U.S. budget deficit to top $1 trillion in 2020 despite
strong economy, CBO says
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[January 29, 2020] By
Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. economy
will grow at a "solid" rate of 2.2% this year, the non-partisan
Congressional Budget Office forecast on Tuesday, but the federal budget
deficit will hit $1.02 trillion.
The economy will be strong during this presidential election year,
thanks in part to consumer spending, CBO said, but it forecast "higher
inflation and interest rates after a decade in which both remained low,
on average."
Economic growth will slow to an average annual rate of 1.7% from 2021 to
2030, CBO predicted, while inflation and interest rate increases will
slow in 2023.
After topping $1 trillion in fiscal 2020, federal deficits will average
$1.3 trillion per year between 2021 and 2030, CBO estimates, a level
that some economists and policymakers warn is unsustainable.
Washington's budget deficit hit a peak of $1.4 trillion in fiscal 2009,
after emergency measures to contain a severe economic recession that
began two years earlier.
It hasn't topped $1 trillion since 2012 and fell to $585 billion at the
end of President Barack Obama's second term in 2016.
The current and forecast deficits come under better economic
circumstances, but after a Republican overhaul of the tax system, which
reduced revenues over the short term. Federal outlays in 2020 will be
$4.6 trillion, while revenues will hit $3.6 trillion, CBO estimates.
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Work crews construct a new hotel complex on oceanfront property in
Encinitas, California, U.S., November 26, 2019. REUTERS/Mike Blake
CBO projections assume that current laws governing taxes and spending will
generally remain unchanged.
Under the current system, budget deficits will push overall U.S. federal debt
held by the public to $31.4 trillion by the end of 2030, CBO estimated.
That would be 98% of gross domestic product, or the total monetary value of all
goods and services produced in the United States. That's a higher rate than at
any point since just after World War II, CBO said, and "more than double what it
has averaged over the past 50 years."
Interest payments on federal debt, coupled with increased spending on mandatory
federal programs like Social Security, will be the biggest contributors to
climbing federal outlays in coming decades, the CBO said.
As a result, U.S. federal spending will grow more than revenues through 2050,
CBO estimates.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Heather Timmons and
Andrea Ricci)
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