ICYMI: CBO Projects 2016 Budget Deficit To Hit $590 Billion
The fiscal year is set to end on September 30 and the deficit is expected to be $56 billion more
than what the Congressional Budget Office projected. According to
Reuters, slow growth in revenues and more spending on entitlement
programs mucked up the original numbers:
The U.S. budget deficit is expected to grow to $590
billion in fiscal year 2016 due to slower than expected growth in
revenues and higher spending for programs including Social Security and
Medicare, the Congressional Budget Office said on Tuesday.
The estimate, which is $56 billion larger than CBO's forecast in
March, shows the deficit increasing in relation to economic output for
the first time since 2009. CBO said the deficit is expected to be $152
billion higher than in 2015 and will equal 3.2 percent of economic
output.
The deficit peaked at $1.4 trillion in 2009 and shrank to $485 billion in 2014.
The nonpartisan research agency also said that debt held by the
public will amount to nearly 77 percent of gross domestic product by the
end of 2016, three percentage points higher than last year and its
highest ratio since 1950.
Yes, we all hear President Obama boasting about how he shrunk the
deficit in half, but the deficit has gotten worse and the national debt
is approaching $20 trillion. The administration likes to frame
themselves as saviors of an economy, which is in recovery. Many
Americans simply don’t feel it. An argument could be made that Obama
stopped us from going over the cliff, but the second part of that is
pushing us up the hill to a true recovery. He’s been disappointing in
that regard.
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