Aug 17

Past Event

Deficit Reduction and the New Congressional Committee: A Primer

Event Materials

Video

Highlights

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

  • Human Rights Issues will not Trump U.S.-China Dialogue

    Kenneth Lieberthal: These talks are critical to the U.S.-China relationship, and the matter of Chinese dissident Chen Guangcheng will not trump the range of issues that must be addressed in order for the relationship to move forward.

    Kenneth G. Lieberthal

Audio

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Summary

After years of inaction, President Obama and Congress agreed on legislation to cut federal spending by more than $900 billion over the next ten years, and to put in place a new Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction to find $1.5 trillion more in spending cuts or additional revenue by November 23. If the new committee fails to agree, across-the-board spending cuts will take effect automatically. The implications for the economy and American families are immense.

On August 17, the Budgeting for National Priorities Project at Brookings hosted a panel discussion to provide answers and insights into the magnitude of the challenge the committee faces, the odds of success and the consequences of failure. Henry Aaron provided a primer on the federal budget, William Gale discussed the implications of choosing a baseline against which to measure spending cuts and revenue increases, Sarah Binder explained the process and history of prior “super committees” and William Frenzel reviewed the congressional politics. Ron Haskins outlined the debt limit agreement and moderate the discussion.

After the program, the panelists took audience questions. The hashtag for the event was #deficitprimer.

View the full event video on C-SPAN »

Details

August 17, 2011

1:30 PM - 3:00 PM EDT

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

For More Information

Brookings Office of Communications

(202) 797-6105

Event Agenda

  • intro

    • Ron Haskins

      Co-Director

      Economic Studies

  • Panelists

    • Portrait: Henry Aaron

      Henry J. Aaron

      Senior Fellow

      Economic Studies

    • Portrait: Sarah Binder

      Sarah A. Binder

      Senior Fellow

      Governance Studies

    • Bill Frenzel

      Guest Scholar

      Economic Studies

    • Portrait: William Gale

      William G. Gale

      Co-director

      Economic Studies