On March 20, 2009, the bipartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released its latest forecast in an effort to take into account the impact of the recently released Obama budget. The verdict? A whopping $1.8 trillion deficit for 2009, approximately four times larger than the all-time record established in 2008 ($455 billion).
The concerns raised by this latest forecast are many:
- A mere two months ago, the CBO’s estimate for 2009 was “only” $1.2 trillion. They have already grossly underestimated a deficit that will most likely continue to balloon in the coming months.
While the new administration:
- Has focused its attention on the spending side of the budget, it has paid little attention to the other side of the equation. What will happen when tax revenue comes in much lower than current projections?
- Even ignoring the likely expansion of the projected deficit, where will we get the $1.8 trillion needed to cover the CBO’s estimated deficit? Foreign investors? Higher taxes? Or that old standby, the printing presses?
Buried in the latest CBO forecast are numerous reasons to be alarmed, chief among them the authors’ admission that they have no idea what the future holds for the economy. They state:
“Both the magnitude of the contractionary forces operating in the economy and the magnitude of the government’s actions to stabilize the financial system and stimulate economic growth are outside the range of recent experience. The forecast assumes that financial markets will begin to function more normally and that the housing market will stabilize by early next year. The possibility that financial markets might not stabilize represents a major source of downside risk to the forecast. ”
To cover themselves when their forecasts fall flat, the CBO members offer the following caveats:
and
“CBO’s forecast incorporates the middle of the range of the agency’s estimates of ARRA’s impact on GDP and employment, that range is quite large.”
These statements are somewhat disconcerting when we remember that in January 2008, it was this same CBO that predicted the U.S. government’s fiscal year deficit would be $250 billion. What did we end up with? A $455 billion deficit. They weren’t even close.
What also worries us is that while the CBO clearly states that its forecast includes the impact of the currently approved programs, it fails to take into account any further bailouts of various industries, any new stimulus packages, or any additional programs proposed by the administration.
While the current CBO forecast is the result of very scientific economic models put together by a multitude of experts, our economists at Casey Research question many of its basic assumptions by applying the same logic that allowed us – more than three years ago -- to correctly predict the subprime crisis and its expansion into a widespread financial disaster.