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Budget report:Bush plan adds $2.75 trillion to national debt

 
 
Reply Sat 28 Feb, 2004 10:46 am
Saturday, February 28, 2004, 12:05 A.M. Pacific
Budget office report: Bush plan adds $2.75 trillion to national debt
By Jonathan Weisman
The Washington Post

WASHINGTON ?- President Bush's budget would fail to cut the budget deficit in half over five years, as he has promised, and would run up $2.75 trillion in additional debt over the next decade, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected yesterday in the first authoritative look at the plan's longer-range implications.

The nonpartisan report suggests that the administration has given an overly pessimistic view of the deficit this year but an overly optimistic forecasts for later.

Under Bush's forecast, the deficit would drop from $521 billion this year to $239 billion in 2009, the last year of his projection. By contrast, the CBO says the deficit under Bush's budget policies would be $478 billion this year, fall to $258 billion in 2009 and climb to $289 billion by 2014.

The CBO projections indicate that, by 2014, the president's spending and tax-cut policies would push the government into a hole that would be $737 billion deeper than if Congress ignored Bush's policy prescriptions.

Crunching the numbers

The federal government, if it used an accounting method preferred by Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, would have turned in a deficit of $665 billion in 2003.

That's bigger than the figure recognized as the budget deficit for last year, which clocked in at a little more than $374 billion.

The larger figure, included in a Treasury Department report yesterday, is based on a method of accounting in which expenses are booked when incurred ?- not when payments are made. Greenspan has said this method provides a better picture of the government's obligations and assets.

?- The Associated Press

The new forecast comes at a sensitive time for the White House and congressional Republicans. Bush and the CBO two years ago envisioned surpluses totaling $5.6 trillion for the decade ending in 2011. House and Senate budget writers have pledged to tackle the deficit more vigorously than the president.

The report also likely will reopen debate over whether tax cuts enacted but not in force should be rescinded and whether those that have taken effect with expiration dates should be allowed to expire as scheduled.

Robert Bixby, head of the Concord Coalition, a watchdog group based in Arlington, Va., said the numbers portended "an ugly budget year."

He said the CBO report showed that the administration had failed to give a full picture of the country's budget problems by presenting a five-year plan when "the overwhelming impact" of its proposals came after five years.

"In short," Bixby said, "these numbers do not support the administration's assertion that it has a plan to cut the deficit in half over five years. Worse yet, even under this scenario, the deficit is beginning to rise at the end of the 10-year outlook ?- just as the (baby) boomers begin their retirement.

"If we follow this path, we will have done nothing to prepare for the enormous fiscal challenge of the demographic tidal wave," Bixby said. "In fact, the strategy behind this budget appears to be, 'Here's comes the tidal wave. Let's all go for a swim.' "

Under Bush's plan, CBO said, an additional $2.75 trillion in publicly held federal debt in the next decade would increase today's $4.1 trillion debt by 67 percent.

"This is devastating," said Thomas Kahn, Democratic staff director of the House Budget Committee. "This confirms our worst fears about the president's budget."

White House budget-office spokesman Chad Kolton noted that, even under the CBO projections, the deficit, as expressed as a percentage of the economy, will be cut in half, from 4.2 percent of the economy this year to 1.8 percent. Kolton added that the CBO's 2009 deficit forecast of $258 billion is still half of the White House's $521 billion projection for this year.

Kahn said the picture actually is fuzzier. The CBO's estimate includes no money for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan beyond this year, since Bush included no such funding in his budget. Even White House officials have conceded they will have to seek up to $50 billion in war funding, probably after the November election.
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Bixby's comments were reported by the Los Angeles Times; details on projected surpluses in 2001 were provided by The Associated Press.
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BumbleBeeBoogie
 
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Reply Sat 28 Feb, 2004 10:51 am
Deficit Goes Up Fast in Year 6 of Bush 5-Year Plan
http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-budget28feb28,1,6863162.story?coll=la-headlines-nation

Deficit Goes Up Fast in Year 6 of Bush 5-Year Plan
Congressional analyst says the president's proposal to cut red ink by half by 2009 would mean an enormous increase afterward.
By Richard Simon, Times Staff Writer
February 28, 2004

WASHINGTON ?- President Bush's fiscal 2005 budget proposals would reduce the deficit over the next five years, the Congressional Budget Office said Friday, but at the expense of an enormous increase in red ink in the following five years.

Bush had pledged that his plan would cut the annual deficit in half in five years, and White House projections of the effects of his proposals suggested he would meet that goal. The CBO estimated that the Bush budget would fall slightly short of that 50% reduction.

And although the White House did not project what the deficit would be after five years, the CBO ?- Congress' nonpartisan fiscal analyst ?- did. The CBO found that the annual deficit would remain greater than $200 billion through 2014. For the 10 years beginning in 2005, the cumulative deficit would total $2.75 trillion.

By contrast, the CBO said, the annual deficit would shrink nearly to zero if the current budget were put on autopilot for the decade and no changes were made to spending or tax policy. Under this approach, the cumulative 10-year deficit would be abut $2 trillion.

The report is expected to stoke a political debate on Capitol Hill and on the campaign trail over whether Bush and Congress are doing enough to rein in spending. It also likely will reopen debate over whether tax cuts already enacted but not yet in force should be blocked and whether those that have taken effect with expiration dates should be allowed to expire as scheduled.

Robert L. Bixby, head of the Concord Coalition, a budget watchdog group based in Arlington, Va., said the numbers portended "an ugly budget year." The CBO report showed, he said, that the administration had failed to give a full picture of the country's budget problems by presenting a five-year plan when "the overwhelming impact" of its proposals would come after five years.

"In short," Bixby said, "these numbers do not support the administration's assertion that it has a plan to cut the deficit in half over five years. Worse yet, even under this scenario, the deficit is beginning to rise at the end of the 10-year outlook ?- just as the [baby] boomers begin their retirement.

"If we follow this path, we will have done nothing to prepare for the enormous fiscal challenge of the demographic tidal wave," Bixby said. "In fact, the strategy behind this budget appears to be, 'Here comes the tidal wave. Let's all go for a swim.' "

At the White House budget office, spokesman Chad Kolton said the CBO report showed that "we can cut the deficit in half in five years if we continue to keep spending under control and grow the economy." He asserted that if the deficit were viewed as a percentage of the gross domestic product, it would be cut in half ?- to 1.6% of the gross domestic product ?- in 2009, from 4.5% this year.

Kolton also said that any estimates beyond five years are "notoriously inaccurate."

Senate Budget Committee Chairman Don Nickles (R-Okla) said he would begin deliberations next week, with the intent of cutting the deficit in half in five years.

The CBO predicted that the deficit for fiscal 2004, which runs through Sept. 30, would hit $478 billion, up from last year's $374 billion. The White House has projected this year's budget deficit at $521 billion.

The bleak report comes days after Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan urged Congress to consider cutting Social Security benefits for future retirees to cut government spending.

It also comes as Bush lobbies Congress to make his tax cuts permanent, at a cost of more than $1 trillion over 10 years.
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