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1 How Changes in Economic Conditions Might Affect the Federal Budget: 2022 to 2032 1 (June 8, 2022)

handle is hein.congrec/hwcsieccs0001 and id is 1 raw text is: S ome of the uncertainty in budget projections
stems from the fact that the federal budget is
highly sensitive to economic conditions, which
are difficult to accurately predict. If conditions
differed from those in the Congressional Budget Office's
economic forecast, budgetary outcomes could diverge
from those in the agency's baseline budget projections.
To show how variations in economic conditions might
affect its budget projections, CBO analyzed how the bud-
get might change if values of the following key economic
variables differed from those in the agency's forecast:
The growth of productivity and, consequently, the
growth of real gross domestic product (that is, GDP
adjusted to remove the effects of inflation);
Labor force growth, which would also affect real GDP
growth;
- Interest rates; and
= Inflation and nominal interest rates (assuming that
inflation-adjusted interest rates remain unchanged).
In those analyses, called the rules of thumb, CBO
examined how slower productivity growth, slower labor
force growth, higher interest rates, and higher inflation
would increase deficits above the amounts in the agency's
baseline budget projections. However, the actual out-
comes of any of those variables could be higher or lower
than they are projected to be in CBO's baseline. The rules
of thumb are roughly symmetrical, so if productivity or
the labor force increased more quickly than projected,
or if interest rates or inflation were lower than projected,
1. For the agency's most recent baseline projections, see
Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook:
2022 to 2032 (May 2022), www.cbo.gov/publication/57950.

deficits would be smaller than they are in the agency's
baseline budget projections by about the same amounts.
Looking at deviations that would worsen budget deficits,
CBO's analysis yielded the following results:
If productivity grew at a rate that was 0.1 percentage
point slower each year than it does in the agency's
economic forecast, annual deficits would be larger
than projected by amounts that would climb to
$59 billion by 2032, CBO estimates. Over the
2023-2032 period, the cumulative deficit would
be $292 billion larger than it is in CBO's baseline
projections.
- If the labor force grew at a rate that was 0.1 percentage
point slower each year than the rate in CBO's
economic forecast and if the unemployment rate
remained unchanged, annual deficits would be larger
than those in the agency's baseline budget projections
by amounts that would grow each year and reach
$27 billion by 2032, CBO estimates. The cumulative
deficit for 2023 to 2032 would be $128 billion larger
than it is in the agency's baseline budget projections.
If all interest rates-including both the rate on
3-month Treasury bills and the rate on 10-year
Treasury notes-were 0.1 percentage point higher
each year than they are in CBO's economic forecast,
deficits would increase progressively over the
projection period by amounts that would rise to
$41 billion in 2032, if other variables were held
constant. The cumulative deficit for 2023 to 2032
would be $285 billion larger than it is in the agency's
baseline projections.
= If all wage and price indexes-including the GDP
price index, the consumer price index for all urban
consumers (CPI-U), the chained CPI-U, and the
employment cost index for wages and salaries of

Notes: All years referred to in describing the budgetary effects of changes in the economy are federal fiscal years, which run from October 1 to September 30
and are designated by the calendar year in which they end. Years referred to in describing estimated changes to the economy are calendar years. Numbers in
the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding.

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