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Issue 4, July/August 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
The Federal Budget: Developments and Outlook
In recent years, concern
about the federal budget deficit has become more
pronounced and widespread. A combination of economic
and policy changes has shifted the budget from surplus
to deficit. This shift has probably reduced national
saving, which will impose substantial economic costs—a reduction in Americans' future
income.
Despite these costs, the budget outlook cannot be
described as a crisis. The deficit is still within
its historical range. And it is projected to shrink
over the next decade, although economic developments
and policy changes could slow or reverse the projected
decline.
Recent Budgetary Developments
Sharp Swing from Surplus
to Deficit. In March, the Congressional Budget Office
(CBO) estimated a $477 billion deficit for fiscal 2004,
which began last October. Although CBO has not officially
revised its projections, it has announced that fiscal
2004 revenue is running $30 billion to $40 billion
higher than anticipated, with no change in expected
spending. That would put the 2004 deficit at $437 billion
to $447 billion.
In nominal terms, that would be the largest deficit
in U.S. history. That fact, among others, has led to
concern about a budget crisis.
It's more reasonable,
though, to measure the deficit as a share of GDP.
That measure puts the current deficit at about 3.8
percent of GDP, making the picture a little less
dramatic (Chart 1). Since 1946, the deficit has been
larger in eight years (1976, 1982 through 1986, 1991
and 1992) and roughly the same in two others (1990
and 1993).

Still, the recent swing from surplus to deficit has
been stunning in both its size and speed. The budget
was in surplus from 1998 through 2001, with the surplus
peaking at 2.4 percent of GDP in 2000. Over the past
four years, the budgetary position has shifted by more
than 6 percentage points.
Deterioration in Budget Outlook. Chart
2 provides another perspective on recent developments—it
compares the actual path of the budget with the path
projected in CBO's January 2001 baseline. Today's
deficit of 3.8 percent of GDP contrasts sharply with
the 3.3 percent surplus projected then. CBO's
March 2004 baseline, discussed further below, is also
much less favorable than the baseline from three years
ago.

A combination of factors changed the 2004 surplus
projected three years ago into the deficit we now observe.
About 40 percent of the change is due to economic factors
CBO did not predict. The largest economic changes were
the 2001 recession and the stock market slump, which
lowered federal revenue.[1]
Policy changes accounted
for the other 60 percent of the deterioration. The
January 2001 baseline was CBO's prediction
of what would happen to the deficit if the laws and
policies then in place remained unchanged. But Congress
and the president actually made policy changes that
enlarged the deficit. Those policy changes were split
about equally between spending increases (27 percent)
and tax cuts (33 percent).[2]
The spending increases
have primarily been in discretionary programs—those
whose funding levels are set annually by Congress
in appropriation bills. About half of discretionary
spending goes to defense and about half to nondefense
programs. The 2001 baseline assumed that discretionary
spending would stay at its 2001 level (adjusted for
inflation), but actual 2004 spending is significantly
higher.
The pickup in defense spending, from 3.0 percent of
GDP in 2001 to 3.9 percent in 2004, largely occurred
after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and includes
military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq. As a share
of GDP, defense spending remains well below the values
observed during most of the past 40 years. Nondefense
discretionary spending rose from 3.4 percent of GDP
in 2001 to 3.9 percent in 2004; the recent values are
the highest since 1985.
Tax cuts have come in three installments. A June 2001
law lowered income and estate and gift taxes; except
for one minor provision later made permanent, this
law is scheduled to expire in its entirety on Dec.
31, 2010. A tax stimulus package followed in March
2002. The latest tax cut, in May 2003, provided tax
relief for dividends and capital gains through the
end of 2008 and accelerated certain provisions of the
2001 tax cut.
In fiscal 2000, revenue reached 20.8 percent of GDP
(Chart 3). This value was exceeded only in 1944. Without
any tax cuts, economic factors would have reduced the
revenue share by about 2.3 percentage points. The tax
cuts reduced it by another 2.4 percentage points. The
combined result is a 2004 revenue share of about 16.1
percent, the lowest since 1959.

Official estimates of the
revenue loss from the tax cuts may be overstated.
These estimates assume that tax changes do not alter
macroeconomic aggregates, such as GDP and employment.
(The estimates do attempt to include the effects
of tax changes on microeconomic variables, such as
capital gains realizations and fringe benefit payments.)
Under some circumstances, a tax cut can boost real
GDP, causing a revenue feedback that partly offsets
the direct revenue loss. Economists do not agree
on the size of such a feedback,
although there is a consensus that it would usually
not be large enough to fully offset the direct revenue
loss.
Economic Impact of Deficits
Government saving is the
government's net investment
in capital minus its budget deficit. Deficits therefore
represent negative government saving, unless they finance
investment in government capital. Running a deficit
permits tax cuts or spending increases today. But servicing
or repaying the resulting debt requires tax increases
or spending cuts tomorrow.
Government saving is of
limited importance in its own right. It is just one
component of national saving, which is the sum of
government saving and private saving. (Private saving
is the sum of personal and corporate saving). A reduction
in government saving causes a reduction in national
saving, unless there's
an offsetting one-for-one rise in private saving.
Some policies that produce a deficit, such as tax
cuts that enhance saving incentives, may cause an increase
in private saving. Moreover, if households recognize
that deficits will result in future tax increases or
spending cuts, they may save more to prepare for those
burdens. In most cases, though, it is likely that budget
deficits reduce national saving to some extent.
A reduction in national saving has important economic
consequences. It raises living standards today, as
resources are consumed rather than saved. But it lowers
living standards tomorrow, compared with what they
otherwise would have been, by reducing future national
income. The exact mechanism depends on whether the
economy is closed or open to international trade and
investment.
In a closed economy, a reduction in national saving
raises interest rates and reduces investment. With
less investment, the capital stock is smaller. With
less capital available to aid in production, future
output is lower. Lower output translates into lower
incomes throughout the economy, including lower wages.
In an open economy, a reduction
in national saving is likely to increase the inflow
of foreign capital. This change in capital flows
must be financed by a larger trade deficit. In this
case, investment need not fall—foreign savers
can finance the investments for which domestic savers
fail to supply funds. There is then no reduction
in the capital stock or in the future output produced
inside the United States. Nevertheless, the future
incomes of Americans still fall, relative to what
they otherwise would have been, because more of the
output produced inside the United States must be
paid to the foreign savers who financed the investment
and own the capital.
As shown in Chart 4, private saving and national saving
have generally fallen as a share of GDP throughout
the past 40 years. The difference between the two series
is government saving. During most of this period, national
saving was lower than private saving, as government
saving was negative. From 1998 through 2001, when the
federal budget was in surplus, government saving was
positive, so national saving was larger than private
saving. In 2002 and 2003, when the federal budget moved
back into deficit, government saving again turned negative.[3]

In 2003, private saving was 5.3 percent of GDP while
government saving was negative 3.8 percent, putting
national saving at 1.5 percent, the lowest value since
1934.
Although this chart shows how private saving and government
saving add up to yield national saving, it does not
establish the extent to which changes in government
saving have caused changes in national saving. We cannot
conclusively determine what private saving would have
been if government saving had been different.
Even if deficits have a significant effect on national
saving, tax and spending proposals should not be evaluated
solely by how they affect the deficit. The allocation
of government spending across different programs is
also important; for example, transfer payments do not
have the same effects as spending on public infrastructure.
Tax and spending changes can also affect incentives
to work and save, the distribution of disposable income
and the business cycle. Programs that make transfer
payments from one age group to another, like Social
Security and Medicare, can have profound effects on
private saving and the fiscal burdens borne by different
generations.
Budget Outlook During the Next Decade
Deficit Shrinks
Under CBO Baseline. Under
CBO's
March 2004 baseline, the deficit shrinks, as a share
of GDP, throughout the next decade, especially after
2010 (Chart 5). By 2014, the budget is almost in balance.

Several factors combine to produce this result. Under
the baseline, discretionary spending keeps up only
with inflation, meaning that it steadily declines relative
to GDP. Meanwhile, revenue rises relative to GDP for
three reasons:
- The
brackets and exemption amounts for the regular individual
income tax are adjusted each year only for inflation,
not for real economic growth. As people's incomes
rise faster than inflation, they move into higher
brackets, a process called real bracket creep.
- The
brackets and exemption amounts for the individual
alternative minimum tax (AMT) are not adjusted at
all, even for inflation. As a result, AMT payments
will sharply increase in upcoming years—by
2010, one person in four will be on the AMT rather
than the regular income tax.
- The
tax cuts adopted in 2001, 2002 and 2003 become smaller
after fiscal 2004 and completely expire by December
31, 2010. The expiration of the tax cuts explains
the rapid shrinkage of the baseline deficit after
fiscal 2010.
A countervailing factor is the growing cost of the
Medicare drug benefit, which will take effect in 2006.
Rising medical costs and the retirement of the first
baby boomers also push up entitlement spending over
the next decade. Nevertheless, the deficit still shrinks
during this period under the baseline.
Deficit Shrinks Less Under
President's Budget. As mentioned above, the baseline assumes that no policy
changes occur. We can get a better picture of what
may actually happen to the budget by examining the
policy changes that Congress and the president might
adopt. Consider, for example, the policy changes proposed
by the president in the fiscal 2005 budget that he
released in February.
While the baseline lets
discretionary spending keep up with inflation, the
president proposes a more restrictive policy. CBO
estimates that under the president's
proposals, nominal discretionary spending would grow
at an average annual rate of 1.1 percent per year from
2004 to 2009, significantly less than inflation. Defense
spending would grow at 1.4 percent and nondefense discretionary
spending at 0.7 percent. The slow growth rate for defense
spending is facilitated by the fact that the costs
incurred in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2004 are not expected
to persist until 2009.
The president also proposes
making most of the recent tax cuts permanent and
adopting some other smaller tax cuts. The president's
budget would therefore result in a lower revenue
share than the baseline, particularly after 2010,
as can be seen by referring back to Chart 3. Even
so, the revenue share would still rise from the historic
low reached in 2004 because of real bracket creep,
the rise in AMT payments and the shrinkage of the
tax cuts after 2004.
The net impact of the president's tax and spending
proposals can be seen in Chart 5. The president's
budget would result in slightly smaller deficits than
the baseline during the next six years. After 2010,
it would result in significantly larger deficits than
the baseline because the tax cuts would not expire.
The deficit would still shrink, though, from 3.8 or
3.9 percent of GDP today to 1.6 percent in 2014.
Debt Burden Remains Within Historical Range. Chart
6 shows the projected path of the federal debt. Under
the baseline, the debt grows from 36 percent of annual
GDP at the end of fiscal 2003 to 41 percent at the
end of 2010. After the tax cuts expire, it declines,
falling back to 36 percent at the end of 2014. Under
the president's budget, the debt grows from 36
to 40 percent of annual GDP over the next couple years
and remains at roughly that level through 2014.

These debt burdens are
within the range of recent experience—larger than those of the 1970s but
smaller than those of the early 1990s. They are much
larger, though, than the debt burdens projected in
CBO's January 2001 baseline. Under that baseline,
the entire federal debt would have been paid off by
2009.[4]
Other Factors Affecting Budget Outlook. Of
course, the CBO baseline and the president's
budget do not cover the full range of possible budget
outcomes.
Both projections rely on
CBO's economic assumptions,
which, as CBO points out, are subject to great uncertainty.
CBO assumes average annual real GDP growth of 2.9 percent
over the next 10 years; a different growth rate would
yield different budget outcomes. Interest rates, the
stock market and medical costs are also uncertain.
Furthermore, the policies
ultimately adopted by Congress and the president
may differ from either the current policies in the
baseline or those proposed in the president's
budget.
Notably, neither the baseline
nor the president's
budget includes permanent AMT relief, even though there
is a political consensus that such relief should and
will be provided. The costs of such relief grow over
time and could approach 0.5 percent of GDP in 2010.
Also, there is likely to
be pressure to increase discretionary spending, both
defense and nondefense. Some have argued that the
spending levels in the baseline, let alone those
in the president's budget, are inadequate
to meet public needs. In May, the president requested
additional Iraq funding that had not been included
in his budget.
The new Medicare drug benefit has also been criticized
by some as inadequate, and there may be pressure to
make it more generous. Finally, the president may propose
Social Security changes that would increase deficits
during the next decade, although no such proposals
are in his 2005 budget.
These likely policy changes may slow or reverse the
projected decline in the deficit during the next decade.
Conclusion
During the past four years,
the budget has swung sharply from surplus to deficit,
due to a combination of economic factors and policy
changes. This development has probably reduced national
saving relative to what it otherwise would have been.
A reduction in national saving imposes significant
economic costs—a sacrifice of Americans' future
income.
Despite these costs, neither the current deficit nor
those projected for the next decade can be described
as a crisis. The deficit and the debt are within their
historical ranges, though toward the upper end of those
ranges. Also, the deficit is projected to decline over
the next decade, although that projection is subject
to considerable uncertainty.
This does not mean, however,
that there is no budget crisis. The short-term outlook
is overshadowed by the looming Social Security–Medicare
challenge, to which Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan and others have repeatedly called our attention.
The projected long-run growth of these programs has
profound implications for national saving, as well
as for the fiscal burdens facing future generations.
—Alan D. Viard
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| About
the Author
Viard is a senior economist and research officer in
the Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas.
Notes
-
CBO distinguishes between "economic" and "technical" changes.
The former are revisions to the variables
in CBO's economic forecast, such
as GDP, employment, inflation and interest
rates. The latter are changes in any
other factors (except policy changes)
affecting revenue or spending, such
as the stock market, medical costs
and income distribution. For simplicity,
I combine these changes and refer to
them as "economic."
-
I classify additional interest payments
resulting from the tax cuts as part
of the tax cuts rather than as spending
increases. Increases in refundable
income tax credits paid in cash to
households that do not owe income tax
are classified as spending increases.
-
Although government saving differs
from the federal budget surplus (due
to such factors as government capital
investment and state and local government saving),
the two series usually move closely together.
- The baseline projection recognized
that it would be difficult to actually
repay some of the debt before it matured.
By 2009, though, the cumulative surpluses
would have allowed the government to
buy financial assets equal to its remaining
debt, leaving it with no net debt.
About Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited
and a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
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Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box 655906, Dallas,
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