Eakinomics: The
Long-Term Budget Outlook
In the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, with the economy climbing out of the
sharpest downturn in U.S. history, few people are focused on the fiscal
situation in 2050. But Monday the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) issued
its latest Long-Term Budget Outlook, which
reminded Americans that they cannot ignore the future reality for very
long. For those Eakinomics readers (or, admittedly, writers) who prefer the
Cliff’s Notes version, AAF’s Gordon Gray has a nice summary of the highlights.
The first insight is that federal debt in the hands of the public will
reach 195 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2050. That is, of
course, if Congress does not pass new legislation that worsens the deficit
and adds more debt. It certainly will, however, so this is a
rough lower bound to the size of the problem.
The second insight is that fighting the COVID-19 recession has added
considerably to the debt – the 2050 projection is up from 180 percent
of GDP – but has not really changed the outlook for spending or revenue
after the next couple of years. Both return to their baseline growth
patterns, i.e. spending outgrowing revenues as far as the eye can see. The
fact that Congress passed something as consequential and transitory as the
COVID-19 response is somewhat remarkable.
The final insight is the most important one. Gray leads with a relatively
innocuous warning: “Before long, stabilizing the debt will
require an unprecedented fiscal consolidation.” But if one reads further,
he spells out exactly what that means. “CBO has also been calculating what
is essentially the cost of delaying needed fiscal consolidation, shown in
Figure 3 [reproduced below]. To hold debt held by the public as a share of
GDP to about current levels, 100 percent, in 2050 would require an annual reduction
(relative to CBO projections) in the primary deficit (a revenue increase,
spending decrease, or both, excluding net interest) of 2.9 percent if begun
in 2025. This sum amounts to $598 billion in 2020. Achieving the same level
of debt in 2050 would require a much larger fiscal consolidation if delayed
until 2030, or 2035.”
The unsustainable fiscal outlook cannot be ignored forever. More important,
the longer Congress waits to act, the harder stabilizing the debt outlook
will be.
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