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Eakinomics:
Mid-Session Review of the Budget
Under the cover of oppressive heat and humidity on a Friday in August, the
administration “released” (in the same sense as a trash truck released its
load) the Mid-Session Review of the Budget.
Now, there was a time when people were concerned about the present and future
of public finances. Now is not that time. There was a time when the
president’s budget submission was an important document that framed a serious
debate about legislative priorities. Now is not that time. And in that time,
the update to the budgetary outlook contained in the Mid-Session Review (MSR)
was eagerly awaited as one crept closer to the July 15 deadline. The fact
that it came out on August 27; well, it is clear that now is not that time.
What can one glean from a revision to a document that is irrelevant to an
issue that nobody cares about? Actually, a couple of things. First, the
administration continues to hew to its “bigger is better” theory of
government. By 2031, the president’s policies would generate taxes just shy
of 20 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and spending equal to 24
percent of GDP. Both levels are way beyond historical norms.
Second, the administration is unconcerned with fiscal sobriety. Dealing with
the inevitable fallout of excessive debt is someone else’s problem. Both
federal debt and the real carrying cost of federal debt will be on
unsustainable upward trajectories.
Third, somehow the economy is supposed to prosper even more than previously
believed. Growth (measured from 4thquarter to 4thquarter)
in 2021 has been upgraded from 5.2 percent to 7.1 percent, and the long-term
trend upped from 2.0 percent to 2.3 percent. Why?
Fourth, the administration acknowledges that it has managed to generate
substantial inflation. It puts the projection for 2021 at 4.8 percent
(compared to 2.0 percent in the Budget). Consistent with that, nominal
interest rates have been marked up a bit as well.
To summarize, the administration continues to be in denial on the budgetary
front. It has suppressed the Trustees’ reports that would document that
financial danger to Social Security and Medicare and has no plan to fix any
of the existing social safety net. Instead, it intends to raise taxes to
historic levels to in part fund a massive expansion of the social safety net
without addressing the problems presented by either program or the federal
debt. And it has decided to declare victory on the economy, even though the
only thing it has clearly done is generate inflation that wipes out any
increase in wages. But most of all, the administration did not want anyone to
notice what is going on.
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