credit for that.
[He] did something about it, fast. And I think we are seeing some
benefits."
- Business Week, 5/19/97: "Clinton's 1993 budget cuts, which reduced
projected red ink by more than $400 billion over five years, sparked a
major drop in interest rates that helped boost investment in all the
equipment and systems that brought forth the New Age economy of
technological innovation and rising productivity."
- Goldman Sachs, March 1998: One of the reasons Goldman Sachs cites for
the "best economy ever" is that "on the policy side, trade, fiscal, and
monetary policies have been excellent, working in ways that have
facilitated growth without inflation. The Clinton Administration has
worked to liberalize trade and has used any revenue windfalls to reduce
the federal budget deficit."
- Lehman Brothers, 1/10/94: "Lower deficits, lower long-term rates and
higher real growth was the overall promise. With the data now rolling
in for December 1993, it seems clear that President Clinton delivered on
all three counts..."
A SMALLER BUT MORE PROGRESSIVE GOVERNMENT
President Clinton and Vice President Gore have cut Federal spending and
cut the Federal workforce, reversing twelve years when the Republicans
exploded the deficit and more than quadrupled the debt. At the same
time, the Clinton-Gore Administration has made investments in everything
from education to science and technology to health care to tax relief
for working families.
PAYING OFF THE DEBT BY 2013
- The debt quadrupled under President's Reagan and Bush. The debt held
by the public increased from $712 billion in 1980 to $3.0 trillion in
1992. In early 1993, the debt was projected to rise to $5.9 trillion in
2000. The President's fiscal discipline has slashed that to a projected
$3.5 trillion in 2000. That is $2.4 trillion less in debt than was
projected seven years ago.
- On track to pay-down $297 billion in debt held by the public over
three years. In 1998 and 1999, the debt held by the public was reduced
by $140 billion. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) is
projecting that the United States will pay-down an additional $157
billion in debt held by the public this fiscal year. That will bring
the total debt pay-down to $297 billion --the largest three-year debt
pay down in American history. This keeps us on track to pay off the
debt held by the public by 2013 --two years ahead of the President's
previous projection.
LOWEST GOVERNMENT SPENDING IN OVER THREE DECADES
- Federal spending as a share of the economy is the lowest since 1966.
The fiscal restraint under President Clinton has brought spending down
from 22.2 percent of GDP in 1992 to 18.7 percent of GDP in 1999 -- the
lowest since 1966. At the same time, President Clinton has increased
investments that are vital for future growth, including nearly doubling
education and training. Under Presidents Reagan and Bush, Federal
government spending as a share of the economy increased from 21.6
percent in 1980 to 22.2 percent in 1992.
- Non-defense discretionary Federal spending as a share of the economy
is the lowest on record. Since President Clinton took office,
non-defense discretionary spending has fallen from 3.7 percent of GDP in
1992 to 3.3 percent of GDP in 1999 - the lowest as a share of the
economy on record. Over this period, total discretionary spending fell
from 8.6 percent of GDP to 6.3 percent of GDP, also the lowest on
record. (Comparable data for these categories goes back to 1962.)
- Discretionary spending down under President Clinton and up under the
previous two Administrations. Real discretionary spending has fallen by
1.1 percent per year under President Clinton; from 1980 to 1992, real
discretionary spending increased 1.0 percent per year.
- Lower general government spending -- as a share of GDP -- than any
major economy in the world. According to the OECD, the U.S. has lower
total government spending --Federal, state, and local -- as a share of
GDP than any major economy in the world.
SMALLEST FEDERAL WORKFORCE IN 40 YEARS
- The smallest Federal civilian workforce in 40 years. The Federal
civilian workforce increased from when President Reagan took office to
when President Bush left office. Since President Clinton took office,
the Federal workforce has been cut by 377,000 "nearly a fifth" and is
now lower than any time since 1960.
LOWEST TAXES FOR MIDDLE-INCOME FAMILIES IN OVER TWO DECADES
- While balancing the budget and paying down the debt, President Clinton
has provided tax relief for working families. The tax cuts signed into
law by the President in 1993 and 1997 -- for example, the expanded
Earned Income Tax Credit, the $500 child tax credit, the $1,500 HOPE
Scholarship Tax Credit, and expanded IRAs, have reduced taxes for
American families. The total Federal tax rate for middle-income
families has dropped from 24.5 percent in 1992 to 22.8 percent in 1999
-- that's the lowest tax rate since 1978. For families at one-half the
median income, the effective Federal tax rate has been slashed from 19.8
percent in 1992 to 14.1 percent in 1999 -- that's the lowest tax rate
since 1968.
IV. HIGHLIGHTS OF THE FY2001 BUDGET
- Education and Training
- Child Care
- Health Care
- Environment
- Working Families
- Community Empowerment
- From Digital Divide to Digital Opportunity
- Research & Development
- Safe Communities
- United States Leadership in the World
- America's Armed Forces
- Restoring Fairness to Legal Immigrants
- Tobacco Policy
- Farm Safety Net
- Building One America
EDUCATION AND TRAINING
Education and training have been a cornerstone of the Clinton-Gore
Administration's agenda since 1993. The President's initiatives have
helped to provide students with the educational opportunities they need
to reach high standards, enhanced the quality of teaching, made college
more affordable for all Americans, and offered lifetime education and
training opportunities to those in need. The President's FY2001 budget
builds on these efforts and offers new initiatives to improve the
educational and training opportunities needed for a strong economy and
healthy communities. At the core of these proposals is a basic
principal: we must invest more in our schools and demand more from them.
Proposing the Largest Head Start Expansion in History. The President's
budget increases funding for Head Start by $1 billion -- the largest
funding increase ever proposed for the program -- to provide Head Start
and Early Head Start to approximately 950,000 children. This funding
will bring within reach the President's goal of serving one million
children in 2002 and builds the foundation for the long-term goal of
universal pre-school. Early Head Start, created by the Clinton-Gore
Administration in 1994, brings these services to families with children
ages zero to three and to pregnant women. The President's FY2001
proposal would increase funding for Early Head Start by $143 million.
Since 1993, this Administration has already increased funding for Head
Start by 90 percent.
Fixing Failing Schools and Rewarding Success. The President believes
that we must not only demand more from our schools, we must also invest
more in them. The following initiatives provide resources and
incentives to help all students meet high academic standards:
- Universal After-School for Students in the Most Need. The President
and Vice President propose to invest $1 billion in the 21st Century
Community Learning Centers program to help ensure that every child in
every failing school has extended learning opportunities in the
after-school and summertime hours. The Administration's budget will
maintain the commitment to serving all children, but will dedicate much
of the increase to help those children most in need of academic
assistance as part of a comprehensive approach to help low-achieving
students meet high academic standards.
- Accountability Fund. In his FY2001 budget, the President will propose
to nearly double funding from $134 million in FY2000 to $250 million to
turn around failing schools. This funding is used by states and
localities to turn around low-performing schools through a variety of
approaches, including overhauling the curriculum, improving staffing, or
bringing in new management and staff. The initiative also includes
provisions supporting public school choice for students in failing
schools.
- Rewarding High Performance and Closing the Achievement Gap. The
President also proposes a $50 million initiative to provide bonuses to
states that make exemplary progress in improving student performance and
closing the achievement gap between high and low-performing groups of
students. States would be eligible for bonuses based on student
performance and narrowing of the achievement gap as indicated by
performance on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP).
- Class Size Reduction. The President's budget request maintains his
commitment to reduce class size in the early grades by staying on a path
to hiring 100,000 high-quality teachers by 2005. The Administration's
FY2001 budget will boost funding for this initiative to $1.75 billion,
an increase of $450 million over current levels -- enough to fund about
49,000 teachers, nearly half way to our long-term goal.
- Small, Safe and Successful High Schools. The President's budget will
include $120 million for a Small Schools Initiative to reinvent high
schools on a smaller scale and make them more responsive to student
needs. School districts could use this money to create small schools or
to break up existing large schools into smaller learning communities.
Districts would be expected to demonstrate increases in student
achievement, graduation rates, and the number of students pursuing
postsecondary options, and decreases in disruptions and violence.
Teaching to High Standards. This initiative is a new $1 billion teacher
quality plan to recruit, train and reward good teachers. The Teaching
to High Standards Initiative will give grants to states and districts to
fund high-quality, standards-based professional development for
teachers. It also includes several new proposals:
- Higher Standards-Higher Pay for Teachers. This $50 million initiative
will award grants to high-poverty school districts to help them attract
and retain high-quality teachers through better pay and higher
standards. Participating teachers would receive immediate pay
increases; some would receive additional raises for exceptional work.
- Teacher Quality Rewards. This $50 million program will reward school
districts that have made exceptional progress in reducing the number of
uncertified teachers and out-of-field teachers. The President has
proposed requiring states to ensure that 95 percent of teachers are
certified and 95 percent of secondary teachers are teaching within field
by 2004.
- Hometown Teacher Recruitment. This $75 million program would make
students aware of the opportunities available in the teaching
profession; provide mentoring and teaching experiences as they progress
through school; and provide financial assistance for students who pursue
bachelor's degrees with the goal of teaching in high-need communities
after graduation.
- Transition to Teaching. This $25 million initiative will build on the
success of the Department of Defense's Troops to Teachers program by
recruiting and preparing talented mid-career professionals from diverse
fields to become teachers in high-need subject areas and high-need
schools.
- School Leaders Initiative. This $40 million program will fund
non-profit partnerships designed to recruit, prepare and provide
professional development for superintendents and principals, and other
school leaders to bolster their capacity to lead high-performing
schools. Funding would support approximately 20 centers and 10,000
school leaders.
- Early Childhood Educator Professional Development. This $30 million
competitive grant program will fund partnerships to help early childhood
educators in high-poverty communities obtain high-quality professional
development, and improve their capacity to work with young children,
particularly on the language and literacy skills that are the foundation
for academic advancement.
Special Education. The President's budget proposes nearly $6.4 billion
to support the education of children with disabilities under the
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). This increase
includes almost $300 million to help states and local school districts
educate children with disabilities, as well as an increase of more than
$30 million in competitive grants, including funds for states to help
schools comply with IDEA. Funding for special education has more than
doubled since 1993.
Charter Schools. The President's budget will increase funding for
charter schools by $30 million dollars from $145 million to $175
million. Charter schools are public schools that are open to all and
given a great deal of flexibility in exchange for agreeing to meet
defined goals for student performance. With 1,700 charter schools now
in operation, this funding will help reach the President's goal of 3,000
charter schools by 2002.
College Test Preparation for Low-Income Students. This $10 million
initiative will provide rigorous SAT/ACT college preparation programs to
low-income students. Competitive grants would be given to partnerships
that would provide college preparatory services to college-bound
students.
Challenging Coursework Online. This $10 million initiative will support
the development of high quality, Web-based Advanced Placement, second
language, and other challenging courses. The program will provide
grants of up to three years to partnerships for research, development
and evaluation of innovative technologies that can help provide
high-quality learning experiences for all students no matter where their
school is located.
School Construction and Modernization. President Clinton is renewing
his commitment to his School Modernization Bonds by proposing $24.8
billion in tax credit bonds over two years to modernize up to 6,000
schools. Within this $24.8 billion program, $2.4 billion is reserved
for Qualified Zone Academy Bonds. In addition, the budget includes a
new $1.3 billion urgent/emergency school renovation loan and grant
proposal. This proposal would cost $8 billion over 10 years.
College Opportunity Tax Cut. The College Opportunity Tax Cut expands
the President's Lifetime Learning tax credit in order to make college,
graduate school, and job training more affordable for millions of
families. The proposal would give families, for the first time, the
option of taking a tax deduction or a 28 percent tax credit on tuition
and fees to pay for college and other higher education. This is worth
nearly twice as much as a deduction for families in the 15 percent
bracket. The proposal would cover up to $5,000 of educational expenses
in 2001 and 2002 and rise to $10,000 of educational expenses from 2003
forward. This proposal would provide up to $2,800 in tax relief
annually to help American families pay for college, graduate work, or
courses taken to improve job skills. This proposal will provide
families with $30 billion in tax relief over the next 10 years.
Increasing Support for College Access. In the new economy, education is
the key to economic opportunity. The FY2001 budget includes a nearly $1
billion boost in investments to make college more affordable for
economically disadvantaged students.
- Pell Grants. The Pell Grant program provides grants to economically
disadvantaged young people to help pay the cost of post-secondary
education. The FY2001 budget increases the maximum Pell award $3,500.
Funding for the Pell Grant program is increased by over $716 million,
bringing the total Pell Grant appropriation to $8.356 billion.
- SEOG. The Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (SEOG)
program provides campus-based grant assistance to needy undergraduate
students. Generally, this program supplements the aid students receive
from other sources, and leverages institutional aid by at least one
dollar for every three Federal dollars. The FY2001 budget provides $691
million.
- Work Study. Work Study provides students with the opportunity to work
their way through college. The FY2001 budget includes $1.011 billion
for Work-Study, an increase of $77 million to continue the President's
commitment to serve one million students.
- Dual Degree Programs for Minority-Serving Institutions. This new $40
million program increases opportunities for an estimated 3,000 students
at minority-serving institutions. Students would receive two degrees
within five years: one from a minority-serving institution, and one from
an institution in a field in which minorities are underrepresented.
Keeping Young People On Track for Success. Students not only need help
to pay for college, they need support to enter and complete college.
The President's FY2001 budget includes an increase of more than $400
million for programs designed to prepare students to take full advantage
of post-secondary opportunities.
- GEAR UP. GEAR UP is a nationwide initiative to encourage more
disadvantaged young people to have high expectations, stay in school,
study hard, and take the right courses to go to and succeed in college.
GEAR UP is funded at $200 million in FY2000, enough to provide services
to over 750,000 students. The FY2001 budget provides a 62.5% increase
to $325 million, enough to provide services to 1.4 million students.
- TRIO. The TRIO programs seek to motivate and prepare students to go
to and stay in college. The FY2001 budget provides $725 million for
TRIO, an increase of $80 million to help provide assistance to over
760,000 students, 37,000 more than in 2000.
- College Completion Challenge Grants. The FY2001 budget creates a new
initiative within the TRIO program called College Completion Challenge
Grants (CCCG). Although college enrollment rates have risen, 37 percent
of students that go on to post-secondary school drop out before they get
a certificate or a degree. The problem is especially acute for
minorities: 29 percent of African Americans and 31 percent of Hispanics
drop out of college after less than one year, compared to 18 percent of
whites. The CCCG program is designed to address this problem with a
comprehensive approach including pre-freshman summer programs, support
services and increased grant aid to students. This $35 million
initiative will improve the chances of success for nearly 18,000
students.
- Youth Opportunity Grants and Youth Training Formula Grants. These
competitive grants provide comprehensive employment and training
assistance to youth, primarily out-of-school youth in high poverty
areas. The President's FY2001 budget provides a 50 percent increase in
funding to $375 million, enough to serve 85,000 youth in high poverty
areas. In addition, the FY2001 budget provides a $22 million increase
(to $1.022 billion) for the Youth Activities formula grant program.
This level will provide job training and summer job opportunities to
about 612,000 disadvantaged young people.
- Youthbuild. This program is targeted to 16-24 year old high school
dropouts, and provides disadvantaged young adults with education and
employment skills through rehabilitating and building housing for
low-income families and homeless people. Funded at $75 million, the
Youthbuild programs will provide opportunities for approximately 3,330
trainees in 2001.
- Job Corps. Job Corps is the nation's largest and most comprehensive
residential education and job training program targeted at impoverished
young people. The FY2001 budget increases funding by $35 million,
bringing the total budget to $1.393 billion.
Investments in Job Training to Ensure Economic Opportunity. The
President's FY2001 budget expands successful training programs and
implements new ones focused on providing needed training for young
people, displaced workers and individuals with disabilities.
- Employment of People with Disabilities. The budget proposes a $1,000
tax credit for workers with disabilities to defray costs including
improving access to employment and training programs.
- Universal Reemployment Initiative. The Dislocated Worker Training
program provides training and support services to help permanently
dislocated workers return to productive, unsubsidized employment. The
President's FY2001 budget provides an increase of $181 million and
provides assistance to almost 1 million dislocated workers. Also
included in the budget is $50 million to provide reemployment assistance
to unemployment claimants.
- Responsible Reintegration for Young Offenders. This new $75 million
initiative in the Department of Labor helps young offenders under age 35
to successfully reintegrate into the mainstream economy. Competitive
grants will be made to partnerships between the criminal justice system
and local workforce investment systems. This effort will be operated in
conjunction with a related initiative at the Department of Justice that
focuses on community safety and the supervision of ex-offenders.
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) School Construction and Repair. The
President has proposed $300 million, more than double the FY2000 enacted
level of $133 million, to replace and repair BIA-funded schools on
reservations. This is the largest investment ever in a single year for
BIA school construction and repair. Of these funds, $126 million would
be used to assist in replacing at least six of the 185 BIA-funded
schools on reservations. The remaining $174 million would provide for
much-needed health and safety-related repairs, improvements, and
maintenance that together comprise a roughly $700 million backlog.
Training and Recruiting New Native American Teachers. Only two-thirds
of Native American students successfully complete high school. To
address this challenges the budget provides $10 million for the
Education Department to continue the second year of the Administration's
initiative to begin training and recruiting 1,000 new teachers to serve
in schools with high concentrations of American Indian and Alaska Native
students.
New American Indian Administrator Corps. The President and the Vice
President propose $5 million for a new Department of Education
initiative, the American Indian Administrator Corps, that will support
the recruitment, training, and in-service professional development of
500 American Indians and Alaska Natives to become effective school
administrators in schools with high populations of Native American
students. As in the Native American teacher initiative,
higher-education institutions are encouraged to form consortia with the
tribal colleges in order to develop this program.
CHILD CARE
The Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget includes a comprehensive
child care initiative to address the struggles our nation's working
parents face in finding child care they can afford, trust and rely on.
Through unprecedented tax relief and subsidy support, the President's
balanced budget includes a package of proposals to help working families
pay for child care, improve the safety and quality of care, expand
after-school programs and promote early learning.
The number of children with parents who work outside of the home is
higher than ever before. In 1996, three out of four mothers with young
children worked outside of the home, compared to one in four in 1965.
During the Clinton-Gore Administration, funding for child care has more
than doubled. Still, many eligible children do not receive assistance.
Tax Relief for Over 8 Million Families with Child Care Expenses. The
Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit (CDCTC) provides tax relief to those
who, in order to work, pay for the care of a child under 13 or for a
disabled dependent or spouse. The President's proposals, which cost $30
billion over 10 years, broaden this tax relief and will help over 8
million families pay their child care expenses:
- Making the Credit Refundable for Nearly Two Million Working Parents.
Under current law, a typical family of four with an income under $25,000
is ineligible for credits for child care expenses because it has no
income tax liability. Many such families earn too little to claim the
credit, but too much to get the full benefit of child care subsidies.
To help these families, the President proposes to make the CDCTC
refundable for the first time - so that families with no tax liability
can receive up to $2,400 to help offset the cost of child care. This
proposal will assist nearly two million families.
- Increasing the Child Care Tax Credit. For families earning up to
$60,000, the President proposes to increase the maximum level of the
CDCTC from 30 percent to 50 percent. This will provide an average
additional tax cut of $249 for these families and eliminate tax
liability for nearly all families with incomes below 200 percent of
poverty that claim the maximum allowable child care expenses. Under
this proposal, a family of four with an annual salary of $35,000, and
child care expenses of $3,100, would receive a tax credit of $1,395 --
an increase of $775 over current law. This expansion proposal will help
over four million working families pay for child care.
- Providing Tax Relief to Parents Who Stay at Home. The President will
also propose enabling parents who stay at home with children under age
one to take advantage of the Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit by
claiming assumed child care expenses of $500. This proposal will
provide an average tax cut of $154, benefiting almost two million
parents.
Proposing the Largest Head Start Expansion in History. The President's
budget increases funding for Head Start by $1 billion - the largest
funding increase ever proposed for the program - to provide Head Start
and Early Head Start to approximately 950,000 children. Head Start
prepares low-income children for a lifetime of learning by providing
early, comprehensive child development services.
Universal After-School for Students in the Most Need. The President and
Vice President propose to invest $1 billion in the 21st Century
Community Learning Centers program to help ensure that every child in
every failing school can have a safe place to learn during the afterschool
and summertime hours. This more than doubles the FY2000
investment. The Administration's budget will maintain the commitment to
serving all children, but will dedicate much of the increase to help
those children most in need of academic assistance as part of a
comprehensive approach to help low-achieving students meet high academic
standards. The budget provides sufficient funding to make after- or
summer-school programs universally available to all students attending
Title I school identified as low-performing, nearly tripling the number
of children served by the program to 2.5 million.
Helping Low-Income Families Afford Child Care. The President's budget
boosts the Child Care and Development Block Grant by $817 million in
FY2001, enabling the program to provide child care subsidies to nearly
150,000 more children next year. These new funds, combined with the
child care funds provided in welfare reform, will enable the program to
serve over 2.2 million children in 2001, an increase of nearly one
million since 1997.
Promoting Early Learning. The President's budget includes $3 billion
over five years for the Early Learning Fund to help improve child care
quality and early childhood education for children under five years old.
The Early Learning Fund will provide community grants for activities
that foster cognitive development, improve child care quality and
promote readiness for school. Resources could be used to help child
care providers get training or certification, facilitate licensing or
accreditation of child care centers, and reduce child-to-staff ratios.
Supporting High-Quality Early Childhood Educators. The President's
budget includes $30 million to ensure that well-trained professionals
are teaching our young children. The Early Childhood Professional
Development initiative will provide competitive grants to local
partnerships that can pull together universities, local school districts
and child care providers. The initiative would focus on equipping early
childhood educators with the tools they need to help children develop
vital language and literacy skills.
Supporting Parents in Higher Education by Offering College Campus Based
Child Care. To help low-income parents pursue higher education, the
President's budget includes $15 million -- a $10 million increase over
last year's funding level -- to provide an additional 150 college
campuses with grants to support the establishment or expansion of child
care services. States may also use a share of the Child Care and
Development Block Grant for this purpose.
Creating New Child Care Tax Incentives for Businesses. In his budget,
President Clinton will also propose a new tax credit for businesses that
provide child care services for their employees. These services could
include: building or expanding child care facilities, operating existing
facilities, training child care workers, or providing child care
resource and referral services. The credit covers 25 percent of
qualified costs (and 10 percent of resource and referral service
expenses), but may not exceed $150,000 per year per business. This tax
credit costs $1.4 billion over 10 years.
HEALTH CARE
The Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget includes investments to
address the nation's long-term care needs, improve the quality of care,
expand the Administration's commitment to biomedical research, and
safeguard and improve the public health.
Addressing the Nation's Multi-faceted Long-term Care Needs. The
President's FY2001 budget will include a $28 billion, 10-year investment
in long-term care. The initiative tackles the complex problem of
long-term care that affects millions of elderly, people with
disabilities, children with special needs and the families who care for
them. Its centerpiece is a $3,000 tax credit for people with long-term
care needs or their caregivers -- the budget triples the credit over
last year's proposal. In addition to the tax credit, the initiative
will: (1) provide funding for services which support family caregivers
of older persons; (2) improve equity in Medicaid eligibility for people
in home- and community-based settings; (3) encourage partnerships
between low-income housing for the elderly and Medicaid; and (4)
encourage the purchase of quality private long-term care insurance by
Federal employees. This initiative complements the Administration's
effort, spearheaded by the Vice President, to improve the quality of
care in nursing homes.
Assuring the Quality of Health Care. Since he took office, President
Clinton has been aggressive in his efforts to promote patients' rights
and ensure the delivery of high-quality health care.
- Patients' Bill of Rights. Over the coming year, the President will
continue to challenge the Congress to finally finish the overdue job of
passing patients' rights legislation that includes critical protections
such as: guaranteed access to needed health care specialists; access to
emergency room services when and where the need arises; continuity of
care protections so that patients will not have an abrupt transition in
care if their providers are dropped; access to a fair, unbiased and
timely internal and independent external appeals process to address
health plan grievances; and an enforcement mechanism that ensures
recourse for patients who have been harmed as a result of a health
plan's actions. Last fall, over 60 Republicans joined virtually every
Democrat in the House in voting for the Norwood-Dingell Patients Bill of
Rights. This strong, enforceable, patient protections bill should not
be watered down in a manner that makes it ineffective and unworthy of
signing by including provisions that further segment healthy from
unhealthy populations without significantly expanding coverage for the
currently uninsured.
- Protecting Medical Privacy. The Clinton-Gore Administration will also
continue to act to protect the privacy of Americans' private medical
information. This year the Administration will issue historic, final
rules that will legally guarantee key privacy protections: notice of
data uses; consent before records are used for non-medical purposes;
patient access to records; proper security; and effective enforcement.
In addition, the President will continue to advocate for strong Federal
action on this issue and encourage Congress to pass legislation that
ensures that this private information will not be used to discriminate
against Americans seeking employment, being evaluated for promotion, or
purchasing health insurance.
New Initiatives. The President's FY2001 budget includes new initiatives
to improve health care quality.
- Preventing Medical Errors and Improving Quality of Care. The FY2001
budget responds to the President's request to act aggressively to
develop new avenues for the prevention of medical errors. It will
include new funds to improve medical errors prevention, patient safety
research, reporting and information dissemination. More detailed
information about these initiatives, as well as additional actions the
Administration is currently reviewing, will be outlined in the Quality
Interagency Task Force's response to the President, scheduled to be
released early this year.
- Protecting Patients Purchasing Prescription Drugs Over the Internet.
This initiative would invest $10 million in new funds in the
investigation, identification, and prosecution of entities selling
unapproved new drugs, counterfeit drugs, prescription drugs without a
valid prescription, expired or illegally diverted pharmaceuticals, and
the marketing of products based on fraudulent health claims. It would
certify internet pharmacy sites that meet all state and Federal
requirements. It would also update the current penalty structure to
create new civil money penalties for dispensing without a valid
prescription over the internet or for selling drugs without Federal
certification; and provide FDA with new administrative subpoena
authority in order build a case against offenders.
Supporting Biomedical Research. The President's FY2001 budget includes
almost $19 billion, an increase of $1 billion over last year's funding
level, for biomedical research at the National Institutes of Health
(NIH). Two years ago, the President called for an increase of almost 50
percent over 5 years in the NIH budget as part of his Research for
America Fund. Since that time, the NIH budget has increased by over
$4.3 billion and with the funding proposed by the President this year,
the Administration will be one year ahead of schedule in reaching the 50
percent goal. As a result, NIH now supports the highest levels of
research ever on nearly all types of disease and health conditions. In
addition, the budget proposes to repeal the provision enacted for 2000,
which would delay the availability of 2000 funds for NIH and other HHS
programs.
Safeguarding and Improving the Public Health. President Clinton's
FY2001 budget affirms the Administration's commitment to improving
public health and invests in several priorities including: new efforts
to combat HIV and AIDS; food safety programs; additional efforts to
combat emerging infectious diseases; family planning efforts nationwide;
efforts to promote childhood immunizations; a Medicare demonstration
project on cancer clinical trials; mental health and substance abuse
prevention activities; and improving the nation's response to the threat
of bioterrorism.
- Combating the Spread of HIV / AIDS and Other Diseases. The
President's FY2001 budget calls for an additional $100 million
investment in AIDS prevention, care, public health infrastructure, and
education in the African and Asian countries that have been hit the
hardest by the disease. It also includes a new tax credit for sales of
vaccines for malaria, tuberculosis, and AIDS to accelerate the
development of these vaccines, building upon a proposed $50 million
investment in the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunization (GAVI).
Finally, the President will call upon the World Bank to dedicate up to
$900 million annually to expand immunization, treat common diseases, and
build delivery systems for basic health services. The President's
budget also invests an additional $125 million in the Ryan White
Program, an increase of almost 8 percent over last year's funding level,
to provide primary medical care, drugs critical to treatment, and other
support services for people living with HIV and AIDS. The budget also
includes an additional $50 million for HIV prevention, community
intervention to encourage individuals at risk to avoid behaviors that
can result in the transmission of the disease and increase the number of
people who know their HIV status.
- Enhancing the Nation's Food Safety System. A total of $422 million is
included in the President's budget for his interagency food safety
initiative -- a $68 million, or 19 percent, increase over FY2000
enacted. The initiative includes funding for the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS)
to: achieve annual inspections of high-risk domestic food
establishments; expand the number of imported food exams; enhance the
national network of public health laboratories capable of subtyping
foodborne pathogen DNA for rapid response to disease outbreaks
(PulseNet); and expand research, risk assessment and education
activities. Funding is also included for HHS and USDA to begin
implementation of the Egg Safety Action Plan adopted by the President's
Council on Food Safety.
- Major Increase in the War on Emerging Infectious Diseases: This
initiative will dedicate an additional $20 million, a 45 percent
increase over the FY2000 funding level, to further the development of a
national electronic disease surveillance network to track newly emerging
infectious diseases, such as West Nile-like encephalitis, and new
strains of influenza, and provide essential information to public health
clinics, hospitals, and health care providers. Funds will also be used
to enhance local investigations, education, and focused disease
monitoring nationwide, and promote the dissemination of new software for
outbreak detection.
- Increasing Family Planning Efforts Nationwide: The FY2001 budget will
invest an additional $35 million, a 16 percent increase over the FY2000
funding level, for grants to family planning clinics providing
reproductive health services and clinical care to over 5 million low
income women. These new funds will be used to prevent over a million
unintended pregnancies year by improving the delivery of comprehensive
reproductive health services, including STD and cancer screening and
prevention, and HIV prevention, education and counseling; providing
educational programs that encourage adolescents to postpone of sexual
activity; increase the accessibility of contraceptive counseling and
services; increasing efforts to provide effective contraceptives to
those in need; and developing partnerships with other community based
providers to conduct outreach to adolescents at risk. In addition, the
budget continues the requirement that health plans in Federal Employee
Health Benefits Programs (FEHBP) offer a full range of contraceptive
options.
- Promoting Childhood Immunizations: The budget proposes almost $1
billion for childhood immunizations, including the Vaccines for Children
program and CDC's discretionary immunization program. The incidence of
vaccine-preventable diseases among children, such as diphtheria,
tetanus, measles, and polio, is at an all-time low.
- Establishing Medicare Cancer Clinical Trial Demonstration: The budget
gives more Americans access to these cutting-edge cancer treatments and
encourages higher participation in clinical trials by establishing a
three-year, $750 million demonstration program. Medicare beneficiaries
who participate in certain cancer clinical trials will have their
routine patient care costs covered for those trials.
- Expanding Substance Abuse Activities: The budget includes a $82
million increase for the prevention and treatment of substance abuse, a
50 percent increase from the FY 1993 enacted level. These new funds
continue the Administration's commitment to expand substance abuse
treatment for thousands of under-served Americans. To help communities
address gaps in substance abuse services for emerging areas of need, the
budget proposes an additional $54 million for Targeted Capacity
Expansion grants. With this increase and an additional $31 million in
funding for the Substance Abuse Block Grant, the budget will provide
treatment for another 15,000 individuals. In addition, in JanuarY2001,
the FEHBP's benefit structure will, for the first time, provide for
parity in the provision of mental health and substance abuse benefits,
illnesses which have long been given less favorable treatment by the
health care industry.
- Increasing Federal Support for Improving the Mental Health of All
Americans: According to the December 1999 Surgeon General's Report on
Mental Health, one in five Americans is living with a mental health
disorder. This report states that the fundamental components of
effective service delivery are broadly agreed upon, but in short supply.
The budget includes a new investment of $100 million for mental health
services, an increase of 16 percent over last year's funding level and a
90 percent increase since 1993.
- Improving Asthma Treatment for Low-income Children: The budget
proposes $100 million in demonstration grants ($50 million in FY2001 and
$50 million in FY2002) to States test innovative asthma disease
management techniques for children enrolled in Medicaid to help these
children receive the most appropriate care, and keep their asthma in
check.
ENVIRONMENT
The Clinton-Gore Administration FY2001 budget proposes a record $42.5
billion in FY2001 to protect our natural resources, our communities and
families, and the global environment. The proposed environment budget
represents an 11 percent increase over FY2000 and a 36 percent increase
over FY 1993. It includes major initiatives to preserve America's lands
legacy, combat global warming, protect tropical forests, end childhood
lead poisoning, and build more livable communities
A Permanent Lands Legacy for America. In FY2000, the President secured
$652 million, a 42 percent increase for his Lands Legacy initiative.
For FY2001, the President is proposing $1.4 billion, the largest
one-year investment ever in conserving America's land and coastal
resources. In addition, the President is proposing a new, protected
budget category to preserve this higher level of funding in future
years. More than half this dedicated funding would be used to support
state and local conservation efforts. For FY2001, the President
proposes:
- Helping Communities Protect Wildlife and Open Space. The President's
budget proposes $521 million, almost four times current funding, to help
state, local, and tribal governments protect wildlife and local green
spaces. Priorities include protecting threatened farmland, working
forests, wetlands, and urban parks. This includes a new $100 million
grant program to help states protect non-game wildlife.
- Saving Natural and Historic Treasures. $450 million, a 7 percent
increase, for Federal acquisition and protection of critical lands,
including: wildlife-rich bayous in the Lower Mississippi Delta, giant
sequoias in California's Sierra Nevada, Civil War battlefields, the
historic Lewis and Clark trail, fragile Southern California desert, and
the Florida Everglades.
- Providing Special Assistance to Coastal Areas. $429 million, a 159
percent increase, to protect ocean and coastal resources, including $100
million for a new program to help coastal states address environmental
impacts of existing offshore oil and gas development, and $100 million
to help state, local and tribal efforts to restore coastal salmon in the
Pacific Northwest.
Meeting the Challenge of Global Warming. The President is proposing
$2.4 billion -- a 42 percent increase -- to combat global climate
change, and $1.7 billion for scientific research into factors
influencing climate and the likely consequences of global warming.
Highlights include:
- Promoting Clean Energy at Home and Abroad. $289 million to develop
technologies that convert crops and other "biomass" into clean fuels and
other products; and over $200 million, a 105 percent increase, to
promote the export of clean energy technologies to developing nations.
- Moving New Technology into the Marketplace. The budget proposes $9
billion over 10 years in tax relief to encourage the purchase of
energy-efficient cars, homes, and appliances, and the production of
wind, solar, and biomass power.
- Advancing Clean Energy Research. $1.4 billion, a 30 percent increase,
to develop and deploy renewable energy and energy efficiency
technologies for the buildings, transportation, industry and utility
sectors; and to research coal and natural gas efficiencies and carbon
sequestration.
- Helping Local Clean Air Efforts. $85 million for a new Clean Air
Partnership Fund for state and local projects that reduce both
greenhouse gases and air pollutants like soot and smog.
Protecting Forests and Biodiversity Around the World. The President is
proposing $150 million for a new Greening the Globe initiative to help
stem the loss of forests worldwide -- especially tropical forests, which
support more than half the known species on earth. The initiative will
help developing nations strengthen their economies by preserving their
forests. It includes:
- Targeted Conservation Investments. $100 million, a 60-percent
increase, for programs at the U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID) that help more than 60 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin
America conserve their forests and other natural areas.
- Debt-for-Nature Swaps. $37 million, almost three times current
funding, to relieve developing countries of debt owed to the United
States when they commit to invest in forest conservation.
- Research and Wildlife Protections. $10 million to protect wildlife
habitat and research causes and prevention of forest fires; $3 million
to protect endangered elephants, tigers, and rhinos.
- Monitoring Forest Loss from Space. A new program led by USAID and
NASA to compile the first comprehensive satellite maps of the world's
tropical forests, and to work with national and international partners
to regularly monitor and report on future changes in forest cover.
Building Livable Communities. The President is proposing $9.3 billion,
a 14 percent increase, for the Administration's Livable Communities
initiative, which helps communities grow in ways that enhance their
quality of life and ensure strong, sustainable economic growth.
Priorities include:
- Community Transportation Choices. $9.1 billion to help ease traffic
congestion, including a record $6.3 billion for light rail and other
transit systems; $1.6 billion for innovative local programs that ease
congestion while reducing air pollution; and $468 million for an
expanded passenger rail fund.
- Better America Bonds. The President is proposing Federal tax credits
to pay the interest on $10.75 billion in bonds over 5 years for
investments by State, local, and tribal governments. The bonds can be
used to preserve green space, create or restore urban parks, protect
water quality and clean up brownfields (abandoned industrial sites).
The cost is $3.billion 1 over 10 years.
- Crime Data Sharing. $125 million for grants to state and local
governments to improve public safety through data sharing and the use of
advanced crime-solving technologies.
- "Smart Growth" Partnerships. $25 million to promote strategic
regional "smart growth" planning in urban and rural communities.
Protecting Children From Lead Poisoning. The President is proposing
$165 million to launch a 10-year strategy to end childhood lead
poisoning by eliminating lead hazards, strengthening enforcement,
advancing research, and improving health monitoring and intervention.
FY2001 priorities include:
- Making Homes Lead-Safe. $120 million, a 50 percent increase, for
grants and other Housing and Urban Development efforts to reduce lead
paint hazards in low-income homes with children under six.
- Increased Enforcement. $6 million for the Environmental Protection
Agency and the Department of Justice to increase public education and
enforcement of lead-disclosure rules.
Promoting Conservation on the Farm. The President is proposing $3
billion, a $1.3 billion increase over currently authorized levels, for
voluntary programs that help farmers protect water quality and wildlife
habitat. A new $600 million Conservation Security Program would provide
additional income to family farmers who adopt comprehensive plans to
curb erosion and protect water supplies from polluted runoff. Other
proposed increases would expand efforts to restore habitat, preserve
streamside buffer zones, and protect farmland threatened by sprawl.
Restoring the Great Lakes. The President is proposing a new $50 million
initiative to help state and local governments restore polluted "areas
of concern" in the Great Lakes so they can be used for fishing,
swimming, boating and urban redevelopment. Matching grants could be
used to clean up contaminated sediments, control stormwater, restore
wetlands, acquire greenways and buffers, and control polluted runoff.
State or local governments would provide at least 40 percent of project
costs, resulting in a total investment of more than $80 million.
WORKING FAMILIES
Since 1993, the Clinton-Gore Administration has worked hard to reduce
poverty and increase opportunity for our most disadvantaged families.
The overall poverty rate fell to 12.7 percent in 1998, with 7.7 million
fewer people in poverty than in 1993. The child poverty rate has
declined from 22.7 percent to 18.9 percent -- the largest five year drop
in nearly 30 years. But despite the strongest economy in a generation,
there are still millions of workers struggling to raise a family and
make ends meet. The President believes that parents who work hard and
play by the rules should not have to raise their children in poverty.
President Clinton's FY2001 budget proposes to create new initiatives and
expand upon existing programs to help give working families the
opportunities they need to partake of our country's prosperity.
Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) to Even Better Reward Work
and Family. President Clinton proposes a $23 billion plan to expand the
Earned Income Tax Credit to reward work and family. According to
estimates by the Department of the Treasury, this EITC expansion would
provide tax relief for 6.8 million hard-pressed working families,
providing up to $1,200 in additional tax relief for some of them. The
President's proposal would build on his 1993 EITC expansion, which
provided a tax cut for 15 million families and made EITC even more
effective at encouraging work and reducing poverty, by:
- increasing benefits for families with three or more children;
- expanding the credit for married, two-earner couples;
- rewarding families that are working hard to move into the middle class
by lowering the phaseout rate; and
- encouraging savings through simplification.
Increasing the Minimum Wage. The President again proposes a $1 increase
in the minimum wage. This proposal, which builds upon President
Clinton's 1996 minimum wage increase, would help 10 million Americans --
70 percent of whom are adults and 60 percent of whom are women. For a
full-time, year-round worker at the minimum wage, this would mean an
additional $2,000 per year.
Individual Development Accounts. Since 1992, the President has
supported the creation of Individual Development Accounts (IDAs) to
empower individuals to save for a first home, post-secondary education,
or to start a new business. In 1998, the President signed into law
legislation authorizing a five-year $125 million demonstration program.
The President's budget provides $25 million for IDAs in FY2001. The
Administration will also propose to allow low-income working families to
use IDAs to save for a car that will allow them to get or keep a job.
Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) To Help Families Save and Invest And
Expand Pension Coverage for Small Businesses. The President's
Retirement Savings Accounts (RSAs) proposal will give 76 million
Americans the opportunity to build wealth and save for their retirement
through a progressive tax cut. This proposal builds on the successful
model of Individual Development Accounts (IDAs), extending generous
matches to all low- and moderate-income families to encourage them to
develop savings and assets. A person who participated for 40 years in
this savings program could accumulate over $266,000 -- enough to produce
$24,000 a year of income in retirement. This proposal would cost $54
billion over 10 years.
Tax Incentives For Small Businesses To Offer High-Quality Pension
Coverage. In an effort to encourage more small businesses to offer
pensions for their employees, the budget provides for a 50 percent tax
credit for three years of qualified contributions to employees'
pensions. This provision would cost $17 billion over 10 years.
Reducing the Marriage Penalty for Married, Two-Earner Couples By
Increasing the Standard Deduction by More Than $2,000. The President
will propose to increase the standard deduction for two-income married
couples to twice that of single filers, providing substantial tax relief
for 9.1 million married couples. When fully phased in, this change
would result in a $2,150 increase in the standard deduction. The
President's proposal would also increase the standard deduction by $500
for single-earner married couples and by $250 for single filers. Both
elements of the President's plan would cost $45 billion over 10 years
and benefit 42.1 million families.
Alternative Minimum Tax Relief: The President will propose in his
budget a $33 billion proposal over 10 years to correct serious design
flaws in the individual Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) that increasingly
hurt middle-income families with children who play by the rules. It
complicates their tax preparation and raises their tax bills. The
President's proposal will take over 9 million families per year off the
AMT when fully phased in.
Helping Families Afford to Take Family Leave. The President's budget
includes a $20 million family leave initiative to fund roughly 15
competitive planning grants for states and other interested entities to
explore ways to make parental leave and other forms of family leave more
affordable and accessible for American workers. Today, many workers
face barriers, such as financial barriers, to taking advantage of unpaid
leave. A 1996 Study by the Commission on Family and Medical Leave found
that loss of wages was the most significant barrier to parents taking
advantage of unpaid leave following the birth or adoption of a child.
The President's budget request will enable states and others to identify
in more detail the workers who need financial assistance to take
parental leave or other forms of family leave and to evaluate and
develop options to aid these workers.
Helping Low-Income Working Families Get to Work. Transportation to work
is a barrier for many low-income families. Some families need a car to
get to work, but owning a car can often be the one item that makes a
household ineligible for food stamps. The President's budget will make
it easier for working families to own a reliable vehicle and receive
food stamps by allowing states to conform their food stamp vehicle
policy with a more generous TANF vehicle policy. The Administration
will also propose to allow low-income working families to use IDAs to
save for a car that will allow them to get or keep a job. In addition,
the Administration supports expanding public transit as a reliable form
of transportation. The budget proposes to double Access to Jobs
transportation funding to $150 million to expand grants to communities
to develop innovative public transportation solutions that help more
low-income workers and welfare recipients get to work.
Helping Millions Move from Welfare to Work. In 1992, President Clinton
promised to end welfare as we know it, and now more than three years
after the enactment of the welfare reform law, we've seen revolutionary
changes to promote work and responsibility: the number of Americans on
welfare is at its lowest level since 1969 -- 30 years ago -- as millions
of people move from welfare to work. Since January 1993, the welfare
rolls have fallen by more than half, from 14.1 million to 6.9 million.
More than 1.3 million welfare recipients went to work in 1998 alone.
The 12,000 business participating in the Welfare to Work Partnership
launched by the President in 1997 have hired nearly 650,000 former
welfare recipients. The Federal government is also doing its share: in
1997, the President asked the Vice President to lead the Federal hiring
initiative to hire 10,000 welfare recipients over four years, and today,
we've far exceeded that goal, hiring more than 16,000 people at a time
when the Federal workforce is the smallest it has been in thirty years.
Helping More Long-term Recipients Move from Welfare to Work. Because of
the President's leadership, the 1997 Balanced Budget Act included $1.5
billion in each of years 1998 and 1999 for Welfare-to-Work grants to
help
long-term welfare recipients and certain non-custodial parents go to
work and support their children. Currently, grantees have up to three
years to spend the funds and fully implement these important efforts.
The President's budget allows grantees an additional two years to spend
these existing funds.
Ensuring Equal Pay. According to the Department of Labor, the average
woman who works full-time earns approximately 75 cents for each dollar
that an average man earns. For women of the color, the gap is even
wider. This gap is attributable, in part, to differing levels of
experience, education, and skill. However, even after accounting for
these factors, a significant pay gap still remains between men and women
in similar jobs. On January 24, the President announced a $27 million
Equal Pay Initiative in his FY2001 budget, an increase of $12 million
over FY2000. The Initiative requests $10 million for the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) to provide training and
technical assistance to about 3,000 employers on how to comply with
equal pay requirements and to launch a public service announcement
campaign on wage issues. The Initiative also dedicates $10 million for
the Department of Labor (DOL) to train women in nontraditional jobs,
including high-tech jobs and other skill shortage occupations. Lastly,
the Initiative provides $7 million for DOL to help employers assess and
improve their pay policies, support public education efforts, provide
for projects in non-traditional apprenticeships, and implement industry
partnerships. The President also called on Congress again to pass the
Paycheck Fairness Act, which would strengthen wage discrimination laws,
provide for new collection of data on wage issues, and provide for
additional research, training, and public education efforts on this
important subject.
Creating Initiatives to Collect More Child Support. Since the President
took office, child support collections have nearly doubled, from $8
billion in 1992 to $15.5 billion in 1999. Today, parents who owe child
support have their wages garnished, their bank accounts seized, and
their tax refunds withheld. To build on this success, the budget
contains several new measures to get parents to pay the child support
they owe and to ensure more support goes directly to families. Parents
who owe past-due child support will have their gambling winnings
intercepted. If they are delinquent, they will have their vehicles
booted, they will have a harder time obtaining or renewing a passport,
and they can be prohibited from enrolling as a Medicare provider. The
proposals also provide incentives for states to pass through more child
support payments directly to families, so that families leaving welfare
can keep all the payments, and families still working their way off can
keep up to $100 a month. Finally, the budget will require that child
support orders be updated more frequently. In total, these initiatives
will bring in nearly $2 billion more for families.
Fathers Work/Families Win Grants. The President's budget will contain
$255 million in new competitive grants in FY2001 to promote responsible
fatherhood and support working families, critical next steps in
reforming welfare and reducing child poverty. This budget will
encourage responsible fatherhood through $125 million in "Fathers Work"
grants to put approximately 40,000 non-custodial parents (mainly
fathers) who owe child support to work and help them connect with their
children. As part of this effort, states will need to put in place
procedures allowing them to require more parents who owe child support
to pay or go to work. The President's budget will also contain $130
million in "Families Win" grants to help about 40,000 low-income parents
stay in their jobs, move up the career ladder, and remain off cash
assistance. An important part of these grants will be to improve
families' access to food stamps, health care, childcare, and other
critical support for working families. Of these amounts, $10 million
will be set-aside for applicants from Native American workforce
agencies. This proposal complements other budget initiatives to ensure
that low-income working families have access to the health care coverage
and nutritional assistance they need.
Second Chance Homes. The budget includes $25 million in new funds to
support "second chance homes," adult-supervised and supportive living
arrangements, for unmarried teen parents and their children who cannot
live at home or with other relatives. States will be able to use these
funds, as they can other Social Services Block Grant (SSBG) funds, to
support services provided by faith-based and community-based
organizations. (Overall, the budget increases SSBG funds by $75 million
over current law.) This new initiative will be the latest of the
Administration's efforts to break the cycle of dependency and reduce
teen pregnancy, which have resulted in the lowest teen pregnancy rates
on record and an 18 percent decline in teen birth rates from 1991 to
1998.
Homeless Initiative. Homeless persons do not participate fully in
important health and other programs for which they are eligible. The
President's budget proposes legislation for a new $10 million initiative
that would improve homeless individuals' access to mainstream programs
that will help them move toward self-sufficiency. Demonstration grants
would be awarded to several states to improve access to and provide
coordination among mainstream programs such as Medicaid, State
Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families, Food Stamps, the Workforce Investment Act, and the
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Block Grants. The budget also
proposes $1.2 billion for homeless assistance programs at the Department
of Housing and Urban Development, including $105 million for 18,000
homeless vouchers.
COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT
The United States is currently in the midst of the longest expansion in
its history. The strength and duration of this expansion have helped
bring economic opportunity to millions of people once cut off from the
economic mainstream. But too many urban and rural areas have not
participated in this growth. Working with the private sector and state
and local governments, the President is committed to help these
communities participate in our country's economic prosperity. The
Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget proposes an expanded New
Markets initiative and Empowerment Zone program, a new program known as
First Accounts, creation of the new Delta Regional Authority, new
initiatives to close the Digital Divide, efforts to expand opportunities
to Native Americans as well as other programs that will provide
distressed communities with additional opportunities to succeed.
The New Markets Initiative. The President's budget provides tax credits
and loans guarantee incentives to stimulate $22 billion of new private
capital investments in economically distressed communities around the
country and build a network of private investment institutions to funnel
credit, equity and technical assistance to businesses in America's new
markets. In addition, the budget proposes a new initiative, known as
First Accounts that will provide low-cost bank accounts for working
families.
- More Than Doubling the New Markets Tax Credit. The President proposes
to more than double the New Markets tax credit to spur $15 billion in
new investment in community development in economically distressed
areas. An entity making new equity investments in a selected community
development project would be eligible for a tax credit worth 25 percent
of the cost of the investment. A variety of vehicles providing equity
and credit to businesses in underserved areas would be eligible. The
total cost of the tax credits amounts to $5 billion over 10 years.
- Expanded Empowerment Zones. The proposed expanded wage credits, tax
incentives, and new round of urban and rural EZs will extend and improve
economic growth in the 31 existing urban and rural Empowerment Zones,
administered by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)
and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), and support the proposed
third round of 10 new Empowerment Zones to be designated in 2001. The
total cost of these proposals will be $4.4 billion over 10 years.
- America's Private Investment Companies (APICs). Modeled after the
Overseas Private Investment Corporation's (OPIC) successful investment
fund program, the President's budget proposes $37 million to allow APICs
to provide guaranteed debt to private investment companies, licensed by
HUD, to help leverage private equity capital and lower the cost of
capital for investments in low- and moderate-income communities. For
every dollar that private investors provide, the government will
guarantee two dollars in debt to expand the APIC's pool of capital
available for making investments and enhance the return on those
investments to the private investors. APICs will make equity
investments in larger businesses that are expanding or relocating in
inner cities and rural areas.
- New Market Venture Capital Firms (NMVCs). The budget proposes $52
million to allow NMVC firms to match the equity of private investors
with Government-guaranteed debt and technical assistance funding to
cultivate the growth of smaller firms. NMVC would invest in smaller
growth companies that can also benefit from expert management
assistance.
- Creation of First Accounts. The President's budget proposes $30
million for the Department of Treasury to pilot strategies to help lowand
moderate-income Americans benefit from basic financial services.
Treasury will work with financial institutions and others: (1) to
encourage the creation of low-cost bank accounts (First Accounts); (2)
to expand access to automatic teller machines in safe, secure, and
convenient locations, including U.S. Post Offices, in low-income
neighborhoods; (3) to educate low-income Americans about the benefits of
having a bank account, managing household finances, and building assets.
The First Accounts initiative complements Treasury's Electronic Transfer
Accounts (ETAs) -- low-cost, electronic banking accounts for "unbanked"
Federal benefit recipients -- by reaching those not eligible to
participate in the ETA program because they are not Federal benefit
recipients.
- Other Elements of New Markets. Other elements in the budget include:
increasing the funding for SBA's microenterprise lending program to $50
million; $15 million to fund PRIME -- a program authorized last year to
provide technical assistance to low-income entrepreneurs; boosting CDFI
funding to $125 million; expanding support to $6.6 million for
BusinessLINC to encourage large businesses to work with small businesses
in new markets; and providing $5 million to establish a New Markets
University Partnerships pilot project which, under the auspices of HUD,
would provide Universities with funding to develop local community
partnerships, assistance to intermediaries, and technical and business
development assistance to new and existing firms. In addition, to
better serve Native American communities, the President will provide
additional funding to expand the New Markets initiative to Indian
Country.
Native American Initiative. In order to better serve Native American
communities in this millennium and to honor the Federal government's
trust responsibility to tribes, the President's budget includes an
increase of $1.2 billion over FY2000 -- the largest increase ever - for
a total of $9.4 billion for key new and existing programs assisting
Native Americans and Indian reservations. Some of the highlights
include:
- Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) School Construction and Repair. The
President has proposed $300 million, more than double the FY2000 enacted
level of $133 million, to replace and repair BIA-funded schools on
reservations. This is the largest investment ever in a single year for
BIA school construction and repair.
- Increased Funding for Tribal Colleges. The budget proposes increased
funding of $25 million for the Nation's tribal colleges for a total of
$77 million.
- Indian Health Service. The President's budget proposes $2.6 billion,
an increase for the Indian Health Service (IHS) of $230 million or 10
percent over the FY2000 enacted level.
- Improving Law Enforcement in Indian Country. The budget proposes $439
million, an increase of $103 million over FY2000, for the Departments of
Justice and Interior for the third year of the President's Indian
Country Law Enforcement Initiative. The initiative will improve public
safety for the over 1.4 million residents on the approximately 56
million acres of Indian lands.
- Building Roads and Bridges in Indian Country. The Transportation
Department (DOT) will expand its program to improve roads and bridges on
Indian reservations. The President's budget proposes to give the Indian
Reservations Roads program the full authorization amount of $275 million
with an additional $74 million from a highway receipts account for a
total of $349 million, which is an increase of $117 million over the
previous year. This will allow Tribes to address the estimated backlog
of $4 billion in needs on these roads and bridges.
- Tribal Infrastructure Projects. The President and the Vice President
propose $49 million, an increase of $46 million over FY2000, for the
Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration (EDA) to
fund infrastructure, planning, and public works projects.
- Addressing the Digital Divide. To encourage Native Americans to
pursue careers in information technology and other science and
technology fields, the budget provides $10 million, to be administered
by the National Science Foundation, for grants to tribal colleges for
networking and access, course development, student assistance, and
capacity building.
- Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Contract Support Costs. Within the
overall BIA increase, the budget continues to support Tribal
self-determination by proposing $134 million, a $9 million or 7 percent
increase over 2000 for contract support costs. This funding provides $5
million for new and expanded contracts and $129 million for existing
contracts.
- Trust Services. The Administration is committed to improving trust
services and management through its trust reform efforts at the Interior
Department. The budget proposes $108 million, a 48 percent increase
over 2000, for improved trust services in the BIA for activities such as
probate, real estate appraisals, and other services.
- Indian Trust Fund Balances. The Administration is committed to
resolving disputed Indian trust fund account balances through informal
dispute resolution and supports the unique government-to-government
relationship that exists in Indian trust land management issues. After
Tribal consultations, BIA submitted its "Recommendations of the
Secretary of the Interior for Settlement of Disputed Tribal Accounts" to
Congress in November 1997. Legislation reflecting these recommendations
was proposed in 1998, but not enacted. The Department will continue
efforts to resolve trust fund account balances.
- Trust Land Management. As part of BIA's commitment to resolving trust
land management issues, Interior worked with Congress in 1999 to
repropose legislation (S. 1586) to establish an Indian Land
Consolidation program to address the ownership fractionation of Indian
land. In addition to $13 million for the Indian Land Consolidation
program, the budget provides $83 million for DOI's Office of Special
Trustee, including the trust management improvement project. Current
activities include verifying individual Indian's account data and
converting these data to a commercial-grade accounting system.
Creation of the Delta Regional Authority. In the Mississippi Delta,
poverty remains at 175 percent of the national average. The President's
budget proposes $153 million for the creation of a new Delta Regional
Authority, modeled after the successful Appalachian Regional Commission,
to bring the resources of a Federal-State partnership to the fight for
economic growth in the region. This partnership will help bring the
infrastructure and job training needed to make the Nation's prosperity a
reality in the Delta.
Closing the Digital Divide. Access to computers and the Internet and
the ability to effectively use this technology are becoming increasingly
important for full participation in America's economic, political and
social life. Unfortunately, unequal access to technology and high-tech
skills by income, educational level, race, and geography could deepen
the divisions that exist within American society. The President's
budget proposes a comprehensive package to help bridge the Digital
Divide and to help create more digital opportunity for all Americans.
These initiatives include $2 billion in tax incentives to encourage
private sector activities such as computer donations, and $380 million
in new and expanded initiatives to serve as a catalyst for
public-private partnerships designed to increase access, training and
applications for low-income families.
Expanding Housing Vouchers and Opportunities for Hard Pressed Working
Families. The President's budget will include $690 million for 120,000
new housing vouchers to subsidize the rents of low-income families.
These housing vouchers subsidize the rents of low-income Americans,
enabling them to move closer to job opportunities -- many of which are
being created far from where these families live. Of the 120,000 new
housing vouchers, 32,000 will be targeted to families moving from
welfare to work, 18,000 to homeless individuals and families, and 10,000
to low-income families moving to new housing constructed through the Low
Income Housing Tax Credit (LIHTC), with the remaining 60,000 vouchers
allocated to local areas to help address the large unmet need for
affordable housing. These new vouchers build on the 110,000 new housing
vouchers secured through the President's leadership over the past two
years. In addition, the President's budget proposes to increase the
Low-Income Housing Tax Credit volume cap from $1.25 per capita to $1.75
per capita and to index the cap to inflation after 2001,which will
provide additional incentives to build and make an additional 180,000
units of affordable housing available to working families over the next
five years.
Supporting Community Empowerment Fund (CEF). The CEF/EDI, funded at
$100 million in FY2001, working in tandem with the Section 108 loan
guarantee program, funded at $30 million in FY2001, will work with a new
pilot program beginning in 2000 to create loan pools to improve the
securitization of Section 108 loans.
AmeriCorps and Encouraging Community Service. Since the start of his
Administration, the President has encouraged and facilitated community
service. Over 150,000 young people have participated in AmeriCorps --
they have helped to immunize more than a million people; taught, tutored
or mentored 4.4 million children; helped build some 11,000 homes; and
truly sparked a new spirit of public engagement across the land. The
President's budget includes over $850 million for the Corporation for
National Service. This increase of nearly $120 million keeps AmeriCorps
on track for the President's goal of 100,000 members each year bY2004.
The budget will also include a new "AmeriCorps Reserves" program,
modeled after the military reserves, and designed to engage former Corps
members in times of need. The budget also includes $15.5 million in new
initiatives that reward innovations in youth service, as well as
additional resources to encourage service by senior citizens, and to
engage students in service through a new "Community Coaches" program.
Encouraging Philanthropy. The budget includes a comprehensive package
of new tax proposals to encourage philanthropy. The budget proposes
allowing non-itemizers to take a tax deduction for charitable giving.
New rules will make it easier for charitable foundations to make gifts
in times of need. In addition, the budget proposes making it easier for
individuals to donate appreciated assets like securities and real
property. These proposals would cost $14 billion over 10 years.
Strengthening Non-profits' Role in Community Development. Already many
faith-based and community-based organizations partner with government to
help our nation's families, but the President and Vice President believe
we should do more, and their budget proposes to increase the involvement
of religiously affiliated and community-based organizations in
after-school, housing, community development, criminal justice, welfare
reform, teen pregnancy prevention, and juvenile justice programs,
consistent with the constitutional line between church and state.
Helping More Long-term Recipients Move from Welfare to Work. Because of
the President's leadership, the 1997 Balanced Budget Act contained $3
billion for Welfare-to-Work grants to help long-term welfare recipients
and certain non-custodial parents go to work and support their children.
To fully implement these important efforts, the President's budget
allows grantees an additional two years to spend these existing funds.
Helping Low-Income Working Families Get to Work. Transportation to work
is a barrier for many low-income families. Some families need a car to
get to work, but owning a car can often be the one item that makes a
household ineligible for food stamps. The President's budget will make
it easier for working families to own a reliable vehicle and receive
food stamps by allowing states to conform their food stamp vehicle
policy with a more generous TANF vehicle policy. The Administration
will also propose to allow low-income working families to use IDAs to
save for a car that will allow them to get or keep a job. In addition,
the Administration supports expanding public transit as a reliable form
of transportation. The budget proposes to double Access to Jobs
transportation funding to $150 million to expand grants to communities
to develop innovative public transportation solutions that help more
low-income workers and welfare recipients get to work.
Homeless Initiative. Homeless persons do not participate fully in
important health and other programs for which they are eligible. The
President's budget proposes legislation for a new $10 million initiative
that would improve homeless individuals' access to mainstream programs
that will help them move toward self-sufficiency. Demonstration grants
would be awarded to several states to improve access to and provide
coordination among mainstream programs such as Medicaid, State
Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP), Temporary Assistance for
Needy Families, Food Stamps, the Workforce Investment Act, and the
Mental Health and Substance Abuse Block Grants. The budget also
proposes $1.2 billion for homeless assistance programs at HUD, including
$105 million for 18,000 homeless vouchers.
FROM DIGITAL DIVIDE TO DIGITAL OPPORTUNITY
Access to computers and the Internet and the ability to use this
technology effectively are becoming increasingly important for full
participation in America's economic, social and political life.
Unfortunately, there is strong evidence of a "digital divide"-- unequal
access to technology by income, education level, race, and geography.
In 1998, those with a college degree were more than eight times more
likely to have a computer at home and nearly sixteen times as likely to
have home Internet access as those with an elementary school education.
This growing divide also cleaves our community along income, ethnic, and
geographic lines, with affluent, white, and urban/suburban households
enjoying better computer and Internet access than their
African-American, Hispanic, less affluent and more rural counterparts.
Private sector competition and rapid technological progress are powerful
forces to bridge the digital divide and make Information Age tools
available for more and more Americans. By working with the private
sector and community-based organizations, the Administration can
accelerate the trend toward expanded access. But we also need to give
people skills to use technology and to promote content and applications
of technology that will help empower under-served communities. Building
on their past successes in bridging the digital divide, President
Clinton and Vice President Gore propose the following initiative to help
accomplish these goals:
Tax incentives to encourage private sector involvement. The budget
proposes $2 billion over 10 years in tax incentives to encourage private
sector donation of computers, sponsorship of community technology
centers, and technology training for workers, including:
- Encouraging companies to donate computers. The President proposes to
extend and expand the tax deduction that gives companies an incentive to
donate computers to schools, libraries and computer technology centers.
This enhanced deduction allows companies to deduct more than the cost of
their donation. Under current law, this deduction applies to donations
of computers to schools only and expires after the year 2000. The
President's proposal would extend this provision through June 30, 2004
and expand it to donations to public libraries or community technology
centers in Empowerment Zones, Enterprise Communities, and high-poverty
areas.
- Promoting corporate sponsorship of schools, libraries and community
technology centers. The President proposes tax relief to encourage
companies to sponsor schools and community technology centers in
Empowerment Zones, Enterprise Communities, and targeted low-income
areas. The President's proposal would allocate credits for $16 million
in corporate sponsorship to each of the 31 existing Empowerment Zones
and 10 proposed new Empowerment Zones and $4 million in corporate
sponsorship for each of the more than 80 Enterprise Communities. In
total, the President's proposal would help support up to nearly $1
billion in annual sponsorships to help improve schools and community
technology centers.
- Supporting technology training for workers. The President's proposal
would provide targeted tax relief to encourage companies to provide
computer training, workplace literacy, or other basic education for
employees who lack the basic skills to succeed in the modern workplace.
Companies would be allowed to take a 20 percent tax credit for up to
$5,250 in annual expenses per employee. Eligible employees generally
would not have received a high school degree or its equivalent.
Teacher training. The budget proposes $150 million to help train new
teachers entering the workforce to use technology effectively in the
classroom. Under the leadership of President Clinton and Vice President
Gore, the United States has made enormous progress in connecting schools
to the Internet and increasing the number of modern computers in the
classroom. However, access to computers and the Internet will not help
students achieve high academic standards unless teachers are as
comfortable with a computer as they are with a chalkboard. President
Clinton's budget calls for $150 million in Department of Education
grants -- double last year's investment of $75 million -- to achieve
this goal.
Community Technology Centers. The President proposes $100 million to
create up to 1,000 Community Technology Centers in low-income urban and
rural communities. The President's budget more than triples the
Department of Education's support for Community Technology Centers --
from $32.5 million in FY2000 to $100 million in FY2001. This
initiative, championed by Congresswoman Maxine Waters, was initially
funded at $10 million in FY 1999. It aims to help close the "digital
divide" by providing computers and Information Age tools to children and
adults who can not afford them at home.
Public/private partnerships. The President's budget includes a new $50
million Department of Commerce pilot program to expand access to
computers and the Internet for low-income families and to give these
families the skills they need to use these new Information Age tools
effectively. This new program will provide competitive grants to
public-private partnerships at the local level.
Innovative applications of technology. President Clinton's budget will
increase the investment in the Department of Commerce's
highly-successful Technology Opportunities Program (TOP) to $45 million
-- triple the current level of $15 million. Applications might include
public health information systems that raise childhood immunization
rates in inner cities, tele-mentoring for at-risk youth, and electronic
networks that strengthen local communities by fostering communication
and collaboration.
High-speed networks in underserved communities. High-speed Internet
access is becoming as important to the economic vitality of a community
as roads and bridges are today. The President proposes a new $25
million program at the Department of Commerce and the Department of
Agriculture to accelerate, through grants and loan guarantees, private
sector deployment of broadband networks in under-served urban and rural
communities.
Native Americans and information technology. The President proposes $10
million to prepare Native Americans for careers in information
technology and other technical fields. The National Science Foundation
will support efforts by tribal colleges to increase the number of Native
Americans who are prepared to pursue careers in information technology
and other technical fields.
RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT
President Clinton and Vice President Gore include a nearly $3 billion
increase in the "Twenty-First Century Research Fund" in their FY2001
budget, including a $1 billion increase in biomedical research at the
National Institutes of Health and double the largest dollar increase for
the National Science Foundation in its 50 year history. These
investments will ensure that science and technology will continue to
fuel economic growth and allow Americans to lead longer, healthier
lives. These investments also will enable America to continue to lead
in the 21st century by increasing support in all scientific and
engineering disciplines, including biomedical research, nanotechnology,
information technology, clean energy, and university-based research.
Specifically, this infusion of funds will enable researchers to tackle
important scientific and technological challenges.
The Benefits of Technology for America. Technology has helped fuel
American prosperity, improved the lives of American families, and
enabled us to learn more about the world around us.
- American Prosperity in the 21st Century. With rapid growth, increased
productivity and rising standards of living, the U.S. economy is
thriving, in large part because of our technological leadership.
Science and technology have become the engine of America's economic
growth: information technology alone accounts for 1/3 of U.S. economic
growth, and is creating jobs that pay almost 80 percent more than the
average private-sector wage. Many of the technologies that are fueling
today's economy are the result of government investments in the 1960's
and 1970's.
- Longer, Healthier Lives for All Americans. In the last 100 years, the
life expectancy of the average American has increased by almost 30
years, as a result of breakthroughs such as antibiotics. Today, we are
on the verge of even greater scientific advances, and continued
investment in health-related research could lead to greater life
expectancies and better quality of life.
- Educating America's High-tech Workforce. The President's investment
in university-based research will help spur innovations in new
technologies and treatment, while preparing the next generation of
leaders in science, engineering and technology.
- Cleaner Energy for a Cleaner Environment. Research can help America
create cleaner sources of energy and energy-efficient technologies, such
as fuel cells that emit only water, cars that get 80 miles per gallon,
and bioenergy derived from new cash crops.
- New Insights into the World Around Us. Increases in funding for
science-based research can lead to amazing breakthroughs in our
understanding of the world around us and beyond.
The President's FY2001 Proposals for Research and Development. In his
FY2001 budget the President is proposing a wide range of initiatives and
funding increases for vital investments in research and development:
- $1 billion Increase in Biomedical Research at the National Institutes
of Health (NIH). The President's FY2001 budget includes almost $19
billion, an increase of $1 billion over last year's funding level, for
biomedical research at NIH. In addition, the President will eliminate
the delays in releasing $4 billion in research funds as required in last
year's appropriations bill. This increase will support research in
areas such as diabetes, brain disorders, cancer, genetic medicine,
disease prevention strategies, and development of an AIDS vaccine. It
will also help researchers complete in the near future a first draft of
the entire human genome -- the very blueprint of life. This and other
wise investments in science are leading to a revolution in our ability
to detect, treat, and prevent disease. If Congress passes the
President's proposal, funding for NIH will increase by over 80 percent -
nearly twice what the NIH budget was when President Clinton came into
office.
- A New $495 Million National Nanotechnology Initiative. The
President's budget proposes an 83 percent increase in nanotechnology
research, from $270 million in FY2000 to $495 million in FY2001.
Nanotechnology -- the ability to manipulate individual atoms and
molecules - could revolutionize the 21st century in the same way that
the transistor and the Internet led to the Information Age. Increased
investments in nanotechnology could lead to breakthroughs such as
molecular computers that can store the contents of the Library of
Congress in a device the size of a sugar cube, new materials ten times
stronger than steel and a fraction of the weight, and the ability to
detect cancerous tumors that are a few cells in size.
- A $675 Million Increase in the National Science Foundation - Double
the Largest Dollar Increase in NSF's History. The President's FY2001
budget includes $4.6 billion for research and education investments at
the National Science Foundation (NSF). This represents a $675 million
(17 percent) increase over current funding levels. If Congress approves
this investment, it would double the largest dollar increase ever for
the Foundation, and NSF funding would have increased by 66 percent since
President Clinton took office. This increase will boost
university-based research and ensure balanced support for all science
and engineering disciplines. NSF accounts for half of all non-health
university-based research.
- An Almost $600 Million Increase in Information Technology Research.
The President's FY2001 budget provides $2.3 billion for IT R&D, almost
$600 million more than last year's appropriations and a billion dollars
more than the FY 1999 appropriation. This is the second year of the
Administration's "Information Technology for the Twenty-First Century"
initiative. This increase in information technology research could lead
to advances such as high-speed wireless networks that can bring distance
learning and telemedicine to isolated rural areas; and supercomputers
that can more accurately predict tornadoes and hurricanes, and more
rapidly develop life-saving drugs. These investments are consistent
with the recommendations of the President's Information Technology
Advisory Committee, a committee of experts in industry and academia
which has called on the government to substantially increases its
investment in long-term information technology research. Previous
Federal investments in information technology research have led to
today's Internet, the first "point and click" Web browser, advanced
microprocessors, and the technology for many of today's Internet search
engines.
- Promoting Bioenergy and Bio-based Products. The President's FY2001
budget proposal includes a new initiative in research and development in
bio-based technologies, which convert crops, trees, and other "biomass"
into a vast array of fuels and products. The initiative provides an
increase of more than $93 million over the amounts available for FY2000
-- a 47 percent increase. The initiative supports the President's goal
of tripling U.S. use of biobased products and bioenergy bY2010.
Reaching the President's goal would generate billions of dollars of new
income for farmers and diversify and strengthen the rural economy
producing 50,000 new, high-technology jobs in small processing plants in
rural America and up to 130,000 such jobs in biopower, bioproducts, and
biofuels industries. It would also lower the emissions of greenhouse
gases by 100 million tons, equal to the amount emitted by 70 million
cars.
- Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) Preparedness and Critical
Infrastructure Preparedness R&D. The President's budget provides $501
million, a $28 million increase, for WMD preparedness. This will
enhance our efforts to prevent, detect and respond to the release of
weapons of mass destruction. The budget also includes $606 million, a
$145 million increase, to improve the safety and security of the
Nation's "critical infrastructure." This is the power, communications,
information, transportation and other systems on which our economy and
quality of life depend.
- Integrated Science for Ecosystem Challenges. The budget proposes $747
million - a $90 million increase over FY2000 -- to support environmental
research to improve our understanding of the factors that result in
ecosystem decline and biodiversity loss, and to design more effective
options to prevent future declines.
SAFE COMMUNITIES
America has the lowest crime rate in a generation. The Clinton-Gore
Administration's FY2001 budget proposes a series of measures to continue
to make progress toward the goal of making America the safest large
country in the world.
21st Century Policing Initiative. The President's COPS program has
funded 100,000 more community police for our streets. The 21st Century
Policing Initiative builds on that success by:
- providing resources for communities to hire and redeploy up to 50,000
more police for our streets by FY2005, targeting new officers to crime
"hot spots";
- giving law enforcement access to the latest crime-fighting and
crime-solving technologies, such as improved police communications,
crime mapping software, laptop computers, and crime lab improvements;
- funding new state and local prosecutors to work with local law
enforcement and the community to combat local crime problems; and
- engaging all sectors of the community to prevent and fight crime by
funding partnerships with probation parole officers, schools and
faith-based organizations.
Stopping Crime by Stopping Drugs. Offenders under the influence of
drugs or in the pursuit of money to feed a drug habit commit many
crimes. To break the vicious cycle of drugs and crime, the President's
budget provides more funding to help states to implement tough, rigorous
systems of drug testing, punishment, and treatment of offenders under
criminal justice supervision. The President's $215 million initiative
would double current funding for this initiative to move more offenders
off of drugs and away from crime. Studies show that offenders who
complete drug-treatment are 70 percent less likely to commit crime. The
initiative will also fund innovative drug courts and intensive drug
treatment for state prisoners with the most serious drug problems.
Safe Schools. While overall school and youth crime continues to
decline, recent incidents of tragic violence in our nation's schools
reminds us that we can do more. The budget reaffirms the President's
commitment to school safety by calling for a significant expansion of
his Safe Schools/Health Students Initiative. The President's
initiative, first launched at the White House Conference on School
Safety in 1998, helps communities to develop and implement
community-wide responses to school and youth violence. The program
joins principals, parents, police and others in the community in
comprehensive strategies to address youth violence in and out of school.
The budget provides a $100 million increase for this initiative,
investing a total of nearly $250 million in this signature program.
Supervising Released Offenders: Project Reentry. The need for greater
supervision of the 500,000 inmates who will leave prison this year and
reenter local communities is significant: two-thirds of all prisoners
are re-arrested for new offenses within three years of release. The
President's budget contains $60 million for community supervision
initiative to create "reentry partnerships" and "reentry courts" to
address community safety concerns, lower recidivism rates, and promote
responsible fatherhood among offenders returning to communities. The
initiative is complemented by $75 million in Responsible Reintegration
for Young Offenders grants from the Department of Labor as well as $10
million in SAMHSA targeted capacity expansion grants for substance abuse
and mental health services at the Department of Health and Human
Services.
Reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act. In 1994, the
President signed into law the Violence Against Women Act (VAWA I), an
historic piece of Federal legislation that contains a broad array of
ground-breaking laws to combat the epidemic of violence against women.
The Clinton Administration has awarded over $1.3 billion in VAWA grants
since 1994. The President called on Congress to reauthorize this
historic piece of legislation this year, as part of his Crime bill, in
order to ensure that these programs and prevention strategies continue
in this millennium. The President's budget also includes $516 million
in order to combat domestic violence - $296 million for the Department
of Justice and $220 million for the Department of Health and Human
Services.
Improving Law Enforcement in Indian Country. The budget proposes $439
million, an increase of $103 million over FY2000, for the Departments of
Justice and Interior for the third year of the President's Indian
Country Law Enforcement Initiative. The initiative will improve public
safety for the over 1.4 million residents on the approximately 56
million acres of Indian lands. This funding will increase the number of
law enforcement officers on Indian lands, provide more equipment, expand
detention facilities, enhance juvenile crime prevention, and improve the
effectiveness of tribal courts. Although violent crime has been
declining nationally for several years, it has been on the rise in
Indian country. According to the Department of Justice, American
Indians are the victims of violent crimes at more than twice the rate of
all U.S. residents. Recognizing this, the President made a major
commitment to improve law enforcement in Indian country.
Fighting Gun Crime with the Largest National Gun Enforcement Initiative
in History. The President's strategy of combating gun violence has
helped lead to a 35 percent decline in gun crime. Building on that
success, the President's budget includes $280 million for the largest
national gun enforcement initiative in history. The initiative
specifically includes:
- 500 New ATF Agents and Inspectors. The President's initiative
includes the largest increase ever in ATF agents and inspectors, with
new agents to crack down on violent gun criminals and illegal gun
traffickers at guns shows, gun stores and on the streets and more
firearms inspectors to target unscrupulous gun dealers who supply
firearms to criminals and juveniles.
- Over 1,000 Federal, State, and Local Gun Prosecutors. The President's
initiative will fund more than 1,000 new Federal, state and local
prosecutors to incarcerate gun criminals. Specifically, the President's
budget will provide funding for 1,000 new state and local gun
prosecutors to work closely with communities, law enforcement, and
Federal prosecutors on gun-related crimes. In addition, over 100 more
Federal gun prosecutors in the offices of U.S. Attorneys, and 20 gun
enforcement teams will be funded in high gun crime areas across the
nation to coordinate enforcement efforts and maximize tough Federal
sentences against armed career criminals and illegal gun traffickers.
- Comprehensive Crime Gun Tracing. To move toward tracing every crime
gun in America, 250 local law enforcement agencies will receive training
and tracing equipment to facilitate comprehensive tracing. In addition,
the Administration's successful Youth Crime Gun Interdiction Initiative
(YCGII), which helps law enforcement crack down on traffickers that
illegally supply guns to young people, will be expanded from 38 to 50
cities across the country.
- New National Integrated Ballistics Information Network. The
President's budget will more than triple current funding for ballistics
testing programs to launch the first-ever national ballistics network --
to support the deployment of 150 ballistics imaging units to law
enforcement, helping to link bullets and shell casings to the criminal
guns they were fired from.
- Local Anti-Gun Violence Media Campaigns. To help communities send a
strong message to combat gun crime and violence, the budget funds $10
million in matching grants to support local anti-violence media
campaigns highlighting penalties for breaking gun laws, safe storage of
firearms and preventing child access.
Funding Innovative Smart Gun Technology. The accidental gun death rate
for children under 15 in the U.S. is nine times higher than in 25 other
industrialized nations combined. To help prevent accidental gun death
and injuries of children who obtain access to guns, gun theft, and other
unauthorized uses, the President's budget provides $10 million to fund
the expansion, testing and replication of "smart" gun technologies.
These state-of-the-art gun safety precautions can limit a gun's use to
its adult owner or other authorized users.
Strengthening Brady Background Checks. The President's budget provides
$70 million to double funding to improve state criminal history records
and improve the speed and accuracy of Brady background checks. In
addition, $5 million will fund a National Instant Notification (NIN)
system to help police apprehend criminals attempting to illegally
purchase firearms.
Keeping Used Police Guns Out of the Hands of Criminals. To end the
resale of used police guns and seized firearms on civilian markets where
criminals may gain access to them, the budget provides $10 million for
one-time grants to help law enforcement meet budgetary constraints on
the condition that they agree to halt the practice of resales.
UNITED STATES LEADERSHIP IN THE WORLD
At the start of a new century, the United States is faced with new
opportunities and new challenges as a global leader and the world's
strongest force for peace and prosperity. American leadership has been
instrumental in seizing new opportunities for peace, including reversing
ethnic cleansing and restoring stability to the Balkans; ending
bloodshed in Northern Ireland; brokering peace in the Middle East
between Israel and its neighbors; restoring democracy in East Timor;
supporting Russia's transformation to democracy and free markets; and
integrating China into the international community. U.S. leadership has
also been decisive in meeting new challenges and combating new threats
such as weapons proliferation, terrorism, and drug-trafficking. The
Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget seeks to build upon past
success to advance America's leadership position in the world, funding a
number of new initiatives designed seize the new opportunities and face
the new challenges the 21st century presents.
Promoting Peace and Democracy Abroad.
- Kosovo. After reversing the campaign of ethnic cleansing by leading
the NATO alliance to victory against Serb forces, the President remains
committed to finishing the job by restoring peace and prosperity to the
region. His budget proposes $175 million to help the people of Kosovo
build a democratic society, strengthen their economy, and create new
employment opportunities. The members of the European Union will bear
the lion's share of the aid money, but the United States must contribute
as well. FY2000 emergency supplemental appropriations of $624 million
will be used for economic and democratic reform activities in Kosovo,
Croatia, and Montenegro, as well as to provide additional assistance to
the democratic opposition in Serbia. This funding will also provide
critical support needed in 2000 for the UN Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) and
to build secure U.S. diplomatic facilities in Kosovo, Bosnia, and
Albania.
- Southeast Europe Initiative. The political and economic integration
of the Balkans into Europe and the global community is critical for
lasting peace in Europe. The budget requests in the Support for Eastern
European Democracies account $428 million for this fundamental
initiative, including $96 million that will help to promote the
democratic opposition of Serbia and to provide assistance to Montenegro.
Approximately $6 million of U.S. assistance will go to accelerating the
integration of Southeast Europe's countries into the global trading
system by breaking down barriers to trade and investment.
- Middle East Peace. This year the President brokered a peace agreement
between Israel and the Palestinians to implement key provisions of the
Wye River Accords, launched permanent settlement talks, and restarted
the Israel-Syria track of Middle East peace. His budget reflects his
commitment to a lasting peace in the region by requesting funds of $1.8
billion from the Economic Support Fund (ESF) and $3.4 billion from
Foreign Military Financing (FMF) to provide a strong support for the
next phase of negotiations between Israel and its neighbors.
Meeting Threats.
- Expanded Threat Reduction Initiative (ETRI). This effort to contain
the spread of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) from the former Soviet
Union and to promote stability has already helped to: deactivate nearly
5,000 nuclear warheads; eliminate nuclear weapons from Ukraine, Belarus,
and Kazakhstan; strengthen security of nuclear weapons and materials;
tighten export controls and detect illicit trafficking; and engage
former Soviet weapons scientists in productive civilian research.
Despite this considerable progress, more help is needed. The President
has requested $974 million for ETRI, including programs administered by
the Departments of State, Defense, and Energy. These funds will support
science centers, enhance border control and regional security efforts to
decrease smuggling of technology or materials, expand protection of
fissile material, and accelerate closure of nuclear weapons production
facilities.
- Colombia Assistance. To assist Colombian President Andres Pastrana
combat drug traffickers in his country and stem the flow of cocaine and
other narcotics to the United States, the President's budget proposed a
substantial increase in assistance to this embattled partner. The
budget proposed to increase assistance programs through 2000 emergency
supplemental appropriations of $954 million and 2001 new funding of $318
million in the international affairs and other budget areas. Funds will
be used to support President Pastrana's "Plan Colombia" in enhancing
alternative development, strengthening civil justice and democratic
institutions, and providing military assistance.
- Transnational Threats. Global security is threatened by the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and terrorism. The
budget proposes $194 million to support international efforts to combat
the spread of weapons of mass destruction through several programs and a
global network of sensors to detect nuclear explosions. The budget also
includes funding for the Korean Peninsula Energy Development
Organization, which will construct two proliferation-resistant nuclear
power reactors in North Korea. The Administration is strengthening its
fight against terrorism by increasing funding for new embassies
overseas, upgrading physical security at our most at-risk posts, and the
destruction of small arms abroad. The Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban
(CTBT) also remains an important element of the global nonproliferation
regime. The Administration is committed to working to create the
conditions for a successful vote to approve the CTBT in the Senate.
Expanding Trade.
- Trade Agreements. The Administration is committed to opening markets
and integrating the global economic system, which has become a key
element of continuing economic prosperity here at home. The budget
proposes significant increases for efforts by our trade negotiators to
promote open markets and a fair, rules-based trading system. Securing
passage of permanent Normal Trade Relations with China to implement the
historic trade agreement reached between our two countries last November
is critical to achieving the goal of expanded trade and a legislative
priority of the Administration this year. In addition, the President
urges Congress to enact the African Growth and Opportunity Act and the
Caribbean Basin Initiative enhancement legislation, which would
facilitate the integration of these important developing regions into
the world economy through preferential trading arrangements and expand
opportunities for American firms, as well as the Balkans trade
initiative and the extension of the Generalized System of Preferences.
Reaching Out to the Developing World.
- Debt Forgiveness. The Administration this year helped to lift those
in the world's poorest countries by forgiving $500 million in debt and
forging agreement among G-8 industrialized countries to provide
additional debt relief through the expanded Heavily Indebted Poor
Country (HIPC) initiative. The President led this effort with a
proposal that remains at the forefront of this issue with his commitment
to forgive 100 percent of the debt owed to the U.S. by the world's
poorest countries, a majority of them in sub-Saharan Africa. To fulfill
this pledge, the Administration is requesting $600 million for a U.S.
contribution to the HIPC trust fund over three years, including a $210
million supplemental request in FY2000. The budget also includes $37
million for the Tropical Forest Initiative, to use debt relief funds in
support of conservation.
- Making Vaccines More Accessible. In his September 1999 address to the
UN General Assembly, the President called for a concerted effort to make
vaccines more widely available in the developing world, where more than
three million children die each year from vaccine-treatable diseases.
As an important first step, the budget proposes a $50 million
contribution to the Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunizations,
where the money will be used to purchase existing vaccines and ensure
their safe delivery. This initiative will be complemented by increased
funding for the National Institute of Health to accelerate the
development of vaccines for major infectious diseases. In addition, the
President's budget proposes a new tax credit that will encourage the
development of vaccines for diseases that occur primarily in the
developing world.
- Child Labor. In December of last year, the President signed, with
Senate advice and consent, the ILO's convention to ban abusive child
labor. This year, he proposes to take these efforts to a new level,
providing $110 million to support international efforts to eliminate
child labor through a comprehensive strategy with three inter-related
components: (1) increasing the U.S. contribution to the ILO's
International Programme for the Elimination of Child Labor by 50 percent
to $45 million; (2) establishing a new $55 million bilateral educational
assistance program to promote school rather than work in areas where
exploitative child labor is prevalent; and (3) doubling -- to $10
million -- Customs Service resources to enforce the ban on the
importation of goods made with forced or indentured child labor.
Anti-Sweatshop Initiative. President Clinton's FY2001 budget includes a
$5 million grant program at the State Department that will fund
innovative programs to eliminate unhealthy and abusive labor conditions
in sweatshops around the world, particularly in foreign factories that
produce consumer goods for the American market.
AMERICA'S ARMED FORCES
President Clinton and Vice President Gore are committed to maintaining a
strong and capable military that protects our freedoms and fortifies our
global leadership role in the 21st century. To achieve this, President
Clinton last year initiated a long-term, sustained increase in defense
spending by providing additional resources of $112 billion over six
years to protect our high level of military readiness and procure modern
and effective weapons systems. This year's budget continues this
increase in defense spending, providing discretionary funding of $292.2
billion in 2001. This represents an increase in $11.3 billion over the
proposed 2000 level and $4.8 billion over the 2001 level assumed in the
2000 budget.
Enhancing Military Readiness. The current high level of readiness is
the Administration's top defense priority. Increased funding will
enable the Services to support unit operations and joint exercises, meet
their required training standards, maintain their equipment in top
condition, recruit and retain quality personnel, and procure sufficient
spare parts and other equipment. The Department of Defense (DoD)
continues to monitor its current and future readiness through the Senior
Readiness Review process, which ensure that DoD leadership remains well
informed about force preparedness issues.
- Operations and Support Programs. This proposed increase in resources
will ensure that we keep pace with the latest advances to protect
against and prepare for new and emerging threats, including the use of
chemical and biological weapons, other weapons of mass destruction, and
efforts to weaken the critical infrastructure of our nation. This
budget will also increase procurement of modern, effective weapons
systems and provides pay, benefits, and quality of life improvements for
our servicemen and women.
- Contingency Operations. The budget proposes $4.4 billion in 2001 for
ongoing contingency operations -- limited military operations in
conjunction with our allies -- in Bosnia, Kosovo, and Southwest Asia.
This funding will allow DoD to avoid redirection of funds from standard
operations and maintenance programs to contingency operations, which
could undermine the readiness of our fighting forces.
Modernizing Weapons Systems. The United States military must maintain
its status as the best equipped in the world. Weapons systems
modernization, both in the form of upgrades to existing systems and in
the form of research, development and procurement of new systems,
continues to be a high Administration priority. The budget achieves
that goal by providing $60.3 billion for the procurement program, which
is $6.1 billion more than the 2000 level.
- Modernizing Ground Forces. Army modernization efforts will address
the need to maintain a force capable of accomplishing a wide range of
missions from contingencies, to its primary mission of defeating
adversaries in a major theater war. The budget supports plans to:
transform units to deploy more easily than the heavy tank and mechanized
infantry divisions, incorporate digital communications equipment into
weapons systems to strengthen battlefield planning and execution, and to
extend the life and improve battlefield performance of primary combat
systems by integrating new navigation and data transfer technology.
- Modernizing Naval Forces. The budget continues procurement of several
ship classes, including $3.1 billion for three DDG-51 Aegis Destroyers,
and $1.5 billion for two LPD-17 Amphibious Transport Dock ships. The
Navy budget also funds modernization of the nuclear aircraft carrier
fleet by providing $4.1 billion to procure the tenth Nimitz-class
nuclear aircraft carrier and $700 million to fund the first phase of
modernization for second Nimitz-class carrier.
- Modernizing Air Forces. Substantial investment in new tactical combat
aircraft is necessary for the United States to maintain its ability to
dominate battles. The budget supports three new aircraft programs: $3.1
billion for 42 F/A-18E/F Super Hornets, which will become the Navy's
principal fighter/attack aircraft; $2.5 billion for 10 F-22 Raptors, the
Air Force's new air superiority fighter; and $857 million to start
advanced development and research for the Joint Strike Fighter, which is
designed to produce a family of aircraft for the Air Force, Navy and
Marine Corps.
Developing Missile Defenses. The Administration intends to determine
this year whether to deploy a limited National Missile Defense (NMD)
against ballistic missile threats to the United States from rogue
nations. At the same time, the President seeks funding for theater
missile defense to defend our forces in the field.
- Defending Against Strategic Ballistic Missiles. The budget proposes
$1.9 billion in 2001 for the development, procurement, and construction
of an NMD system to defend all 50 states against an attack. The
Administration's long-range defense plan now provides a total of about
$10.4 billion in 2001-2005 for NMD, including additional funding to
expand the NMD capability to counter the rogue threat.
- Developing Missile Defense Technologies. The budget proposes $2.8
billion for other missile defense technologies and systems, including
$1.9 billion for theater systems to defend against missiles that
directly threaten deployed U.S. and allied forces. While the funding is
primarily for research and development of advanced systems to meet
future threats, it includes $0.4 billion in procurement, the majority of
which will be used to purchase an advanced version of the Patriot
missile.
RESTORING FAIRNESS FOR LEGAL IMMIGRANTS
Upon signing the 1996 welfare reform law, the President made a
commitment to reversing unnecessary cuts in benefits to legal immigrants
that had nothing to do with the law's goal of moving people from welfare
to work. In 1997, the President fought for and ultimately was
successful in ensuring that the Balanced Budget Act protects the most
vulnerable. In 1998, the President continued his proposals to reverse
unfair cuts in benefits to legal immigrants. The Clinton-Gore
Administration's FY2001 budget continues to fight for restoring
important disability, health, and nutrition benefits to additional
categories of legal immigrants, at a cost of $2.5 billion over five
years.
- Disability and Health. The Balanced Budget Act of 1997 and the
Noncitizen Benefit Clarification and Other Technical Amendments Act of
1998 invested $11.5 billion to restore disability and health benefits to
380,000 legal immigrants who were in this country before welfare reform
became law (August 22, 1996). The President's FY2001 budget proposes to
restore eligibility for SSI and Medicaid to legal immigrants who enter
the country after that date if they have been in the United States for
five years and become disabled after entering the United States. This
proposal will cost approximately $1.2 billion and assist an estimated
53,000 legal immigrants by 2005, about half of whom would be elderly.
- Nutritional Assistance. The Agricultural Research Act of 1998
provided
Food Stamps for 225,000 legal immigrant children, senior citizens, and
people with disabilities who entered the United States by August 22,
1996. The President's FY2001 budget restores eligibility to legal
immigrants in the United States before August 22, 1996 who either
subsequently reach age 65 or who live in a household with Food Stamp
eligible children. This proposal will restore benefits to about 165,000
legal immigrants by 2005 at a cost of $565 million.
- Health Care for Children and Pregnant Women. Under current law,
states have the option to provide health coverage to legal immigrant
children and pregnant women who entered the country before August 22,
1996. The President's FY2001 budget gives states the option to extend
Medicaid or SCHIP coverage to low-income legal immigrant children and
Medicaid to pregnant women regardless of their date of entry to the
country, including those who entered after August 22, 1996. The
proposal would cost $695 million and provide critical health insurance
to approximately 144,000 children and 33,000 women by FY2005. This
proposal would help reduce the number of high-risk pregnancies and
ensure healthier children. The budget's Medicaid/SCHIP FamilyCare
initiative also covers legal immigrant parents of children who are
covered by Medicaid or SCHIP.
TOBACCO POLICY
The Clinton-Gore Administration's budget will include important new
steps to reduce youth smoking and hold the tobacco industry accountable.
Every year, more than 400,000 Americans die from tobacco-related
diseases; nearly 90 percent of them started smoking as children. To
address this, one of the nation's most serious public health challenges,
the Administration proposes to:
Cut Youth Smoking in Half by Holding the Tobacco Industry Accountable.
The Administration's budget will cut youth smoking in half by charging
the tobacco industry an assessment for every underage smoker. These
youth smoking assessments will provide a strong incentive for tobacco
companies to reduce sales to minors and eliminate advertising
encouraging children to smoke. The $3,000 assessment for every smoker
under age 18 will be put in place starting in 2004 only if youth smoking
has not been cut in half and would remain in effect until the youth
smoking reduction goal has been met. This $3,000 annual assessment
represents twice the lifetime profits the industry is expected to make
from hooking a teen on cigarettes. This policy will significantly
reduce youth smoking when combined with the price increases and public
health initiatives underway as a result of the 1998 state tobacco
settlement and other Federal, state, and local efforts.
In addition to the youth smoking assessments, the Administration's
budget includes a 25 cents per pack excise beginning in FY2001, to raise
further the price of tobacco products from the 45 cent increase agreed
to by the states and the industry in 1998. This increase will help
reduce youth smoking and help achieve the Administration's goal of
cutting youth smoking in half. Public health experts agree that raising
the price of cigarettes cuts youth smoking and recent surveys of youth
smoking released by independent experts indicate youth smoking rates
have started to decline since recent price increases were put in place.
In addition to raising the price of cigarettes by 25 cents a pack, the
Administration's budget will include comparable increases in the price
of other tobacco products such as smokeless tobacco and cigars, and will
move an already legislated 5 cents per pack cigarette increase from
January 1, 2002 to October 1, 2000.
These proposals will reduce youth smoking, and complement the progress
being made as a result of the 1998 settlement between the states and the
industry. These policies would not affect the $246 billion agreement
made between the states and the tobacco industry.
Help Current Smokers Quit. The Administration's budget will take an
important step to improve the health of low-income Americans by ensuring
they have access to drugs to help them quit smoking. The
Administration's budget will ensure every state Medicaid program covers
both prescription and non-prescription smoking cessation drugs, removing
a special exclusion now in law and requiring states to cover these drugs
as they cover all other Food and Drug Administration-approved drugs.
The Federal government would provide the usual Federal match for these
costs, as it does for other Medicaid expenses, and states could use
proceeds from the 1998 tobacco settlement or other funds to pay their
share. Medical research shows that smoking cessation products greatly
increase success rates for those trying to quit smoking, and that
quitting has major and immediate health benefits for smokers of all
ages. Through this proposal, the Administration will ensure millions of
low-income Americans have access to medical treatments that will help
them break their addiction to tobacco, at a Federal cost of $66 million
over the next five years.
Support State and Community Efforts to Prevent Youth Smoking. The
Administration's budget will help support tobacco prevention programs in
states and local communities through a $106 million in resources for the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). This funding, a
ten-fold increase over 1993 levels, will enable the CDC to work with
states and communities to help them put in place effective programs to
prevent tobacco use, particularly among children. This effort is
critically important as states begin to decide how to spend the $246
billion they will receive over the next 25 years from the 1998
settlement with the tobacco industry.
Help Enforce Laws Preventing Minors from Purchasing Tobacco Products.
The Administration's budget will include $39 million for the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) to help enforce the laws preventing youth
under age 18 from purchasing tobacco products. Currently Federal law
requires every state to prohibit minors from purchasing tobacco
products, and Federal regulations ensure retailers check photo IDs of
young people who try to purchase them. These funds will help the FDA
work with the states and with retailers to enforce these laws, by
providing retailers with informational materials to help them explain
the rules to customers and by conducting random checks of retailer
compliance.
Support the FDA's Full Authority to Keep Cigarettes Out of the Hands of
Children. The Administration supports full FDA authority to regulate
tobacco products in order to halt advertising targeted to children and
to curb minors' access to tobacco products. In 1996 the Administration
put forward a comprehensive regulation to protect children from tobacco,
which the tobacco industry challenged in court. The Administration
remains fully committed to the FDA rule.
Recover Tobacco-related Health Care Costs. The Administration firmly
supports the Department of Justice's litigation to recover Federal
tobacco-related health costs, and the budget contains funds to pay the
necessary legal costs. In addition to any remedies imposed by the court
to advance public health, recoveries from the litigation will be used to
assist tobacco farmers and their communities, to pay Federal tobacco
related health costs, and to enhance the security of Medicare and Social
Security for future generations.
Protect Farmers and Farming Communities. The Administration is
committed to protecting tobacco farmers and their communities. The
Administration fully supports the $5 billion settlement to compensate
tobacco farmers, which was agreed to by the states and industry in 1998,
as well as the $328 million included in the Agricultural Appropriations
bill for FY2000, and is committed, as any Federal litigation moves to
judgment or settlement, to ensure funds are set aside for the financial
security of tobacco farmers and their communities.
FARM SAFETY NET
Because the 1996 Farm Bill fails to sufficiently support farm family
incomes when crop prices fall or natural disasters strike, the
Clinton-Gore Administration's FY2001 budget includes a comprehensive $11
billion package to strengthen the farm safety net through 2002 when the
next farm bill will be enacted. His proposal includes counter-cyclical
income assistance, crop insurance reform, a major farm conservation
program initiative (much of which extends beyond 2002), and targeted
assistance to certain segments of the farm and rural communities.
Income Assistance. A particular defect of the 1996 Freedom to Farm Act
is that payments are not targeted to farmers in need or increased when
farm income is low. The 2001 Budget's income support initiative will
help to strengthen the safety net by adding new payment programs to
existing farm programs.
- Supplemental Income Payments. The Administration's proposal includes
counter-cyclical farm income support to provide additional payments
through the expected enactment of the next farm bill (through crop year
2001). This would ensure producers receive at least 92 percent of farm
revenue relative to a five-year average. In order to target payments to
family-sized farmers, there would be a $30,000 combined payment
limitation for these counter-cyclical payments plus AMTA payments.
Payments would be available for producers of the "major" crops (corn,
wheat, soybeans, cotton, rice, barley, sorghum). Total payments on the
2000 and 2001 crop are estimated to be $2.5 billion and $3.1 billion
respectively. There would be no reduction to AMTA or LDP payments.
- Freeze Loan Rates. The Secretary of Agriculture will hold U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) marketing assistance loan rates for the
2000 crop year at their current levels, at a cost of $500 million in
FY2001.
- Dairy Program. The budget extends the dairy price-support program,
set to expire in December 2000, through 2002, the end of the current
farm bill. This proposal will cost $150 million in FY2001 and FY2002,
respectively.
Conservation Initiatives in the Safety Net Proposal. Providing
assistance to farmers and ranchers who practice environmentally sound
land management will yield benefits to all Americans while increasing
farm family income. Through these USDA programs, participants can
receive cost-share assistance, technical assistance, and in many cases
annual payments for high-priority conservation activities. The proposal
-- which increases conservation funding by nearly $1.3 billion over
authorized levels in FY2001 -- includes:
- Conservation Security Program. The new Conservation Security Program
would provide $600 million in annual payments to farmers and ranchers
who implement various conservation practices, with payment levels based
on the comprehensiveness of their conservation plans.
- Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP). The EQIP, a key
component of the President's Clean Water Action Plan, provides
financial, technical, and educational assistance to farmers and ranchers
who wish to implement conservation practices on land currently in
production. The President proposes increasing annual funding for the
program from $200 million to $325 million. Half of the funding is used
to address livestock-related concerns.
- Wetlands Reserve Program (WRP). The WRP offers technical and
financial assistance to farmers who wish to restore and protect
agricultural wetlands. There are only 40,000 acres left to enroll in
2001 under the 975,000 acre cap set by the 1996 Farm Bill. The
President proposes enrolling 250,000 acres in each year, beginning in
2001.
- Conservation Reserve Program (CRP). The CRP provides farmers with
technical and financial assistance, including annual rental payments, in
exchange for removing environmentally sensitive farm land from
production and implementing conservation practices such as wildlife
habitat restoration and field windbreaks. The Administration proposes
to raise the CRP cap by 3.6 million acres to 40 million acres.
- Conservation Reserve Program "Continuous Sign-up" Bonuses. The
Administration plans to offer bonuses totaling up to $100 million in
FY2000 and up to $125 million in fiscal years 2001-2002 to producers who
enroll land in CRP through the "continuous signup." The CRP continuous
sign-up allows producers to enroll certain high priority practices such
as grassed waterways, filter strips, and riparian buffers at any time
during the year.
- Farmland Protection Program (FPP). The FPP, part of the President's
Lands Legacy Initiative, provides matching funds to state, local, and
Tribal governments to permanently protect farmland threatened by
development from urban and suburban "sprawl", through the purchase of
easements that preserve the land for farm use. The budget proposes $65
million per year for the FPP.
- Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program (WHIP). For farmers, ranchers,
and other landowners who wish to implement wildlife habitat practices,
WHIP offers $50 million in cost-share assistance for up to 75 percent of
the habitat restoration expenses and technical assistance.
- Technical Assistance. The Natural Resources Conservation Service
(NRCS) will provide additional technical assistance to farmers and
ranchers to carry out these enhanced programs.
Crop Insurance Reform. Crop insurance represents a critical risk
management tool for the nation's farmers. In recent years, however,
many producers have declined to participate in the program or signed up
for only minimal coverage because of its expense and shortcomings. The
President's budget takes critical steps towards improving the crop
insurance program with the following initiatives:
- Continue Crop Insurance Premium Discounts for the 2001 Crop Year:
Premium discounts on the farmer-paid portion of crop insurance premiums
were provided through emergency appropriations for 1999 and 2000.
Evidence demonstrates that producers have largely invested their
premium-discount benefits in higher levels of insurance coverage. The
Farm Safety Net proposal will provide $640 million to support discounts
for the 2001 crop.
- Establish Multi-year Loss Coverage. Multi-year coverage is needed
because even producers with coverage levels as high as 75 percent can
find it hard to withstand losses in consecutive years on which they must
absorb a 25 percent reduction in expected revenue. To address the
multi-year loss problem, the budget includes $100 million for USDA to
develop or reinsure a privately developed policy that addresses the
problem of multi-year losses.
- Livestock Insurance Pilot. The majority of U.S. ranchers have not
used the risk management tools available on existing futures and options
exchanges because the size of the contracts available are too large for
small operators. The proposed $100 million pilot would offer price
insurance to small ranchers to protect them against a drop in market
prices over the growing period. Intermediaries, such as crop insurance
companies, would sell small "unbundled" portions of options contracts
from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) on cattle and hogs. USDA
would subsidize the operating expense of the intermediary and the
producer's premiums for this price coverage.
- Waive the "NAP Trigger" in the Noninsured Crop Disaster Assistance
Program (NAP). The budget includes $110 million in 2000 and 2001 to
loosen the eligibility requirements for NAP coverage so that more
producers of crops such as lettuce, mushrooms, and artichokes who suffer
significant losses from natural disasters can qualify for this important
risk management tool.
- Risk Management Education (RME). USDA's Risk Management Agency's RME
operation trains producers in the use of new and existing risk
management tools and farm financial management. The budget includes $40
million in FY2001 and 2002 for an aggressive expansion of RME programs.
- Research & Development. The need for new crop insurance policies on
specialty crops is well recognized in both the Administration and
Congress. The President's budget includes $30 million in FY2001 and
FY2002 for USDA R&D on crop policies that may not be seen as attractive
to private developers, while also providing incentives to private
sources of crop insurance R&D.
Other Targeted Assistance. In addition to the proposals identified
above, the President is proposing several smaller, targeted programs to
assist rural communities and producers.
- Rural Empowerment Zone/Enterprise Community Program. The President's
budget includes $15 million in mandatory funding for each of the
remaining eight years of the five Second Round rural Empowerment Zones
and twenty Second Round rural Enterprise Communities.
- Cooperative Development. The proposal would provide financing to
cooperatives for livestock processing and other value-added facilities,
so producers can share in the profits gained through value-added
processing of their raw agricultural commodities.
- Ethanol Subsidies. The CCC will provide up $100 million in 2000, and
$150 million in 2001 and 2002, in incentive payments to ethanol and
other bioenergy producers to expand production of biobased fuels.
Larger proportional payments would go to smaller bioenergy producers.
- On-Farm Storage Facility Loans. Recent commodity surpluses have
resulted in storage shortages that can restrict farmers' marketing
options and reduce their profits. In addition, there have been recent
requests for farmers to separate crops grown from genetically modified
seeds. USDA will offer producers an estimated $350 million in
Treasury-rate loans in 2000 and $150 million in 2001 and 2002 to build
on-farm storage facilities, with a total loan subsidy cost of $14
million.
BUILDING ONE AMERICA
To help achieve the President's vision of One America, the Clinton-Gore
Administration's FY2001 budget provides funding for a variety of
purposes including: to strengthen civil rights enforcement and programs,
to better serve Native American communities, to provide English language
instruction and fairness to immigrant families, to eliminate health
disparities, and to promote educational opportunities and economic
development in urban and rural areas.
CIVIL RIGHTS
The FY2001 budget proposes a significant increase for civil rights
enforcement to help ensure equal opportunity for all Americans. The
President's budget request of $698 million for civil rights enforcement
agencies represents a 13 percent increase over last year's funding
levels. Highlights of the President's proposal include
- Department of Justice's Civil Rights Division. The President's budget
includes $98 million for the Department of Justice (DOJ) Civil Rights
Division -- an increase of 86 percent over the 1993 level. The proposed
funding will permit the Justice Department to expand significantly
investigations and prosecutions of criminal civil rights cases
(including hate crimes and police misconduct), as well as fair housing
and lending cases. Funds are also included to fund the Division's
enforcement of the ADA.
- Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). The budget provides
$322 million for the EEOC, 15 percent more than the enacted FY2000
budget. The majority of increased funding will be dedicated to reducing
the backlog of private sector cases and improving the Federal EEO
complaint process.
- Department of Labor's Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs.
The budget also provides $76 million to encourage Federal contractor
compliance.
- Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD) Fair Housing
Initiatives. The budget proposes $50 million, a 14 percent increase
above last year, for HUD's efforts to reduce housing discrimination. Of
this request, $7.5 million will support the final year of a three-year,
audit-based housing discrimination study being conducted in 20
communities around the country.
- Department of Agriculture's Office of Civil Rights. The USDA's civil
rights programs increased from $18 million to $21 million, will
emphasize outreach to disadvantaged farmers, involve small and
disadvantaged businesses in USDA programs, increase conflict resolution
activities and more effectively process complaints.
- Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights. The budget
proposal of $76 million provides an increase of $5 million over the 2000
enacted budget to fund staff training and technological improvements to
speed the resolution of civil rights issues.
Ensuring Equal Pay. The President's budget includes a $27 million Equal
Pay Initiative, an increase of $12 million over FY2000. The Initiative
requests $10 million for the EEOC to provide training and technical
assistance to about 3,000 employers on how to comply with equal pay
requirements. The Initiative also dedicates $10 million for the
Department of Labor (DOL) to train women in nontraditional jobs,
including high-tech jobs and other skill shortage occupations. Lastly,
the Initiative provides $7 million for DOL to help employers assess and
improve their pay policies, support public education efforts, provide
for projects in non-traditional apprenticeships, and implement industry
partnerships.
Hate Crimes. The President continues to urge Congress to pass the Hate
Crimes Prevention Act, which would strengthen the existing Federal hate
crimes law by expanding the situations in which the Department of
Justice can prosecute defendants for violent crimes based on race,
color, religion, or national origin. Further, it would expand existing
law to cover cases of hate crimes based on sexual orientation, gender,
or disability. The President's budget includes $20 million for training
for Federal, state, and local law enforcement to prevent and respond to
hate crimes, and to promote police integrity.
One America Dialogues. The budget proposes $5 million for the
Department of Justice to fund Citizen Academies, where citizens will
acquire public safety problem-solving tools and training and engage in
honest and constructive dialogues on race.
NATIVE AMERICANS
In order to better serve Native American communities in this millennium
and to honor the Federal government's trust responsibility to tribes,
the President's budget includes an increase of $1.2 billion over FY2000
-- the largest increase ever -- for a total of $9.4 billion for key new
and existing programs assisting Native Americans and Indian
reservations. Some of the highlights include:
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) School Construction and Repair. The
President has proposed $300 million, more than double the FY2000 enacted
level of $133 million, to replace and repair BIA-funded schools on
reservations. This is the largest investment ever in a single year for
BIA school construction and repair.
Increased Funding for Tribal Colleges. The budget proposes increased
funding of $25 million for the Nation's tribal colleges for a total of
$77 million.
Indian Health Service. The President's budget proposes $2.6 billion, an
increase for the Indian Health Service (IHS) of $230 million or 10
percent over the FY2000 enacted level.
Improves Law Enforcement in Indian Country. The budget proposes $439
million, an increase of $103 million over FY2000, for the Departments of
Justice and Interior for the third year of the President's Indian
Country Law Enforcement Initiative. The initiative will improve public
safety for the over 1.4 million residents on the approximately 56
million acres of Indian lands.
Building Roads and Bridges in Indian Country. The Transportation
Department (DOT) will expand its program to improve roads and bridges on
Indian reservations. The President's budget proposes to give the Indian
Reservations Roads program the full authorization amount of $275 million
with an additional $74 million from a highway receipts account for a
total of $349 million, which is an increase of $117 million over the
previous year. This will allow Tribes to address the estimated backlog
of $4 billion in needs on these roads and bridges.
Tribal Infrastructure Projects. The President and the Vice President
propose $49 million, an increase of $46 million over FY2000, for the
Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration (EDA) to
fund infrastructure, planning, and public works projects.
Addressing the Digital Divide. To encourage Native Americans to pursue
information technology and other science and technology fields, the
budget provides $10 million, to be administered by the National Science
Foundation, for grants to tribal colleges for networking and access;
course development; student assistance; and capacity building.
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) Contract Support Costs. Within the
overall BIA increase, the budget continues to support Tribal
self-determination by proposing $134 million, a $9 million or 7 percent
increase over 2000 for contract support costs. This funding provides $5
million for new and expanded contracts and $129 million for existing
contracts.
Trust Services. The Administration is committed to improving trust
services and management through its trust reform efforts at the Interior
Department. The budget proposes $108 million, a 48 percent increase
over 2000, for improved trust services in the BIA for activities such as
probate, real estate appraisals, and other services.
Indian Trust Fund Balances. The Administration is committed to
resolving disputed Indian trust fund account balances through informal
dispute resolution and supports the unique government-to-government
relationship that exists in Indian trust land management issues. After
Tribal consultations, BIA submitted its "Recommendations of the
Secretary of the Interior for Settlement of Disputed Tribal Accounts" to
Congress in November 1997. Legislation reflecting these recommendations
was proposed in 1998, but not enacted. The Department will continue
efforts to resolve trust fund account balances.
Trust Land Management. As part of BIA's commitment to resolving trust
land management issues, Interior worked with Congress in 1999 to
repropose legislation (S. 1586) to establish an Indian Land
Consolidation program to address the ownership fractionation of Indian
land. In addition to $13 million for the Indian Land Consolidation
program, the budget provides $83 million for DOI's Office of Special
Trustee, including the trust management improvement project. Current
activities include verifying individual Indian's account data and
converting these data to a commercial-grade accounting system.
IMMIGRANTS
English Language/Civics Instruction Initiative. Immigrant adults -- and
other adults who have limited-English proficiency -- need access to
opportunities to master English literacy in order to further their
education, obtain good jobs, and become full participants in American
society. To this end, President Clinton is proposing an increase for
the English Language/Civics Initiative, an innovative program to help
states and communities provide limited English proficient (LEP)
individuals with expanded access to high-quality English-language
instruction linked to civics and life skills instruction. This
important initiative is a powerful tool in building a stronger American
community. For FY2001, the Administration's budget request $75 million
for this initiative, a nearly $50 million increase from FY2000 enacted
level to help an additional estimated 250,000 LEP individuals.
Funding and Restructuring INS to Improve Services. In a continuing
effort to improve INS services, this budget provides $35 million to
address backlogs in naturalization, adjustment of status, and other
immigration benefit applications. It establishes a $93 million
Immigration Services Capital Investment Account to fund on-going backlog
reduction efforts and to cover major capital acquisitions. The
President also calls on Congress to move forward with a restructuring of
the INS -- along the principles outlined by the Administration -- to
improve immigration service delivery and border enforcement.
Restoring Benefits to Legal Immigrants. The President believes that
legal immigrants should have the same economic opportunity, and bear the
same responsibility, as other members of society. In the Balanced
Budget Act of 1997 and the Agricultural Research, Extension and
Education Reform Act of 1998, the President fought for and succeeded in
reversing unfair cuts in benefits to legal immigrants. The FY2001
budget builds on the Administration's progress of restoring these
important benefits by providing $2.5 billion over five years to: (1)
restore SSI and Medicaid to legal immigrants who entered the United
States after August 22, 1996, have been here for five years, and become
disabled after entry; (2) restore Food Stamp eligibility to legal
immigrants who were in the country before August 22, 1996 and either
subsequently reach age 65 or live in a household with Food Stamp
eligible children; and (3) allow states to provide Medicaid or SCHIP to
legal immigrant children and pregnant women regardless of their date of
entry, and to legal immigrant parents of children who are covered by
Medicaid or SCHIP in the proposed FamilyCare program.
EDUCATION
Hispanic Education Action Plan. As part of the Administration's
commitment to raising the educational outcomes of Latino youth, the
President again proposes significant increases to programs within the
Hispanic Education Action Plan to help Latinos excel academically,
graduate from high school, go on to college, and continue on the path to
life-long learning. The final budget includes increases of $823 million
for programs that enhance educational opportunity for Latinos,
including: a $416 million increase for Title I, to provide support
supplemental education services for students who have fallen behind in
school, in particular those in high poverty communities; $725 million
for TRIO college preparation programs, an increase of $80 million, which
help disadvantaged high school and college students prepare for, attend,
and graduate from college; and $296 million, an increase of $48 million,
for the Bilingual Education program to increase the quality of services
offered to limited-English proficient (LEP) students and provide 8,000
bilingual and ESL teachers with the high quality in-service and
pre-service training they need to teach this special population.
Dual Degree Programs for Minority-Serving Institutions. The FY2001
budget proposes a new program to increase opportunities for students at
minority-serving institutions. Students would receive two degrees
within five years: one from a minority-serving institution, and one from
a partner institution in a field in which minorities are
underrepresented. This new $40 million program will serve an estimated
3,000 students.
Title I Education for the Disadvantaged. This program provides funds to
help disadvantaged children reach high academic standards. Title I will
receive $9.1 billion in FY2001, an $400 million increase over last
year's level. The President's budget also includes an increase of $134
million for the Title I Accountability Fund bringing total funding to
$250 million. The Title I Accountability Fund supports immediate and
significant State and local interventions in the lowest performing
schools to improve school achievement and promotes public school choice.
HEALTH
Eliminating Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health. In February 1998,
the President committed the nation to an ambitious goal by the year
2010: eliminate disparities in six health areas where racial and ethnic
minorities are disproportionately affected, while continuing the
progress we have made in improving the overall health of the American
people. As a key part of this effort, the budget includes $35 million,
a 17 percent increase over 2000, for demonstration projects (begun in
1999) to better address racial disparities in health.
NEW MARKETS INITIATIVE
The President's budget provides tax credits and loans guarantee
incentives
to stimulate $22 billion of new private capital investments in
economically distressed communities around the country and build a
network of private investment institutions to funnel credit, equity and
technical assistance to businesses in America's new markets. In
addition, the budget proposes a new initiative, known as First Accounts
that will provide low-cost bank accounts to working families.
More Than Doubling the New Markets Tax Credit. The President proposes
to more than double the New Markets tax credit to spur $15 billion in
new investment in community development in economically distressed
areas. An entity making new equity investments in a selected community
development project would be eligible for a tax credit worth 25 percent
of the cost of the investment. A variety of vehicles providing equity
and credit to businesses in underserved areas would be eligible. The
total cost of the tax credits amounts to about $5 billion over 10 years.
Expanded Empowerment Zones. The proposed expanded wage credits, tax
incentives, and new round of urban and rural EZs will extend and improve
economic growth in the 31 existing urban and rural Empowerment Zones,
administered by HUD and USDA, and support the proposed third round of 10
new empowerment zones to be designated in 2001. The total cost of these
proposals will be $4.4 billion over 10 years.
America's Private Investment Companies (APICs). Modeled after the
Overseas Private Investment Corporation's (OPIC) successful investment
fund program, the President's budget proposes $37 million to allow APICs
to provide guaranteed debt to private investment companies, licensed by
HUD, to help leverage private equity capital and lower the cost of
capital for investments in low- and moderate-income communities. For
every dollar that private investors provide, the government will
guarantee two dollars in debt to expand the APIC's pool of capital
available for making investments and enhance the return on those
investments to the private investors. APICs will make equity
investments in larger businesses that are expanding or relocating in
inner cities and rural areas.
New Market Venture Capital Firms (NMVCs). The budget proposes $52
million to allow NMVC firms to match the equity of private investors
with Government-guaranteed debt and technical assistance funding to
cultivate the growth of smaller firms. NMVC would invest in smaller
growth companies that can also benefit from expert management
assistance.
Creation of First Accounts. The President's budget proposes $30 million
for the Department of Treasury to pilot strategies to help low- and
moderate income Americans benefit from basic financial services.
Treasury will work with financial institutions and others: (1) to
encourage the creation of low-cost bank accounts (First Accounts); (2)
to expand access to automatic teller machines in safe, secure, and
convenient locations, including U.S. Post Offices, in low-income
neighborhoods; (3) to educate low-income Americans about the benefits of
having a bank account, managing household finances, and building assets.
The First Accounts initiative complements Treasury's Electronic Transfer
Accounts (ETAs) -- low-cost, electronic banking accounts for "unbanked"
Federal benefit recipients -- by reaching those not eligible to
participate in the ETA program because they are not Federal benefit
recipients.
Other Elements of New Markets. Other elements in the budget include:
increasing the funding for SBA's microenterprise lending program to $50
million; $15 million to fund PRIME -- a program authorized last year to
provide technical assistance to low-income entrepreneurs; boosting CDFI
funding to $125 million; expanding support to $6.6 million for
BusinessLINC to encourage large businesses to work with small businesses
in new markets; and providing $5 million to establish a New Markets
University Partnerships pilot project which, under the auspices of HUD,
would provide Universities with funding to develop local community
partnerships, assistance to intermediaries, and technical and business
development assistance to new and existing firms. In addition, to
better serve Native American communities, the President will provide
additional funding to expand the New Markets initiative to Indian
Country.
V. CHARTS
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