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One of the sharpest increases in government spending has been interest payments on the debt: $94.5 billion so far this budget year. That's up 9.3 percent from the same period a year ago. It reflects the growing size of the national debt from the annual deficits. Economists have warned that unless Congress and the White House agree on a credible plan to reduce the deficit, they risk hurting the economy. Investors could grow nervous and demand higher interest payments to lend to the government. That would drive up borrowing costs for the government and for consumers and businesses. Economic growth would slow. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has called for a plan to reduce the deficit over the long run. But Bernanke has cautioned against slashing spending too soon. Last week, he told Congress that the Republicans' proposed spending cuts could cost the economy a couple hundred thousand jobs. Private economists have suggested that the damage would be worse. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody's Analytics, has estimated that the GOP plan would cost the economy 700,000 new jobs by the end of next year. Still, Zandi, too, has pushed for deficit reduction. "The huge deficits are the nation's most serious long-term economic threat," he said Thursday. "These numbers highlight that we need to make some very fundamental changes to government spending and tax policy."
[Associated
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