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Changes in CBO's Baseline Projections since January 2001 [i] (May 2011)

handle is hein.congrec/cbo8019 and id is 1 raw text is: May 12, 2011

Changes in CBO's Baseline Projections Since January 2001
Each year, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) issues baseline projections of federal
spending and revenues for the following 10 years. Those projections are not intended as a
forecast of future outcomes; rather, they are estimates of spending and revenues under the
laws that are in effect at that time and are designed to provide a benchmark against which
to measure future policy changes.
In January 2001, CBO's baseline projections showed a cumulative surplus of $5.6 trillion
for the 2002-2011 period. The actual results have differed from those projections because
of subsequent policy changes, economic developments that differed from CBO's forecast,
and other factors. As a result, the federal government actually ran deficits from 2002
through 2010 and will incur a deficit in 2011 as well. The cumulative deficit over the
10-year period will amount to $6.2 trillion, CBO estimates-a swing of $11.8 trillion
from the January 2001 projections.
The table below summarizes the differences between CBO's baseline projections in
January 2001 and the actual or currently projected results for each of the years over the
2002-2011 period. The table divides changes to those baseline projections between those
that stemmed from legislative actions and those that resulted from factors related to
economic or other, technical assumptions. Such categorizations were done each year as
new projections were prepared-no new analysis has been done to compile this table.
Thus, the revisions attributable to legislation represent CBO's estimates of costs or
savings associated with new laws relative to the baseline projections that were current at
the time of enactment. The effects of legislation may have turned out to be different from
the original estimates either because those baseline projections were off-target or because
the results of the legislation deviated from what CBO anticipated, but no adjustments
have been made in this table to those initial assessments of the legislation.
To illustrate this point, the table reports total outlays associated with the Troubled Asset
Relief Program (TARP) of $189 billion, which reflects CBO's initial baseline estimate
for the costs of the program. The agency's latest estimate of the costs of the TARP,
released in March 2011, takes into account all activities that have occurred since the
program's implementation and equals $19 billion (including some costs after 2011). The
subsequent revisions to CBO's initial projection of TARP outlays were labeled
technical, and the entry in the table attributable to legislation has not been changed to
reflect that updated estimate. In fact, for most legislation, there is no way to identify the
actual impact on spending or revenues over time, and a retroactive analysis of actual
costs is not possible.
Consequently, the table is only a very rough approximation of how changes since January
2001 have contributed to the swing from projected surpluses to actual deficits over the
2002-2011 period and should not be interpreted as a precise tracking of all the
components of that cumulative change over the past decade.

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