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n2doc

(47,953 posts)
Fri Sep 13, 2013, 10:34 AM Sep 2013

Deficit Falls To Lowest Level Since 2008, Discrediting Argument For More Cuts

BY ALAN PYKE ON SEPTEMBER 13, 2013 AT 10:06 AM

New Treasury Department figures confirm what the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected in the spring: the budget deficit for fiscal year 2013 will be dramatically lower than it was the past four years. The government recorded a $148 billion deficit in August, 22.5 percent smaller than in the same month of 2012, and is on track to total a $642 billion annual deficit when the fiscal year ends on September 30.
Days before the Treasury Department release on August revenue and spending, the CBO updated its statistics on the ratio of debt to gross domestic product. A spring report had projected debt-to-GDP ratios of 76 percent in 2014, 71 percent in 2018, and 74 percent in 2023, but the CBO now says the ratio will fall below 70 percent in 2017 and stay there for four years. Debt-to-GDP is now expected to be 71 percent in 2023 – a difference of about $500 billion in a nearly $17 trillion economy.

These figures reinforce a key point in the argument for resetting the fiscal policy debate: Congress can afford to invest in job creation right now. While Republicans remain committed to the idea of austerity (without being able to pass specific appropriations bills that adhere to the abstract cuts imposed by sequestration), falling deficits and debt levels undercut their argument.

Meanwhile, Congress has already enacted $2.4 trillion worth of austerity measures in the past two years, nearly all of it in the form of spending cuts. Those policies have helped push deficits to their current lows. The fiscal austerity that has helped drive the deficit down has also undermined economic growth, not just in 2013 but for years to come. Cuts to education programs, safety nets, infrastructure investments, and research programs will actually cost the country far more down the road than they save today. The falling deficits and lowered debt-to-GDP projections give the country room to enact targeted spending measures that would kick the economy into the sort of higher gear it needs to bring unemployment back down to pre-recession levels.

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http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2013/09/13/2616681/deficit-lowest-2008/

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Deficit Falls To Lowest Level Since 2008, Discrediting Argument For More Cuts (Original Post) n2doc Sep 2013 OP
And republicans will deny the facts Andy823 Sep 2013 #1
It is still Deficit Spending... Bandit Sep 2013 #2
MAybe, like Clinton, it takes tax INCREASES and growth n2doc Sep 2013 #3

Andy823

(11,495 posts)
1. And republicans will deny the facts
Fri Sep 13, 2013, 11:21 AM
Sep 2013

All the republicans want is to keep the economy in the hole, blame it all on president Obama's leadership, and do nothing at all to help get the economy back on a solid footing. It's all a game to them, they will lie their ass off to keep their agenda going, and the country suffers because of their lack of cooperation.

If the country does not wake up and vote these useless do nothing idiots out of office, then I guess we deserve what we get in 2014. Not voting is not an option, getting rid of those who have done nothing but obstruct progress should be a priority for everyone who is fed up with the BS in congress.

Bandit

(21,475 posts)
2. It is still Deficit Spending...
Fri Sep 13, 2013, 11:24 AM
Sep 2013

Under Clinton we were in surplus the last two years of the Administration. It can be done, but is going to take more cuts. I only hope those cuts are places that will do good instead of bad. Such as Oil Subsidies. Is Capitalism such a bad system that the most profitable industry in the world..EVER.. needs to be supported by Government money?

n2doc

(47,953 posts)
3. MAybe, like Clinton, it takes tax INCREASES and growth
Fri Sep 13, 2013, 11:26 AM
Sep 2013

Since there is a demonstrated correlation between tax cuts and deficits.

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