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157 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2003)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0154 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies that will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

July 18, 2003

Advisory No. 157

MID-SESSION REVIEW PROJECTS HIGHER FEDERAL DEFICITS,
BUT NO NEED TO PANIC

The Administration has released its Mid-Session
Review of the federal budget. It shows increased
federal budget deficits relative to the February
release. The increases are due largely to the weaker
than hoped for economic recovery and spending on
the war in Iraq. As the chart below shows, although
the deficits are large in nominal terms, they are not
unusually big as a share of GDP following a
recession. They are projected to decline quickly as
a share of GDP as the recovery progresses,
especially if the government adopts a modicum of
spending restraint. The deficits are not large enough
to have any significant adverse effect on interest
rates or on the economy. Debt as a share of GDP
will rise only modestly, and will remain well within
historic norms.

The deficit in perspective. As can be seen in
Table 1, the Mid-Session Review projects deficit
increases.
The deficit is projected to jump to $455 billion
in fiscal 2003 and to $475 billion in fiscal year
2004, but it would be halved by fiscal year 2008
under the Administration's budget proposals. As a
percent of GDP, the deficit numbers are less
alarming. They would represent 4.2 percent of GDP
in FY 2003 and FY 2004, and only 1.7% in FY
2008. These are the policy deficits, including the
planned $400 billion in spending on prescription
drugs, which boosts the deficit, but also including
Administration proposals to restraint the growth of
discretionary spending in the future.

g~,3      A3~                                 S  I    6g~    ~ A~  ~

Chart 1        Federal Deficit and Federal Debt Held
By The Public As Percentages of GDP, 1970 - 2008
60%
50% -Federal Debt Held by the Public as Percent of GDP
40% -
o. 20%                    *  -     the Federal Reserve) as Percent of GDP
10%
0%                  Yearly Federal Deficit as Percent of GDP
-10%
1970      1975      1980       1985      1990      1995      2000      2005
Fiscal Year
Sources Data for 1970 2002 from U.S. Budget Historical Tables; and estimates for 2003 2008 from OMB's Mid Session Review  (To
calculate debt held by the public excluding the Federal Reserve, debt held by the Fed was estimated for 2003 2008.)

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