|
Eakinomics: Budget
Update
The Wall Street Journal said
it all: “The U.S. budget deficit grew to a record $1.7 trillion in the first
half of the fiscal year as a third round of stimulus payments sent
federal spending soaring last month. The budget gap, broadened by the Covid-19 pandemic and related
shutdowns that sent the economy into a tailspin starting in March 2020, is
now more than double what it was for the same period a year ago, the Treasury
Department said Monday. The deficit was $660 billion last month, 454% wider
than it was in the same month a year ago. Revenue rose 13% to $268 billion,
while spending increased 161% to $927 billion—the third-highest total on
record, after June and April of last year.”
But that’s not going to stop me from saying more.
First, I got excoriated as Congressional Budget Office Director when the
deficit reached $412.7 billion in 2014, about 60 percent of the deficit for
March alone. I didn’t do it; I just counted it. Not that I’m keeping score,
but I want an apology.
Second, notice that revenues were up, not down, from March 2020. It’s just
that spending was nearly $1 trillion and up over 160 percent from last year.
Third, The Wall Street
Journal highlights the so-called stimulus checks as the
culprit, and this is true for March. But what did we get for that largesse?
The economy was already anticipated to grow at a 6 to 8 percent clip in the
first quarter anyway. No stimulus was merited. A key reason was progress on
the pandemic front that has allowed families in high-income areas to resume
services spending. The data in tracktherecovery.org show
that spending has finally recovered to its January 2020
level. But high-income individuals didn’t get checks, nor will they
benefit from the remainder of the American Rescue Plan. So the economic
growth has nothing to do with the source of the large deficit.
Fourth, the point above is a reminder that in 2020, large deficits were
incurred because of fiscal policy that was timely, well-designed, and scaled
to size of the problem. The 2021 deficits are from policies that are none of
the above. They are poorly timed, utterly unconnected to the issues of
COVID-19, and – weighing in at $1.9 trillion so far – gargantuan compared to
the economic problem. They are the definition of waste and bad policy.
Finally, many features of the American Rescue Plan are intended to be
permanent, as is the proposed American Jobs Plan (and likely the
yet-to-be-unveiled American Family Plan). Making these policies
permanent will balloon the existing structural deficit in the federal
budget, thus buying the United States little in the present and adding to its
woes in the future.
As I noted, The Wall
Street Journal said it all.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment