
The CBO recently came out with an update to their 10-year Budget and Economic Outlook...and it wasn't pretty.
Basically they said if the fiscal cliff is not fixed by President Obama and the House and the Senate before the end of this year, 2012, we will fall back into a recession.
How's that for grabbing your attention? You want to go backwards and relive the downside of the past 4 years, again?
Here's the report in full: CBO Read it for yourself if you have the guts and the stomach for it.
Below, we have taken the summary and inserted somewhat irreverent and pithy comments in red as if we were hearing it for the first time in a Budget Committee hearing and thinking these thoughts to ourselves. You'll be amused and maybe somewhat stunned what goes through the mind of a congressional staffer during such a hearing, besides the obligatory 'What am I going to have for lunch today?' and 'Who do the Redskins play this weekend...I wonder if I can get a ticket from someone?':
'For fiscal year 2012 (which ends on September 30), the federal budget deficit will total $1.1 trillion, CBO estimates, marking the fourth year in a row with a deficit of more than $1 trillion. Wow, that is really, really bad! Wonder if Presidents Reagan, Bush 41, Clinton or Bush 43 would have gotten the pass President Obama has gotten from the media if they had had 4 straight years of $1 trillon+ annual deficits?
That projection is down slightly from the $1.2 trillion deficit that CBO projected in March. Thank God for little favors then! At 7.3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), this year's deficit will be three-quarters as large as the deficit in 2009 when measured relative to the size of the economy. What the heck are they trying to say here exactly? Just say it then. Federal debt held by the public will reach 73 percent of GDP by the end of this fiscal year-the highest level since 1950 and about twice the share that it measured at the end of 2007, before the financial crisis and recent recession. Twice as bad. We were told by President Obama that he was going to cut deficits in half, not expand them.
CBO expects the economic recovery to continue at a modest pace for the remainder of calendar year 2012, with real (inflation-adjusted) GDP growing at an annual rate of about 2¼ percent in the second half of the year, compared with a rate of about 1¾ percent in the first half. The unemployment rate will stay above 8 percent for the rest of the year, CBO estimates, and the rate of inflation in consumer prices will remain low. Both of those growth and unemployment numbers are bad.
CBO has prepared-as it does under its routine procedures-baseline projections (Dream World) that incorporate the assumption that current laws generally remain in place; those projections are designed to serve as a benchmark that policymakers can use when considering possible changes to those laws.
However, the outlook for the budget deficit, federal debt, and the economy are especially uncertain now because substantial changes to tax and spending policies are scheduled to take effect in January 2013. Therefore, CBO has also prepared projections under an alternative fiscal scenario, (Real World) which embodies the assumption that many policies that have recently been in effect will be continued.
Key aspects of our projections are illustrated in the figures below.

What Policy Changes Are Scheduled to Take Effect in January 2013?
Among the policy changes that are due to occur in January under current law, the following will have the largest impact on the budget and the economy: no kidding.
A host all of the Bush tax cuts of significant provisions of the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (Public Law 111-312) are set to expire, including provisions that extended reductions in tax rates and expansions of tax credits and deductions originally enacted in 2001, 2003, or 2009. (Provisions designed to limit the reach of the alternative minimum tax, or AMT, expired on December 31, 2011.)
Sharp reductions in Medicare's payment rates for physicians' services are scheduled to take effect. Will never happen. Ever seen the doctors or hospital lobbies go into full triage mode on Capitol Hill?
Automatic enforcement procedures established by the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25) to restrain discretionary and mandatory spending are set to go into effect.
Extensions of emergency unemployment benefits and a reduction of 2 percentage points in the payroll tax for Social Security are scheduled to expire.
What Is the Budget and Economic Outlook for 2013?
CBO's Baseline which won't happen: Taking into account the policy changes listed above and others contained in current law, under CBO's baseline projections:
The deficit will shrink to an estimated $641 billion in fiscal year 2013 (or 4.0 percent of GDP), almost $500 billion less than the shortfall in 2012 wow! how great would that be from purely a deficit-reduction point-of-view...if it were only true that it was going to happen.
Such fiscal tightening mostly massive tax hikes on everyone paying taxes will lead to economic conditions in 2013 that will probably be considered a recession, D'uh! Ya think? A recession is when someone you know loses their job; a depression is when you lose YOUR job with real GDP declining by 0.5 percent between the fourth quarter of 2012 and the fourth quarter of 2013 and the unemployment rate rising to about 9 percent in the second half of calendar year 2013. not good at all
Because of the large amount of unused resources in the economy and other factors, the rate of inflation (as measured by the personal consumption expenditures, or PCE, price index) will remain low in 2013. In addition, interest rates on Treasury securities are expected to be very low next year.
An Alternative Fiscal Scenario: This is what is almost 99% likely to happen
To illustrate the consequences of possible changes to current law, CBO has produced projections under an alternative fiscal scenario that incorporates the following assumptions:
That set of alternative policies which is going to happen would lead to budgetary and economic outcomes that would differ significantly, both in the near term and in later years, from those in CBO's baseline which was all a dream world anyway:
In 2013, the deficit would total $1.0 trillion, almost $400 billion (or 2.5 percent of GDP) more than the deficit projected to occur under current law. no surprise here
The economy would be stronger in 2013: Real GDP would grow by 1.7 percent between the fourth quarter of 2012 and the fourth quarter of 2013, and the unemployment rate would be about 8 percent by the end of 2013, CBO projects. so hiking taxes really does retard economic growth, huh?
What Is the Budget Outlook for 2014 to 2022 Under Current Law (CBO's Baseline) (The 'Fake' Baseline that will NOT Occur)?
What Is the Economic Outlook for 2014 to 2022 Under Current Law (CBO's Baseline)? Which assumes that the Bush Tax Cuts expire, remember. And the cuts in Medicare and defense and discretionary spending will be made and maintained.
What Is the Budget and Economic Outlook for 2014 to 2022 If Many Current Policies Are Continued (As in CBO's Alternative Fiscal Scenario)?

Contributing Editor Frank Hill ran for Congress at the age of 28 and served as chief of staff for former Congressman Alex McMillan (NC-9) and Senator Elizabeth Dole (NC). He was a budget associate on the House Budget Committee for 4 years and worked on the 1994 Commission on Entitlement and Tax Reform. He now lives in Charlotte, North Carolina where he does some consulting and lots of worrying about federal spending issues.

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