I am going to interject briefly into your discussion with Patranus. His point about 10 years of taxes for 6 years of benefits is very frustrating to me, because I have pointed this out before linking the CBO reports and the assertion just keeps getting made. The fact is, the bill collects virtually NOTHING in tax revenues prior to 2013.
-snip-
wolf
No need to get so frustrated, that change was just published yesterday.
Anyway (or moreover), it's (the House buill to fix the Senate bill) about 150 some pages of law that's going to take a while to sort out and understand.
I think people are focusing too hard on this preliminary report. Just read the cover page to Pelosi and you'll find some elements are omitted (waiting for the Joint Committee of Taxation), others need to be reviewed etc. Might be prudent to wait for the final. Along those lines the Dems are being arguably deceptive by pointing to this thing knowing full it's incomplete and hasn't been adequately reviewed yet.
I'll say the same for much of the MSM, which is touting this as though it's a final.
Yes, the CBO is nonpartisan, nobody should argue that point. However, they are given much of the parameters and assumptions by Congress (the Dems in this case) to perform these calculations. Now we have 25 pages of
financial summaries likely backed by scads of detailed calcualtions etc. It'll take a while before that data can be sifted through. Looking at the summary is only a part of the story, and may be only a small part. The assumptions/parameters that are (1) provided by Congress, and (2) those developed by the CBO itself need to be identified and analyized before the quality of these projections can be determined.
I'm begining to suspect Congress is back to 'full speed ahead' before final data is known.
As CPA who does a lot of projections I recognize that they are just 'fiction', but hopefully based upon good faith/realistic assumptions. Fact of the matter is if projections end up with good future estimates it's a wild coincidence, likely every assumption/parameter was wrong by a certain factor yet the actual data just so happened to coincided 'magically' to arrive at the same, or close result. But because we lack any better tool, this is what we are stuck with. But they are useful and necessary.
Cliffs: Wait for the 'real' CBO report, and then let non-partisan competent professionals analyize it.
Fern