The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #92887   Message #1781566
Posted By: CarolC
12-Jul-06 - 03:01 AM
Thread Name: BS: Oh no!....Say it ain't so!!
Subject: RE: BS: Oh no!....Say it ain't so!!
http://www.cbpp.org/2-12-03bud.pdf

Over the last two years, the federal budget has gone from surplus to deficit. At the same time, Congress enacted major tax cuts. What role did those tax cuts play? Mitchell Daniels, the Director of the President's Office of Management and Budget, has characterized the role of the tax cuts as "minor" and said that the budget would be in deficit even without them. The three short analyses that constitute this paper examine this question, based on the extensive data that the Congressional Budget Office issued in late January. The analyses find the following:

The CBO data show that one-third of the deterioration in the budget since 2000 has been caused by the tax cuts enacted in the last two years. This makes the tax cuts one of the principal factors in the deterioration, rathern than a minor element. Moreover, the share of the budget deterioration that is attributable to the tax cuts grows larger each year over the course of the decade.

According to the CBO data, the recession, along with defense, homeland security, and other spending increases, would have driven the budget into deficit in 2002 and 2003 even without the tax cuts. But the budget would be back in surplus in 2004 and every succeeding year for the rest of the decade were it not for the tax cuts. (This CBO projection excludes the cost of policies not yet enacted, such as further defense increases, a war, or further tax cuts.)

The CBO estimates do not reflect any impacts that tax cuts and spending measures enacted in 2001 and 2002 may have had on the economy. The President's Council of Economic Advisers argues that the tax cuts have stimulated economic growth and that the recession would have vbeen worse without them. The CEA has issued specific estimates of how much worse it would have been. Yet if one uses the CEA estimates on this matter - which are favorable to the Administration and portray the tax cuts as having had larger economic effects than some studies indicate - the tax cuts still would have been responsible for almost 30 percent of the budget deterioration since 2000. There is no escaping the fact that the tax cuts are one of the primary factors behind the deterioration.

One also can examine the extent to which various types of federal legislation have contributed to the budget deterioration. The CBO data show that over the last two years, Congress enacted legislation that cost an average of $260 billion a year in 2003 and 2004. The CBO data also show that $150 billion - or 58 percent - of this $260 cost resulted from the tax cuts. These data demonstrate that the cost of the tax cuts substantially exceeded the combined costs of in creases for the military, homeland security, foreign aid, the farm bill, and all other legislation. (Even if one uses the CEA assumptions regarding the effect of the tax cuts on economic growth, the tax cuts still account for 54 percent of the cost of the legislation enaced over the past two years.)

Finally, under the Administration's new budget - which would make the 2001 tax cut permanent, add further tax cuts on top, and institute some program expansions such as a prescriptions drug benefit - the federal budget would remain in deficit forever. The projections of permanent deficits come from the Administration itself. They are shown in a 75-year table in the OMB budget volume entitled Analytical Perspectives.