U.S. budget deficit to top $1-trillion in
2019: budget experts
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[January 30, 2018]
By Susan Cornwell
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As the U.S. Congress
limps toward the likely passage next week of another stopgap spending
bill to avert a government shutdown, a Washington think tank has
estimated the federal budget deficit is on track to blow through $1
trillion in 2019.
If it does, it would be the first time since 2012 the U.S. economy will
have to support a deficit so large, highlighting a basic shift for the
Republican Party, which has traditionally prided itself on fiscal
conservatism.
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a Washington fiscal
watchdog, said the red ink may rise in fiscal 2019 to $1.12 trillion. If
current policies continue, it said, the deficit could top a
record-setting $2 trillion by 2027.
The committee had previously projected the deficit - the difference
between the government spending and its annual tax revenue - would reach
$983 billion in fiscal 2019. That estimate came after Congress in
December passed a tax overhaul that will add about $1.5 trillion to the
national debt over a decade.
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But that estimate was made obsolete by a shutdown-averting stopgap
funding bill Congress approved earlier this month. It delayed the
implementation of some healthcare taxes, further reducing the
government's projected tax revenues.
Congress in coming days is expected to weigh another stopgap funding
bill, needed by Feb. 8. Lawmakers also want to pass disaster relief
funding, and they are pursuing an agreement to lift budget caps on
spending.
Stan Collender, a longtime budget expert, predicted in October that
trillion-dollar deficits would become "the new normal" under President
Donald Trump. Trump and fellow Republicans control the White House and
both chambers of Congress.
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The U.S. Capitol is seen from behind trees after President Donald
Trump and the U.S. Congress failed to reach a deal on funding for
federal agencies in Washington, U.S., January 20, 2018.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts
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There were four consecutive $1-trillion deficits under former
President Barack Obama. But they resulted from a historic financial
crisis, a recession and stimulative spending.
"During the Trump years, the deficits are occurring mostly because
of legislative changes, like the tax cut," Collender said.
In June 2017, before the tax overhaul was enacted, the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office, Congress' official scorekeeper,
predicted the U.S. government would hit a trillion-dollar deficit in
fiscal 2022.
An updated CBO report would typically be released around now, but
the office said last week that the update would be delayed, partly
because of the need to produce projections that reflect the recently
enacted tax legislation.
(Reporting by Susan Cornwell; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and David
Gregorio)
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