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1 Budgetary Outcomes under Alternative Assumptions about Fiscal Policy 1 (August 29, 2019)

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Budgetary Outcomes Under Alternative

       Assumptions About Fiscal Policy


The Congressional Budget Office regularly publishes
baseline budget projections that show how federal
spending, revenues, and deficits would look if current
laws governing spending and taxes generally remained
unchanged. Those projections are not intended to be a
forecast of budgetary outcomes; rather, they are meant to
provide a benchmark that policymakers can use to assess
the potential effects of policy decisions.

To provide additional information about possible bud-
getary outcomes, CBO has estimated how its most recent
budget projections would change under alternative
assumptions about future fiscal policies, as follows:1

   Discretionary Spending. In CBO's baseline
   projections, discretionary outlays average 6.3 percent
   of gross domestic product (GDP) from 2019 through
   2021, before falling to 5.6 percent of GDP by 2029,
   which would be the lowest percentage recorded since
   the inception of the modern Congressional budget
   process. As one alternative policy, CBO projected
   what discretionary spending would be if it remained
   at about 6.3 percent of GDP through 2029. As a
   second alternative path for discretionary spending,
   CBO also estimated the budgetary effects of freezing



1. For CBO's most recent baseline projections, see Congressional
   Budget Office, An Update to the Budget and Economic Outlook:
   2019 to 2029 (August 2019), www.cbo.gov/publication/55551.


   all discretionary appropriations at the 2019 amounts
   through 2029.

  Tax and Trade Promotion Policies. CBO's
   projections of revenues reflect the assumption that
   individual income tax rates will rise in calendar year
   2026, as scheduled under current law. CBO and the
   staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (CT) have
   estimated the budgetary effects of instead making
   the rates currently in effect permanent and extending
   other expiring revenue provisions, including expiring
   trade promotion programs.

  Tariffs. CBO's projections also reflect the assumption
   that certain U.S. tariffs in effect on July 25, 2019,
   will continue permanently. CBO estimated the effects
   on revenues of implementing some changes that
   have been announced since that date-but have not
   yet taken effect-as well as an alternative policy of
   returning tariffs to their historical levels.

Using some of those assumptions, CBO developed an
alternative fiscal scenario that illustrates the effects of
maintaining certain major policies that are currently in
place. That scenario examines the budgetary outcomes
if discretionary outlays remained at about 6.3 percent of
GDP from 2022 through 2029 and if revenue provisions
that are currently scheduled to expire did not. There are
no changes to tariffs in the alternative scenario; tariffs
remain as they are in the baseline (that is, at the levels


Notes: Numbers in the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding. In this report, measures related to the budget
(including revenues, outlays, deficits, and debt) are reported on a fiscal year basis. (Federal fiscal years run from October 1 to
September 30 and are designated by the calendar year in which they end.) Years indicating the timing of policy changes are calendar years.

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