File this month's Tip of the Hat under Duh. David Frum cites a study that undermines the long-standing austerity narrative of the Right, and kudos to him for doing so. My one complaint? He still can't bring himself to lay the blame squarely where it belongs. Oh well, Rome wasn't built in a day.
AEI's John Makin studies the numbers and concludes that the United States
has already achieved a sustainable fiscal path for the medium term.
There's no need for further near-term spending cuts. Instead, Congress should go
to work on longer-term tax and entitlement reform. Here's a quote with
permission from an advance copy, the text will be available on the AEI site
tomorrow.
Link: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/04/22/there-s-no-need-for-further-near-term-spending-cuts.html
The Deficit is Under Control
The United States has actually made substantial
progress toward deficit reduction in 2013 ...
On January 2, as part of an agreement to avert the
sharpest austerity that would have been triggered by the “fiscal cliff,”
Congress did pass a total of about $180 billion of annual tax increases. The
result is that, by the 2014 fiscal year, the fully phased-in sequester, along
with the January 2013 tax increases, will cut the US deficit—already on a
downward path—from $1,089 billion in 2012 to $845 billion in 2013, and then
further to $615 billion in 2014. In terms of the deficit-to-GDP ratio, that is 7
percent in 2012, down to 5 percent in 2013, and down further to 3.7 percent in
2014.
That is substantial progress, especially when
compared with the G7 average ratio of deficits-to-GDP projected to be −4.0 for
2014.
The years 2015–17 look even better, with
Congressional Budget Office (CBO)–projected deficits averaging just 2.5 percent
of GDP, very close to the 30-year average of 3.4 percent and well below the
projected G10 average of 3.5 percent. The US debt-to-GDP ratio stabilizes at
about 75 percent on a slight negative trajectory from 77 percent in 2014 down to
73.1 percent in 2018. The United States is well below the much-feared 90 percent
[Reinhart & Rogoff] threshold, which itself has been called seriously into
question.
The American fiscal austerity has been moderate and
probably, at the current pace of deficit reduction of about $300 billion per
year over the next half decade, has proceeded far enough for now. … [I] is
important for the US Congress to take yes for an answer to the question of
whether it has already achieved substantial deficit reduction. Perhaps by
accident, Congress has in fact reduced the US budget deficit by enough to enable
working at long-term fiscal reform.
Link: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2013/04/22/there-s-no-need-for-further-near-term-spending-cuts.html
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