Trump and Clinton Fiddle While Long-Term Debt Is Set to Surge

Trump and Clinton Fiddle While Long-Term Debt Is Set to Surge · The Fiscal Times

The Congressional Budget Office on Tuesday warned that the national debt is racing well ahead of prior projections and could reach an historic 141 percent of the overall economy by 2046.

The non-partisan budget agency has been signaling alarm about the long-term fiscal picture of the government, even as the economy has improved and the annual budget revenue shortfall has tapered off considerably after the worst of the Great Recession.

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But while Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, the presumptive Democratic and Republican presidential candidates, have been giving short shrift to longer-term budget problems, the latest CBO report provides added cause for concern.

CBO’s latest long-term budget outlook shows the federal debt’s share of the overall economy will steadily rise from 75 percent of GDP in the wake of the financial crisis to 86 percent in 2026 and 141 percent in 2046 — a level that would surpass the historical peak of 106 percent registered shortly after World War II.

The picture looks worse than it did a year ago, when CBO forecast the long-term debt through 2040 at a level that was 15 percent below the latest projection. Much of the increase in the projected debt stems from a decline in projected tax revenues as a result of the congressional spending deal for fiscal 2016. The CBO outlook was also affected by a downward revision in projected economic growth.

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The CBO acknowledged that its forecast is clouded by a number of factors, including the labor market, economic productivity, interest rates and health care costs. Nevertheless, it said that the trajectory of the federal debt over the next three decades is troublesome: “Taking all factors into account, CBO concludes that despite the considerable uncertainty of long-term projections, debt as a percentage of GDP would probably be greater — in all likelihood, much greater — than it is today if current laws remained generally unchanged.”

Robert Bixby, executive director of the Concord Coalition, a budget watchdog group, said in an interview Tuesday that the latest CBO projections are less shocking than the refusal of Clinton and Trump to address the long-term challenges of containing government costs and averting future financial crises.

“It’s something that the next president is going to have to deal with, and yet they’re not preparing the groundwork for that at all,” he said. “They’re not even talking about it. And it’s the biggest disconnect in the campaign. It’s a major problem that is going to explode on their watch, and they’re not even talking about it.”