Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults

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Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults Conducted for AARP Bulletin January 2006

Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults Report written by Jean Kalata, Research Analyst National Member Research Survey conducted by International Communications Research Copyright AARP Reprinting with permission only 601 E St. NW Washington, D.C. 20049 www.aarp.org January 2006

AARP is a nonprofit, nonpartisan membership organization that helps people 50+ have independence, choice and control in ways that are beneficial and affordable to them and society as a whole. We produce AARP The Magazine, published bimonthly; AARP Bulletin, our monthly newspaper; AARP Segunda Juventud, our bimonthly magazine in Spanish and English; NRTA Live & Learn, our quarterly newsletter for 50+ educators; and our website, www.aarp.org. AARP Foundation is our affiliated charity that provides security, protection, and empowerment to older persons in need with support from thousands of volunteers, donors, and sponsors. We have staffed offices in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands.

TABLE OF CONTENTS PURPOSE AND METHODOLOGY... 1 KEY FINDINGS... 2 Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 i

Purpose and Methodology The purpose of this study was to gather opinions about the federal budget for the AARP Bulletin. Results provide some insight into which budget areas adults think the U.S. should increase federal dollars, which areas the U.S. should decrease federal dollars, and which areas comprise the largest portions of the federal budget. In addition, the survey gathered information on how concerned the population is about the federal deficit and their preferences for reducing the deficit. Questions were included on an omnibus survey January 4-9, 2006. The omnibus survey, conducted by International Communications Research (ICR), is a bi-weekly national telephone survey of U.S. households. ICR conducted a stratified, random-digit-dialing sample of telephone households. The survey included demographic and lifestyle questions, as well as questions about the effects of high energy prices and other topics. The survey was conducted with 1,026 respondents age 18 and older (502 respondents ages18-49 and 524 respondents ages 50+), and all responses were subsequently weighted to be nationally representative of the U.S. population 18+, balanced by key demographics. The margin of error is +/- 3.1%. Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 1

Key Findings Among 8 budget areas, more respondents felt we should increase spending for education (74%) than for any other item, and younger respondents (18-49) were significantly more interested in increasing education funds (79%) compared to older (50+) respondents (67%). When asked from the same list of 8 items which 3 make up the biggest proportion of the current budget, Defense was selected most often (75%), followed by Social Security (53%), Medicare (45%), payment on national debt (33%), Education (27%), Medicaid (26%), Transportation (15%), and Agriculture (11%). Respondents with at least some college education selected Defense more often (83%) than respondents with lower education levels (66%). The majority of respondents (71%) said they are either very (37%) or somewhat (34%) concerned with the current budget deficit. Older respondents (50+) are more concerned (79%) than younger (18-49) respondents (66%). Female respondents are more concerned (75%) than male respondents (66%). When asked for each of 8 possible methods for decreasing the budget deficit, respondents most agreed that we should keep the estate tax on estates over 2 million dollars (69%) and raise income taxes for households earning over $100,000 dollars (61%). Not surprisingly, the wealthiest respondents (household income of $75K+) were less in favor of raising income taxes for high income households (50%), although just as many of these respondents (49%) were in favor of raising high income household taxes. Respondents also agreed strongly that we should NOT cut social security benefits (92%) nor cut Medicare and Medicaid spending (87%). While most responses, including the ones just cited, did not see any differences among older and younger respondents, younger respondents were more in favor of a national sales tax (43%) compared to older respondents (30%), while older respondents were more in favor of cutting farm subsidies (38%) than younger respondents (24%). Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 2

1. For each of the following budget items, please state whether you think the new budget should increase spending on this item from the previous budget, decrease spending on this item from the previous budget, or keep it the same. a. Defense Total 35 24 37 4 * 18-49 35 26 36 2 * 50+ 34 20 39 6 1 b. Social Security Total 60 6 32 2 * 18-49 62 7 30 1 * 50+ 57 4 36 2 * c. Medicare Total 61 6 30 2 * 18-49 64 7 27 2 * 50+ 58 4 34 3 1 d. Medicaid Total 51 10 34 4 * 18-49 54 10 33 2 * 50+ 47 9 36 8 * e. Interest payment on national debt Total 29 26 38 6 1 18-49 26 29 40 5 * 50+ 34 22 35 9 1 f. Transportation Total 33 17 46 4 * 18-49 33 18 46 1 * 50+ 33 14 46 7 * g. Education Total 74 6 18 1 * 18-49 79 6 14 1 * 50+ 67 6 25 2 -- Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 3

h. Agriculture Total 42 14 40 4 * 18-49 46 12 38 3 * 50+ 35 17 42 6 * 2. From the eight items just discussed, which THREE do you think make up the biggest proportion of the current budget? Total Mentions (total respondents) Total 18-49 50+ Defense 75 73 78 Social Security 53 53 53 Medicare 45 43 47 Medicaid 26 29 22 Payment on national debt and interest 33 32 36 Transportation 15 16 12 Education 27 31 22 Agriculture 11 12 10 Don t know 3 3 3 Refused * * * 3. The federal deficit this year is 317 billion dollars. The total budget is 2.4 trillion dollars. How concerned are you about the current budget deficit? CONCERNED NOT CONCERNED NET Very Somewhat NET Only a little Not at all Don t know Refused Total 71 37 34 28 16 12 1 * 18-49 66 28 37 34 20 14 * -- 50+ 79 51 28 19 9 10 1 * Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 4

4. I am going to read you a list of possible ways to reduce the federal deficit. For each, please state whether that is something you think the United States should or should not do. a. Create a national sales tax Total 38 57 5 1 18-49 43 54 3 * 50+ 30 60 9 1 b. Cut defense spending Total 41 57 2 * 18-49 43 56 1 * 50+ 37 59 3 * c. Cut Medicare and Medicaid spending Total 11 87 2 * 18-49 11 87 1 * 50+ 11 86 2 * d. Raise the Social Security tax Total 25 72 3 * 18-49 24 74 1 * 50+ 25 70 5 * e. Cut Social Security benefits Total 7 92 * * 18-49 7 92 1 * 50+ 7 92 * * f. Raise income taxes for households earning over $100,000 dollars Total 61 37 2 * 18-49 60 39 1 * 50+ 63 34 3 1 g. Keep the estate tax on estates over 2 million dollars Total 69 24 6 1 18-49 69 25 5 * 50+ 68 24 8 1 Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 5

h. Cut farm subsidies Total 30 64 6 * 18-49 24 71 5 * 50+ 38 53 8 -- Opinions on the Federal Budget Among U.S. Adults, January 2006 6