Deficit up by $246 billion in a year.

The budget deficit will jump by $246 billion to $407 billion this
year, the Congressional Budget Office estimates in a report released
Tuesday.

"Over the long run, growing budget deficits and the resulting
increases in federal debt would lead to slower economic growth," the
agency said.

The budget deficit shot up 153% from last year's shortfall of $161
billion. The government's fiscal year ends Sept. 30. The agency
attributes the jump to "a substantial increase in spending and a halt
in the growth of tax revenues."

That drop in revenue is driven in part by an estimated 15% decline in
corporate tax receipts. They fell as a result of lower corporate
profits and tax rules governing how businesses depreciate their
investments this year. A second factor is the rebates provided to tax
filers from the economic stimulus law Congress passed earlier this
year.

The spending hike is partly due to efforts by the government "to cover
the insured deposits of insolvent financial institutions," the agency
said.

To date, 11 banks have been seized by the FDIC this year - not a high
number historically, but higher than it's been in recent years - and
that number is expected to grow in the coming months.

The CBO said it expected the deficit to exceed $400 billion - or 3% of
gross domestic product - for each of the next two years if current
policies remain in place. It also forecast several more months of
"very slow" economic growth.

"The nation is experiencing a significant period of economic
weakness," said Peter Orszag, director of the CBO, in a press
briefing.

The CBO's estimate for the cumulative deficit over the next 10 years
is now $2.3 trillion. Earlier this year, the CBO estimated the country
would have a $300 billion surplus by 2018. But that was wiped out in
part because of new spending approved by lawmakers for the war in Iraq
and Afghanistan and revised economic projections.

And the 2.3 trillion figure doesn't account for the likelihood that
the 2001 and 2003 tax cuts will be extended or that the middle class
will continue to be protected from the Alternative Minimum Tax - or so-
called wealth tax. If those extensions are made - and both
presidential nominees have been calling for that, at least in part -
then the 10-year deficit projection jumps to more than $7 trillion.

Putting Fannie and Freddie on the books

The agency's latest estimates do not reflect the Treasury announcement
this weekend that the government would temporarily takeover Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac, the two government-sponsored enterprises that form
the backbone of the mortgage market.

But Orszag said that come January, the CBO will be incorporating the
activities of Fannie and Freddie in its baseline for the federal
budget. The CBO will be working with House and Senate budget
committees to address questions of just how transactions by both
companies should be accounted for - the answers to which will greatly
influence the net effect the companies have on the federal deficit.

"The degree of control exercised by the federal government is so
strong that the best treatment is to incorporate [the agencies] into
the federal budget," Orszag said.

To allay one concern that many taxpayers have expressed, the roughly
$5 trillion in loans that Fannie and Freddie own or back would not be
added wholesale to the debt held by the public, Orszag told
CNNMoney.com.
"I don't see a scenario in which you take a total of the mortgages
backed and add that to the federal deficit," he said.

As a result, Orszag said in the press briefing, "The nation is on an
unsustainable fiscal course."

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to