Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Taxing Political Committees

WM Oversight: Growth of the Tax-Exempt Sector and the Impact on the American Political Landscape, December 13, 2023

Finance, Taxation and IRS Oversight: Laws and Enforcement Governing the Political Activities of Tax Exempt Entities, May 4, 2022

There are two questions for the taxation of charitable contributions. The first is where the money comes from. The second is how the outgo should be taxed.

Under our proposed asset value added tax, assets would be marked to market at initial public offering, option exercise and the first sale after inheritance, gift and donation. When assets are donated to charities and nonprofits, no tax will be paid. When these institutions sell these assets, taxes will be collected in full. Whether endowment income is taxed is an open question, although usually the asset value added tax would be levied.  

Sales to employee-owned or cooperative firms will be zero rated, just as they are when a single owner sells out to an ESOP when transitioning out. We propose expanding this privilege to all asset sales. Note that as long as a business or family farm is kept in the family or sold to a cooperative, no tax is levied.

Political organizations and committees would also pay S-VAT (or I-VAT) on their payroll and their purchases would not be I-VAT exempt in the long term. These collections would be administered by state governments. 

Committees that give little to candidates should not be tax exempt, as they are essentially corporations whose high salaries are essentially partnership income in disguise, without the corresponding risk. As such, they should pay the asset value added tax on such distributions.

Asset VAT collections would be to the Securities and Exchange Commission for liquid assets and states and localities for real property. States and localities would keep these proceeds.

See the second attachment for more information on how taxes are administered under these proposals.

Attachment: Tax Reform (with videos)

Wednesday, December 06, 2023

Tax Policies for Prosperity for American Families

WM Tax: Tax Policies to Expand Economic Growth and Increase Prosperity for American Families, December 6, 2023

I have been hoping that the Subcommittee would hold hearings on the Fair Tax and other potential tax reforms.  I will review the testimonies of the invited witnesses and then describe my own proposal. I am available  at your convenience to discuss this proposal with members and staff.

Consumption-Based Taxation in an International Setting, Alan J. Auerbach

Professor Auerbach provides a good summary of consumption based taxes, but then describes the Destination Based Cash Flow Tax, which he favors. This proposal leaves the current tax system which forces most households to file income tax - where a shift to an employer paid tax with deductions for family support and a goods and services tax would take the trash out of the tax system. His proposal assumes the continuation of the corporate income tax, both in the United States and abroad. The employer-paid subtraction VAT, adopted by our trading partners, would tax locally to provide services to families while exempting these services from border adjustment - thus ending the incentive to avoid these taxes and the associated benefits. 

In summary, the DBCFT is a small ball solution that keeps the complexity of corporate profits taxes intact - and adds to it.

Addressing the Long-Term Fiscal Imbalance with a Value-Added Tax, Alan Viard

Mr. Viard provides a textbook explanation of Value Added Taxation, but leaves adjustments to the income tax system that everyone must file intact. His assumption that income tax increases are impossible is short sighted, especially as these taxes are about to increase automatically if nothing is done. Indeed, the baseline for calculating income tax revenue must be the permanent rate, not the current rate which is soon to expire. Tax Reform MUST NOT be an excuse to leave income tax rates at their current level.

Adding a value added tax must be part of a more comprehensive solution - including levying income taxes solely on the highest one percent (although the top 20 percent would have subtraction VAT surtaxes paid for them by their employers on wages and dividends - with capital gains taxes being repealed in favor of a different tax). The remaining income tax would range between 6.5% and 26% - which is also the range for the VAT Surtax. As discussed below, the remaining personal income tax would go toward paying interest on the national debt and paying down a portion of the principal.

Americans for Tax Reform, Grover Norquist

Mr. Norquist is opposed to any revenue measure, despite the fact that when taxes are more progressive, the economy improves. This is shown by historic data included in our May comments to the House Budget Committee which demonstrated that when progressive income taxes are reduced, deficit spending must occur to avoid or recover from a recession (or worse). The reduction in growth that occurred before the Pandemic was one point lower than before the Tax and Job Cuts Act (not a typo) was enacted - this includes a one-year lag for investors to pocket their tax cuts and invest in the latest investment scam, such as crypto currency and single family home rental mortgage backed securities - while household consumption (and income) similarly declines.

Revenue is at historic lows as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product. Letting the TCJA expire as scheduled will be healthy for the economy, for households and does not violate the precedent that letting tax cuts expire does not trigger Mr. Norquist’s pledge, which was set in 2013.  Member conformity to Mr. Norquist’s will is no longer the standard for most far-right Republicans. It is now supporting former President Trump and excusing or minimizing the events of January 6, 2021 (which will have no impact on future criminal proceeding for Mr. Trump or any who assisted in the planning of that day’s events).

I propose actual tax reform - reform that simplifies the tax system while distributing burden equitably.

Americans for Fair Taxation, Stephen L. Hayes

Mr. Hayes begins his testimony claiming he is not a tax economist. Given the impact of his proposal on low income households and the boon his proposal is to high income households, I agree with his assessment. The idea of a national consumption tax is meritorious, as long as it is not a single tax. 

Unless he includes gambling at the Wall Street Casino as a consumable good covered under the Fair Tax, while retaining some kind of surtax for very high income individuals (one as part of the Fair Tax that employers remit - as Lawrence B. Lindsey suggested - and the second as residual high income tax that can be remitted early as a tax prepayment bond, thus reducing interest on the debt), his suggestion is profoundly unfair.

The Fair Tax proposal includes incentives for tax avoidance that a value added tax removes. There are already tax breaks for individuals and firms who collect income taxes - as such taxes are a deduction. With a VAT, such taxes are a CREDIT that is fully refundable. If I were selling a product, I would much rather have the full credit and not have to look over my shoulder for auditors looking to see if I am misusing the exclusion of wholesale goods.

The Fair Tax replaces income distributed to families through the child tax credit with a prebate that only covers the Fair Tax - a substantial income loss that would either force more people into very low wage jobs - those akin to slavery - or force the government to restore Aid for Families with Dependent Children (welfare) and Food Stamps to levels higher than when President Clinton reformed welfare as we knew it.

The subtraction VAT we propose takes the government out of redistribution almost entirely - save for payments of child tax credits to families receiving disability or unemployment benefits - with employers receiving tax benefits to provide adequate, family size sensitive, wages instead. Such a proposal would both benefit families, make work pay (along with increases to the minimum wage) and increase economic growth and household savings.

The final flaw in Mr. Hayes’ proposal is that it always comes around when income tax rates cuts are scheduled to expire. A single tax proposal which assumes the permanent baseline could not pass. The rate would be too high. America can do better - and it would be fairer.

The Tax Policy Center, Len Burman

Professor Burman addresses wage stagnation and the prospect that technological advancement may make it worse. He would use a universal earned income tax credit to remedy this. My answer to this is increasing the minimum wage. The UEITC would solidify the two-tiered economy. 

The other factor which has led to economic inequality is bad math. By bad math, I mean the rewarding of cost of living adjustments (which are an unearned benefit) on a percentage basis, rather than an equal dollar basis. Because prices follow the 90th percentile (with one half of total adjusted growth income under that point, with the other half above - counting dollars, not people), most families do worse each year. Only product improvement and social programs, such as the Child Tax Credit, allow most families to avoid starvation. Whether this effect is  accidental or intentional is a matter for more systematic study.

From here on in, adjust for cost of living on a per dollar an hour rather than on a percentage basis (or dollars per month or week for federal beneficiaries). Calculate the dollar amount based on inflation at the median income level. No one gets more dollars an hour raise, no one gets less dollars per hour in increases. Increase the minimum wage as above and consider decreasing high end salaries paid to government employees and contractors. Even without decreases, simply equalizing raises will soon reduce inequality. 

Burman echoes the proposal to restore the child tax cut to pandemic era level. I would double that, but take the IRS out of the income distribution business - as previously discussed. He and I agree on the Fair Tax - although I would use the term Fair Tax for a VAT as part of a multi-tax reform. Doing so extracts money spent by heirs and plutocrats who borrow from their fortunes to buy companies and luxuries. If they buy companies or take them public, they would pay an asset value added tax (see below).  Our proposals would end tax shelters. Tax expenditures for health care, family incomes, daycare and the eventual shift to employee-ownership to replace much of the employer contribution to FICA are not shelters, they are basic reforms.

The Center for Fiscal Equity Solution

A single tax will never provide enough revenue while being politically acceptable. We propose a series of taxes, which are detailed in the appendix, which will still prove easier to collect and administer than the current income tax system.

The tax gap leaves revenue on the table. Neither a wealth tax, nor the President’s proposal to tax capital gains at death should pass. Indeed, a wealth tax simply multiplies the problems of capital gains taxation.  It is time for the nation to shift away from taxing short term capital gains taxes at nominal rates and preferred rates for long term gains...

Excellence will come from sound tax policy, especially if the nation shifts away from taxing short term capital gains taxes at nominal rates and preferred rates for long term gains. Instead, set one rate for all transactions and shift from end of the year reconciliation to an asset value added tax for each transaction. 

At initial public offering, option exercise and the first sale after inheritance, gift or donation, the sale would logically be marked to market. If a family keeps the stock or company, there will be no tax until someone else buys it. The second tax cut would be to expand the ESOP tax exemption to all sales of public stock, rather than just private stock. Maximizing employee-ownership will bring a new level of motivation and excellence to the economy.

The 2017 personal income tax changes should not be made permanent or extended, as has been proposed. This will reward savings and speculation, rather than providing an incentive to invest in plant and equipment. The latter responds to greater levels of consumption by households funded by both the public and private sectors, including Social Security recipients. For a more detailed treatment of why this is the case, see the first attachment - which was drafted in 2017 in opposition to the Trump-Ryan-Brady tax cuts.

Our latest comprehensive tax reform proposal is in the attachment. We propose replacing the complexity of the Earned Income Tax Credit with a floor on FICA contributions by employees and a lower ceiling to reduce the amount of funding for high income households. The employer contribution would be shifted from employers to consumers (but not exporters) to the Fair Tax - which would also fund domestic discretionary spending and domestic military basing and operations.

This should be operated like a Value Added Tax - in other words, the deduction of sales taxes paid would be replaced with a tax credit for such payments. This change should be made, even without enactment of the Fair Tax. To not do so is to force companies to pay tax on tax - something that the uninitiated thing the VAT does, but in reality, this is what happens in the current tax system due to its extreme complexity.

Rather than providing for a prebate and shifting the more generous portions of the child tax credit (which is the most anti-abortion provision in law) to direct subsidy, expand the child tax credit and distribute it with Unemployment Insurance, Social Security old age, survivors and disability insurance and wages (including stipends paid for those in educational and work experience programs to raise them out of poverty). 

The child tax credit would be an offset to a subtraction value added tax, as well as a credit for providing employee health insurance. This will replace all Obamacare subsidies and the health insurance exclusion to corporate income taxes. Corporate income taxes would be abolished. The base level of the subtraction VAT should be a wash - with taxes fully offset by credits for the average business above 50 employees. Some firms would even get a rebate if their credits are greater than their tax obligations.

Personal income tax filing on wage and dividend income for middle income households will be replaced with a subtraction value added tax surtax for income above the ceiling for FICA employee contributions, which will be graduated from a 6.5% rate to a 26% rate for income over $425,000. 

At $500,000, an individual surtax ranging between 6.5% and 26% would fund net interest payments, debt reduction and paying down the Social Security Trust Fund. For this reason, these payments will be made to the Bureau of the Public Debt. The Asset VAT will be collected by the SEC. The subtraction VAT, any carbon added tax and the Fair Tax will be collected by the states (who will also do any auditing on tax collection issues). What would happen to the IRS? Abolition.

Thank you for the opportunity to address the committee.  Please contact us for an in person briefing or to arrange for a public hearing. Remember, given the involvement of members in the sad events of January 6th, there should be no delay in shifting from grandstanding to seeking actual compromise. The alternative is a 28.8% capital gains tax rate and a matching corporate income tax rate (rather than the abolition of both taxes, as suggested in our comments).

Attachment: Tax Reform Videos included

Costs and Benefits of the Federal Debt

WM Oversight: Hidden Cost: The True Price of Federal Debt to American Taxpayers, December 6, 2023

Less than full faith and credit

While my comments are usually frank, these will be on the brutal side. I will not be pulling punches, will share the raw politics of this situation and will be sharing my comments with the rating agencies.

Any downgrades we have had - and there have been two - did not come because the Democrats are spending out of control. It is because Republicans refuse to compromise until the last minute, with a significant portion of leadership not wanting to compromise at all. This unwillingness cost Mr. McCarthy his Speakership and likely drove John Boehner out of Congress. 

Downgrades came for the same reason - brinkmanship on the debt limit in an attempt to force temporary tax cuts to be made permanent. The irresponsible strategy and the end goal alarm the bond markets because they indicate that one major party has no commitment to fiscal responsibility - play politics instead in fear of Grover Norquist - who no longer has skin in the game. Donald Trump took all of the radical oxygen away from the Republican fringe.

I am going to assume that leadership, especially among members of the Freedom Caucus, as well as their staffs are truly ignorant of how the national debt actually works. In short, it is the reason capitalism can exist at all. This is why, when the debt was paid off and the national bank was closed by Andrew Jackson, the economy collapsed. 

Historic perspectives

In the 1960s, the debt from World War II was quickly being paid down. By the end of the decade, there was no federal debt to leverage other liquid investments. This eventually led to tax cuts, but President Reagan overshot the mark and then codified it in the 1986 tax reform. Presidents Bush and Clinton found the growing deficits unsustainable and adjusted tax reform at the margins. Doing so reduced the debt while fueling economic growth. 

The Clinton cuts to capital gains taxes put too much money into the hands of speculators, which led to the tech boom and bust. It had nothing to do with technology and everything to do with IPOs. Even then, as budget balance was a real possibility, Alan Greenspan sounded the alarm about abolishing the debt. Many thought that this was to preserve the ability to maintain a fractional reserve currency, but the real motivation was to continue to provide the leverage on which capitalism depends.

The title of this hearing indicates that this history is new to the majority and staff. Either that or it is pandering to public ignorance. Regardless, please consider the current circumstances further.

Federal Debt Ownership

According to the Treasury Bulletin, the national debt is owned by the Federal Reserve System and its member banks (about a third), long term investment, insurance and retirement funds - both public and private - as well as Savings Bonds (another third). Using figures from the 2019 Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finance, I estimate that the top 10% of households own around 54% of these funds, with the bottom 90% owning the remainder (although the bottom three quintiles own essentially nothing - nor do they owe it - as will be described below.

The last third is owned by mutual and bond funds, as well as offshore investors. The top 10% of households own 77% of these funds. If the majority continues to dance on the edge of default, these are the investments that are at risk. The top 1% own the same percentages as of what the top 10% hold. This means that from the second to the tenth percentages own 25% of deposits retirement and mutual funds backed by Treasuries. 

The top 1% hold one quarter of debt assets held through deposits and long-term investment funds and half of what is held by mutual and bond funds. There are better ways to increase interest rates for these borrowers than messing with the Full Faith and Credit of the United States, which is essentially what the Freedom Caucus led assault on the status quo is doing.

Let us add that of the debt held overseas, roughly two thirds are held by foreign governments who, by doing so, facilitate international capitalism - especially the import of consumer goods from Japan and China. Messing with these funds put WalMart shopping at risk, as well as the entire chain. Much of the remainder of foreign bond holdings are in the Caymans, Ireland, Switzerland and Luxembourg. In other words, they are held in tax shelters for very wealthy Republican donors.

These investors know exactly where their debt assets are being held. It seems as if members of the Freedom Caucus do not. Unless there is a plot to destroy capitalism that I have not yet heard about, we suggest that the debt limit be abolished and the 2018 tax cuts allowed to expire on schedule. This will restore the confidence of both rating agencies and investors at home and abroad.

Continuing on the current path, where a major portion of the Republican Party acts against the interests of investors and the nation at large and sustains unsustainable tax cuts could have drastic consequences. The entire economy could collapse again, but this time for real. If the Federal Reserve loses its international leverage because the debt has become worthless, there will be no bailouts for questionable investments in mortgage backed securities - investments that have shifted from owner-occupied housing to single-family rentals. The bill to ban hedge fund ownership of these properties will reduce risk overall, but will not save the nation from the risk of losing its good credit.

Who Owes the Debt?

Debt obligation is a function of income tax paid (FICA tax paid to create assets held in trust by the government, not debt obligation). The current factor is 19 dollars of debt owed for every dollar paid in tax. 

Ownership of Social Security assets is realized when households are in the bottom quintiles who, at that time (because only 20% have income beside Social Security), own almost all FICA trust fund assets. The bottom quintiles hold more than their obligation.

The next three quintiles owe more than they own until we get to the top 0.1%. Because half of their income is earned through asset ownership taxed at preferred rates and their high share of ownership of debt, they break even. They own what they owe. In other words, when interest rates go up due to downgrades, their wealth expands in terms of debt owned compared to debt owed. This should guide how the debt should be reduced responsibly.

Please see the first attachment for more information on how debt is owned and owed. See the second attachment for our tax reform proposals that will responsibly bring down the federal debt.

Possible scenarios

It is now time to speculate on what may happen next. Let us assume rational actors who are capable of changing their behavior. Again, we will be pulling no punches.

Business as usual would be for an agreement between leadership, neo-liberal Republicans and neo-liberal Democrats to enact a reasonable set of spending bills, with the usual dissenters in the Freedom Caucus never coming around to do their duty as members of Congress in the majority party to keep government open.

A variation of that option is for those who have been voting with Democrats to simply switch parties, or at least enough of them to end the drama for the rest of this Congress.

Another change in leadership may, and probably will, occur when Roger Stone and his associates in the Willard Hotel War Room, including members of Congress who were part of the planning process, are indicted by Jack Smith. At this point, from the time these members resign or are expelled and until they are replaced by special elections, Minority Leader Hakim Jefferies becomes the Speaker and enacts a menu of tax, spending and budget process reforms. 

The same variation is possible as above, which is for some number of current Republican members to permanently change parties - especially if they wish to remove the taint of having been in a party which had a majority of its members vote as if they had helped plan the Insurrection on January 7, 2021, because they realize that an elector bloodbath rivaling 1974 is likely.

The worst case scenario is Republican solidarity, allowing the debt to go into default and leading to permanent damage to the economy, including that portion of trade that occurs between China and the United States which is more akin to the internal operations of Wal-Mart. This would include the collapse of the Federal Reserve. If this occurs, it will be before the election, so that no Trumpian tyranny will result.

The least likely option is the challenge made in these comments - a return to bipartisanship without the kind of rhetoric used in naming this hearing - which has infected what was the status quo of this Committee. Under that option, Congress returns to business as usual and quietly passes the required legislation to keep the government running through the middle of 2025.

The fantasy option is for Jack Smith to do nothing related to Congress, with Trump returning to power with strong Republican majorities - strong enough so that he can turn aside any 14th Amendment challenges to taking office again. Anyone who thinks this is at all likely needs both psychiatric and legal advice.

The ideal option, which is also unlikely, is for bipartisanship to result in the reforms detailed in the second attachment. This would actually settle most controversy over taxes for the long-term, which is what makes it unlikely. A lot of money is spent on going back and forth on tax policy, sadly putting our nation at continued risk of financial collapse.

Budget Process Reform 2023

 HBUD: Budget Process Reform Member Day Hearing December 6, 2023

I know that I am intruding on Member’s day, however having members of Congress propose solutions to the budget process, to of all places an overly politicized Budget Committee, is like asking the local pack of foxes to consult on chicken house security.

The Process is Broken

The budget process has been badly broken for the last 49 years - since the passage of the Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974, which created the Budget Committees.

The sad truth is that the more hands are in the kitchen, the more opportunities multiply for members of Congress and the Senate to grandstand and stop the process. Exhibit A is this hearing. Were it not for the budget process, the Appropriations Committee could set its own spending targets for the various Subcommittees to hit, with the House going low and the Senate restoring cuts made by the House. 

Procurements that should be made throughout the fiscal year can only begin in February of most years. This frustrates the work of program offices and government contractors and requires overstaffing of contract and budget activities for the time between the passage of the budget and the end of the fiscal year. Congressional dysfunction costs huge amounts of money.

Tax and entitlement policy can be made by the revenue committees without help, especially since Reconciliation has been used to bypass normal procedure and cut taxes in a manner that can only be regarded as reckless. 

Let Tax Cuts Expire

Prior to the Pandemic, the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act had reduced revenues and increased speculation on Wall Street, which resulted in a reduction in economic growth by one percent in the fiscal year following the passage of the Act. 

Funds that had been going to households through pay went to the CEO/donor sector and its “financial innovations,” i.e. garbage such as mortgage backed securities for single family home rentals and crypto currency, all conveniently buried in Exchange Traded Funds. Now that the pandemic is over, such flawed paper is coming due and may just lead us into a recession yet. COVID bailouts to the financial sector by the Federal Reserve hid the damage - but it will not stay hidden.

Luckily for the nation,  the TCJA cuts for individuals will expire in 2025. This will take money out of the speculative investment sector and, because of greater consumption, will result in more real investment in plant and equipment. Any tax reform (and I am in favor of reforms such as the Fair Tax - but in the form of a value added tax and a net business receipts tax, as well as an asset value added tax) should be pegged to the 2025 revenue laws, not those of the current year.

Enact a reasonable budget control act

Aside from nature taking its course, how do we solve the problem of a dysfunctional budget process which results in a bloated bureaucracy? First, do another Budget Control Act, which will include spending caps that can also function as a budget resolution should no resolution be enacted on schedule. This time, however, the caps should be realistic rather than punitive. Realistic caps will result in lower spending. The recent caps simply forced compromises which drove spending up. 

Second is to either enact a budget resolution (which should be joint rather than concurrent) or use the new budget act levels to trigger automatic appropriations derived from the Current Services Budget at the start of the new fiscal year should they not pass by October First. While Congress could still pass supplemental appropriations, it could not withhold money for either pet projects or to grandstand about cutting spending.

Joint Budget Committee

Another option is to replace both budget committees with an ex officio joint committee made up of the chairs of Ways and Means, Finance and Appropriations in each house who would agree to budget allocations and any tax and entitlement changes, inviting ranking members only when the chambers are controlled by different parties. In other words, turn back the clock to when the system actually worked. 

Try bipartisanship

The final option is for the Budget Committees to do their jobs, which in this case would be for members and staff from this committee to sit down with their opposite numbers in the Senate to work out a realistic compromise. It is the only way the House Budget Committee can really be relevant and allow the bloat to be taken out of government procurement in all sectors (including government contractors whose workloads are held hostage to the congressional calendar).

Would the Appropriations Committee allow the Budget Committees to actually do this? I am doubtful. It is why Budget Committee leadership is always given to the most partisan members. These committees are expected to fail, which preserves the power of the older committees.

Hyper-partisanship is not a good career move. Members of the House generally run for leadership, seek state office or run for the Senate. It used to be that leadership would compromise. Now, not so much. Serving in the Senate, as Governor or working on K Street require the ability to reach across the aisle.  Grandstanding on wokeness is not a good resume item. There is a lot for the Budget Committee to do if it gave up grandstanding. I have already suggested some of these options.

  • It could remedy inflation in the public sector by awarding COLAs on an equal dollar basis rather than as a percentage of current salary. It could even do so based on a lower average percentage than inflation. This would still make most civil servants better off. Only the overpaid would suffer. This limit should also apply in Congress.
  • Cut back on federal leave entitlements, but balance this with closing the government between Christmas and New Years, as many other professional offices - especially government contractors, do.
  • Cut the budget by one percent under the inflation adjustment, rather than one percent over current spending (which is a huge cut).
  • Cut Defense spending, but increase spending by some lesser amount for NASA, with the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee responsible for the agency. This would keep funds in the same sector (aerospace) rather than having NASA fight with the National Science Foundation, the Department of Commerce and the Department of Justice for funding.
  • Make the Affordable Care Act actually work using a public option, but ending pre-existing condition reforms and subsidizing the public option with an employer-paid subtraction value added tax (which it could offset partially by providing insurance or direct health services to employees - including those who now function as contractors).
  • Lead a serious discussion of the Fair Tax (but as a series of consumption taxes as I suggest - including an employer paid subtraction VAT designed to be offset by a generous child tax credit and health insurance coverage of employees. The option of having the IRS distribute the Child Tax Credit as it did under the American Recovery Plan Act or through Social Security as currently proposed turns the federal government into a paymaster for too many people.
  • Reorganize budget line items and appropriations committee jurisdictions to make programmatic sense, rather than codify old personality disputes between chairs. A proposal for doing so is attached.

Budget Act Line Item/Appropriations Subcommittee Reorganization

Agriculture
Add consumer protection functions performed by Consumer Product Safety Commission and Federal Communications Commission. Transfer the Commodity Futures Trading Commission to the Commerce, Financial Services and the Treasury Subcommittee. 

Commerce, Financial Services and the Treasury 
  • Add the Department of the Treasury; Financial Service agencies, including CFTC,  Federal Trade Commission, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (Office of the Inspector General), the National Credit Union Administration, (Community Development Revolving Loan Fund), the Securities and Exchange Commission, Small Business Administration and the United States Tax Court. 
  • Transfer the Department of Justice and related agencies to the  Justice and General Government Subcommittee. 
  • Transfer NASA and the National Space Council from CSJ to the Defense Subcommittee so that reductions to defense research and procurement would be offset with increased budget for space exploration.

Energy, Water Development, Transportation and Related Agencies
Add the Department of Transportation to create synergies between energy and transportation activities, especially research.

Homeland Security - No change unless some agencies are spun off to Justice and General Government.

Justice and General Government
  • Add the Department of Justice and related agencies from CSJ. Transfer Treasury to CSJ. Transfer Financial Services agencies to CSJ. 
  • The following general government agencies are included: Administrative Conference of the United States, Federal Labor Relations Authority, Federal Permitting Improvement Steering Council, General Services Administration, Merit Systems Protection Board, National Archives and Records Administration, Office of Government Ethics, Office of Personnel Management and Related Trust Funds, Office of Special Counsel, Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, Public Buildings Reform Board, Selective Service System, United States Postal Service, Payment to the Postal Service Fund and Office of Inspector General, General Provisions, Government-wide.
  • Transfer District of Columbia, the Executive Office of the President and the Judiciary to the Legislative Branch Subcommittee so that the DC budget will be passed by the start of its fiscal year without interference, the White House is funded with the same staff levels as the Congress in case of government shutdown and the Judiciary is respected as a co-equal branch whose salaries may not be reduced (or unsupported) by Congress. Add D.C. related agencies now funded by the Interior and Environment Subcommittee to Legislative Branch.
Labor, Education, Housing and Related Agencies
  • Add Housing and Urban Development and Veterans Affairs Housing functions to reinforce synergies between housing, education and workforce development.  
  • Transfer out Health and Human Services to decrease the size of the LHHSE Appropriation package.

Health and Human Services and Veterans Affairs
Create synergies between human services and veterans health and other DVA functions.

Military Construction and Veterans Affairs
Remove Veterans Affairs

State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs - no change

Transportation, Housing and Urban Development and Related Agencies 
Disband. Sever the link between developing freeways and warehousing the poor.