“[Washington Post blogger] Ezra Klein says that the shape of a fiscal cliff deal is clear: only a 37 percent rate on top incomes, and a rise in the Medicare eligibility age,” Krugman writes nervously. “I’m going to cross my fingers and hope that this is just a case of creeping Broderism, that it’s a VSP fantasy about how we’re going to resolve this in a bipartisan way. Because if Obama really does make this deal, there will be hell to pay.”
“Broderism,” for those of you unfamiliar with this term, is derived
Krugman writes that there is no reason to change anything about programs like Medicare because raising the top tax rates breath new longevity into strained entitlements.
“So this looks crazy to me,” Krugman concludes. “All that effort to reelect Obama, and the first thing he does is give away two years of Medicare? How’s that going to play in future attempts to get out the vote?”
If Krugman’s lament is any indication of how those on the political left will react to a compromise, Republicans aren’t the only party that will be disappointed in their leadership when/if the fiscal cliff is resolved.
Read the full blog post via The New York Times
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