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The Standardized Budget: Details of the Projections 1 (February 2000)

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The Standardized Budget: Details of the Projections


        The Standardized Budget: Details of the

                                    Projections


                                      February 4, 2000

On January 26, 2000, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its report The Budget and
Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2001-2010, which presents CBO's projections of federal revenues
and outlays over that period. This supplement provides projections of the standardized budget through
fiscal year 2010 (see Tables I through 4 at the end of this page). As in the January report, those
projections are shown using three variants of the baseline, each of which reflects a different
assumption about discretionary spending. The inflated variation assumes that discretionary spending
grows at the rate of inflation after 2000. The freeze variation pegs discretionary budget authority to
the level enacted for the current year, plus amounts already enacted for 2001. The capped variation
assumes that discretionary spending equals CBO's estimates of the statutory caps through 2002 and
grows at the rate of inflation thereafter.

The standardized budget adjusts revenues and outlays for the effects of the business cycle. During
economic downturns, revenues automatically fall as incomes decline, and outlays automatically
increase as unemployment rises. Because of those cyclical effects, changes in the actual budget surplus
can give misleading signals about the stance of fiscal polity. The standardized budget also includes
adjustments for factors that do not have an impact on short-term growth, such as asset sales and
meaningless shifts in the timing of receipts between one fiscal year and the next.

The calculations of the standardized budget also incorporate several new adjustments.lD The most
important of those for the period from 1996 to 2010 are as follows:

     An estimate of capital gains tax collections has been removed because large fluctuations in those
      taxes can distort the measured effects of the budget on short-term growth.

     An estimate of the inflation component of interest payments is now excluded because those
      payments are simply an early return of principal to bondholders and are likely to be saved rather
      than spent.
     An estimate of large changes in withheld taxes that are not matched by a change in tax liabilities
      is now largely excluded because such changes are not likely to have much effect on spending for
      the majority of consumers.

The overall stance of fiscal policy--as measured by the increase in the standardized-budget surplus as a
share of potential gross domestic product (GDP)--moderately dampened short-term growth in 1999
and will do so again in 2000 (see Table 1). In part, that restraint reflects slower growth of real interest
payments. Tax and spending legislation in recent years has not been an important factor. If
discretionary spending is held to the current caps in 2001, fiscal policy will be much more restrictive
next year. Otherwise, its effect on short-term growth will be less restrictive.


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