Dems' Build Back Better Bill Will Add $160 Billion to Deficit, CBO Says
The Fiscal Times · CNP

The Congressional Budget Office on Thursday estimated that, despite promises from President Joe Biden and others in his party that their Build Back Better plan would be fully paid for, the legislation would add about $160 billion to budget deficits over the next 10 years — with a $750 billion gap in the first five years, a result of the front-loaded nature of the spending plans that Democrats made temporary to keep costs low.

The budget scorekeeper said that the plan would actually increase deficits by $367 billion through 2031, but that was “not counting any additional revenue that may be generated by additional funding for tax enforcement.” CBO projected that those additional revenues from beefing up the Internal Revenue Service would total $207 billion over 10 years — far less than the $480 billion the White House had projected — bringing the overall deficit impact to $160 billion.

The new numbers appeared unlikely to derail House Democrats’ plans to approve the bill in a vote Thursday evening. Party leaders expressed optimism throughout the day that they’ll be able to pass what would be the largest expansion of the nation’s safety net in decades — even as they waited for the CBO cost estimate. “At the close of the debate, all that remains is to take up the vote – so that we can pass this legislation and achieve President Biden’s vision to Build Back Better!” House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said in a letter to colleagues Thursday afternoon.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement Thursday evening that, when factoring in her department’s analysis of the proposed IRS investments, the legislation “is fully paid for, and in fact will reduce our nation’s debt over time by generating more than $2 trillion through reforms that ask the wealthiest Americans and large corporations to pay their fair share.”

Using the Biden administration’s projection for revenue from the IRS plan would result in a roughly $113 billion reduction in deficits over the next decade.

Budget hawks disagree, though, arguing that the CBO analysis means that Democrats should find $160 billion in cuts or revenue. “They should also drop the arbitrary sunsets and gimmicky SALT-related offsets. At an absolute minimum, they should make a credible commitment not to extend any parts of the bill without paying for them as well,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which has found that making the temporary parts of the bill permanent would about double its cost, potentially adding $3 trillion to deficits.

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