CBO: US DEFICIT WILL SHRINK MASSIVELY IN COMING YEARS
They also estimate that the deficit falls to $616 billion in 2014 and as low as $430 billion in 2015.
They assume unemployment rates of 8.0 percent in 2013 and 7.6 percent in 2014. They also assume GDP growth of 1.4 percent in 2013 accelerating to 3.4 percent in 2014.
Here are the CBO's long-term budget projections:
And here are the economic projections:
Download the full report here.
Below is the CBO's statement:
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The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2013 to 2023
Economic growth will remain
slow this year, CBO anticipates, as gradual improvement in
many of the forces that drive the economy is offset by the
effects of budgetary changes that are scheduled to occur
under current law. After this year, economic growth will
speed up, CBO projects, causing the unemployment rate to
decline and inflation and interest rates to eventually
rise from their current low levels. Nevertheless, the
unemployment rate is expected to remain above 7½ percent
through next year; if that happens, 2014 will be the sixth
consecutive year with unemployment exceeding 7½ percent of
the labor force—the longest such period in the past 70
years.
If the current laws that
govern federal taxes and spending do not change, the
budget deficit will shrink this year to $845 billion, or
5.3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), its smallest
size since 2008. In CBO’s baseline projections, deficits
continue to shrink over the next few years, falling to 2.4
percent of GDP by 2015. Deficits are projected to increase
later in the coming decade, however, because of the
pressures of an aging population, rising health care
costs, an expansion of federal subsidies for health
insurance, and growing interest payments on federal debt.
As a result, federal debt held by the public is projected
to remain historically high relative to the size of the
economy for the next decade. By 2023, if current laws
remain in place, debt will equal 77 percent of GDP and be
on an upward path, CBO projects (see figure below).
Such high and rising debt
would have serious negative consequences: When interest
rates rose to more normal levels, federal spending on
interest payments would increase substantially. Moreover,
because federal borrowing reduces national saving, the
capital stock would be smaller and total wages would be
lower than they would be if the debt was reduced. In
addition, lawmakers would have less flexibility than they
might ordinarily to use tax and spending policies to
respond to unexpected challenges. Finally, such a large
debt would increase the risk of a fiscal crisis, during
which investors would lose so much confidence in the
government’s ability to manage its budget that the
government would be unable to borrow at affordable rates.
Under Current Law, Federal Debt Will Stay at Historically High Levels Relative to GDP
The federal budget deficit,
which shrank as a percentage of GDP for the third year in
a row in 2012, will fall again in 2013, if current laws
remain the same. At an estimated $845 billion, the 2013
imbalance would be the first deficit in five years below
$1 trillion; and at 5.3 percent of GDP, it would be only
about half as large, relative to the size of the economy,
as the deficit was in 2009. Nevertheless, if the laws that
govern taxes and spending do not change, federal debt held
by the public will reach 76 percent of GDP by the end of
this fiscal year, the largest percentage since 1950.
With revenues expected to
rise more rapidly than spending in the next few years
under current law, the deficit is projected to dip as low
as 2.4 percent of GDP by 2015. In later years, however,
projected deficits rise steadily, reaching almost 4
percent of GDP in 2023. For the 2014–2023 period, deficits
in CBO’s baseline projections total $7.0 trillion. With
such deficits, federal debt would remain above 73 percent
of GDP—far higher than the 39 percent average seen over
the past four decades. (As recently as the end of 2007,
federal debt equaled just 36 percent of GDP.) Moreover,
debt would be increasing relative to the size of the
economy in the second half of the decade.
Those projections are not
CBO’s predictions of future outcomes. As specified in law,
CBO’s baseline projections are constructed under the
assumption that current laws generally remain unchanged,
so that they can serve as a benchmark against which
potential changes in law can be measured.
Revenues
Federal revenues will
increase by roughly 25 percent between 2013 and 2015 under
current law, CBO projects. That increase is expected to
result from a rise in income because of the growing
economy, from policy changes that are scheduled to take
effect during that period, and from policy changes that
have already taken effect but whose full impact on
revenues will not be felt until after this year (such as
the recent increase in tax rates on income above certain
thresholds).
As a result of those factors,
revenues are projected to grow from 15.8 percent of GDP in
2012 to 19.1 percent of GDP in 2015—compared with an
average of 17.9 percent of GDP over the past 40 years.
Under current law, revenues will remain at roughly 19
percent of GDP from 2015 through 2023, CBO estimates.
Outlays
In CBO’s baseline
projections, federal spending rises over the next few
years in dollar terms but falls relative to the size of
the economy. During those years, the growth of spending
will be restrained both by the strengthening economy (as
spending for programs such as unemployment compensation
drops) and by provisions of the Budget Control Act of 2011
(Public Law 112-25). Although outlays are projected to
decline from 22.8 percent of GDP in 2012 to 21.5 percent
by 2017, they will still exceed their 40-year average of
21.0 percent. (Outlays peaked at 25.2 percent of GDP in
2009 but have fallen relative to GDP in the past few
years.)
After 2017, if current laws
remain in place, outlays will start growing again as a
percentage of GDP. The aging of the population, increasing
health care costs, and a significant expansion of
eligibility for federal subsidies for health insurance
will substantially boost spending for Social Security and
for major health care programs relative to the size of the
economy. At the same time, rising interest rates will
significantly increase the government’s debt-service
costs. In CBO’s baseline, outlays reach about 23 percent
of GDP in 2023 and are on an upward trajectory.
Changes from CBO’s Previous Projections
The deficits projected in
CBO’s current baseline are significantly larger than the
ones in CBO’s baseline of August 2012. At that time, CBO
projected deficits totaling $2.3 trillion for the
2013–2022 period; in the current baseline, the total
deficit for that period has risen by $4.6 trillion. That
increase stems chiefly from the enactment of the American
Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 (P.L. 112-240), which made
changes to tax and spending laws that will boost deficits
by a total of $4.0 trillion (excluding debt-service costs)
between 2013 and 2022, according to estimates by CBO and
the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation. CBO’s
updated baseline also takes into account other legislative
actions since August, as well as a new economic forecast
and some technical revisions to its projections.
Looming Policy Decisions May Have a Substantial Effect on the Budget Outlook
Current law leaves many key
budget issues unresolved, and this year, lawmakers will
face three significant budgetary deadlines:
- Automatic reductions in spending are scheduled to be implemented at the beginning of March; when that happens, funding for many government activities will be reduced by 5 percent or more.
- The continuing resolution that currently provides operational funding for much of the government will expire in late March. If no additional appropriations are provided by then, nonessential functions of the government will have to cease operations.
- A statutory limit on federal debt, which was temporarily removed, will take effect again in mid-May. The Treasury will be able to continue borrowing for a short time after that by using what are known as extraordinary measures. But to avoid a default on the government’s obligations, the debt limit will need to be adjusted before those measures are exhausted later in the year.
Budgetary outcomes will also
be affected by decisions about whether to continue certain
policies that have been in effect in recent years. Such
policies could be continued, for example, by extending
some tax provisions that are scheduled to expire (and that
have routinely been extended in the past) or by preventing
the 25 percent cut in Medicare’s payment rates for
physicians that is due to occur in 2014. If, for instance,
lawmakers eliminated the automatic spending cuts scheduled
to take effect in March (but left in place the original
caps on discretionary funding set by the Budget Control
Act), prevented the sharp reduction in Medicare’s payment
rates for physicians, and extended the tax provisions that
are scheduled to expire at the end of calendar year 2013
(or, in some cases, in later years), budget deficits would
be substantially larger over the coming decade than in
CBO’s baseline projections. With those changes, and no
offsetting reductions in deficits, debt held by the public
would rise to 87 percent of GDP by the end of 2023 rather
than to 77 percent.
In addition to those
decisions, lawmakers will continue to face the longer-term
budgetary issues posed by the substantial federal debt and
by the implications of rising health care costs and the
aging of the population.
Economic Growth Is Likely to Be Slow in 2013 and Pick Up in Later Years
The U.S. economy expanded
modestly in calendar year 2012, continuing the slow
recovery seen since the recession ended in mid-2009.
Although economic growth is expected to remain slow again
this year, CBO anticipates that underlying factors in the
economy will spur a more rapid expansion beginning next
year.
Even so, under the fiscal
policies embodied in current law, output is expected to
remain below its potential (or maximum sustainable) level
until 2017 (see figure below). By CBO’s estimates, in the
fourth quarter of 2012, real (inflation-adjusted) GDP was
about 5½ percent below its potential level. That gap was
only modestly smaller than the gap between actual and
potential GDP that existed at the end of the recession
because the growth of output since then has been only
slightly greater than the growth of potential output. With
such a large gap between actual and potential GDP
persisting for so long, CBO projects that the total loss
of output, relative to the economy’s potential, between
2007 and 2017 will be equivalent to nearly half of the
output that the United States produced last year.
The Economic Outlook for 2013
CBO expects that economic
activity will expand slowly this year, with real GDP
growing by just 1.4 percent. That slow growth reflects a
combination of ongoing improvement in underlying economic
factors and fiscal tightening that has already begun or is
scheduled to occur—including the expiration of a 2
percentage-point cut in the Social Security payroll tax,
an increase in tax rates on income above certain
thresholds, and scheduled automatic reductions in federal
spending. That subdued economic growth will limit
businesses’ need to hire additional workers, thereby
causing the unemployment rate to stay near 8 percent this
year, CBO projects. The rate of inflation and interest
rates are projected to remain low.
The Economic Outlook for 2014 to 2018
After the economy adjusts
this year to the fiscal tightening inherent in current
law, underlying economic factors will lead to more rapid
growth, CBO projects—3.4 percent in 2014 and an average of
3.6 percent a year from 2015 through 2018. In particular,
CBO expects that the effects of the housing and financial
crisis will continue to fade and that an upswing in
housing construction (though from a very low level),
rising real estate and stock prices, and increasing
availability of credit will help to spur a virtuous cycle
of faster growth in employment, income, consumer spending,
and business investment over the next few years.
Nevertheless, under current
law, CBO expects the unemployment rate to remain
high—above 7½ percent through 2014—before falling to 5½
percent at the end of 2017. The rate of inflation is
projected to rise slowly after this year: CBO estimates
that the annual increase in the price index for personal
consumption expenditures will reach about 2 percent in
2015. The interest rate on 3 month Treasury bills—which
has hovered near zero for the past several years—is
expected to climb to 4 percent by the end of 2017, and the
rate on 10-year Treasury notes is projected to rise from
2.1 percent in 2013 to 5.2 percent in 2017.
The Economic Outlook for 2019 to 2023
For the second half of the
coming decade, CBO does not attempt to predict the
cyclical ups and downs of the economy; rather, CBO assumes
that GDP will stay at its maximum sustainable level. On
that basis, CBO projects that both actual and potential
real GDP will grow at an average rate of 2¼ percent a year
between 2019 and 2023. That pace is much slower than the
average growth rate of potential GDP since 1950. The main
reason is that the growth of the labor force will slow
down because of the retirement of the baby boomers and an
end to the long-standing increase in women’s participation
in the labor force. CBO also projects that the
unemployment rate will fall to 5.2 percent by 2023 and
that inflation and interest rates will stay at about their
2018 levels throughout the 2019–2023 period.
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