Orbis Tabula
Member
1) We're $18 trillion in debt. 2) Trump's plan INCREASES medical spending on the poor by about 34% over current levels over the next decade
http://reason.com/archives/2017/05/29/trumps-medicaid-cuts-actually-increase-f
The reason we're talking about a drastic cut is because medical costs are skyrocketing as are the populations of people who need those programs (Obama's plan would have nearly doubled Medicaid spending) so even that massive growth means millions will be pushed out of coverage.
But either way, the trend is that government spending for these social welfare programs has exploded - it's the blue part of the first graph here:
http://slatestarcodex.com/2017/06/2...-understand-the-extent-of-republican-failure/
It's not defense that's eating up the budget - it's this. "Entitlement" spending is what we call spending for programs for the elderly, disabled, unemployed, impoverished etc. and entitlements have been growing as a share of the federal budget at a terrifying rate. The Republicans say that we're choosing between cruelty or more cruelty - that the current system of spending will eventually collapse the system like in Greece.
I don't happen to agree with their exact plan (they are using their cuts to fund tax cuts for the rich) but they have plenty of economists on their side saying this trajectory isn't sustainable. Costs HAVE to come down at some point - you can't just keep printing money. When are we going to make those choices?
They're saying we either make those cuts now, or else the system will collapse and then millions truly will die.
I think it's pretty generous to say that these are the reasons why they want to repeal Obamacare. When you hear them talk about why Obamacare needs to go, the go-to answers are usually "get rid of regulations" or "give consumers more choice" or "lower healthcare costs", even occasionally "grow jobs". I don't really see Republicans out there beating the deficit drum on this one nearly as much as they did just a few years ago.
Which sort of makes sense, considering that this plan doesn't really do much to help with the national debt, given that a large part of the savings they're getting end up being balanced out by tax cuts for the rich. If they wanted to cut the debt, there'd be no need to add those tax cuts. They don't have much to do with delivering health care. They're just tax cuts.