The caveats: the budget contains no money for a cap-and-trade emissions credit trading system and therefore does not assume any money dervied from the selling of credits -- but if you'll notice, the President's budget proposal doesn't assume any revenue until 2011, the bulk of which would go towards offsetting an extension of the President's "Make Work Pay" tax credits. (Two years of those credits were funded by the stimulus package.) On cap-and-trade, one can make an argument that a downpayment in the budget would have been helpful to the administration. But the political reality is a standalone bill -- which would include, as the President himself hinted last night, money to account for regional differences in energy production and measures protecting Americans from spikes in electricity bills -- would have a better chance at passage. So far as I can tell, other major difference is that where the White House provided guidance about how to fund and structure a 10-year $684 billion health care reserve fund; Congress provides for a similar facility, but does not specify gross savings -- the White House was more specific. Under both proposals, appropriations committees will be tasked with coming up with legislation that nets to zero. That's kind of exactly what the White House had hoped for. A minor difference: the farm-state senators won't go along with the President's agriculture subsidy cuts.
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http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2009/03/the-great-big-budget-blowup-isnt/6921/
