Houston Chronicle

White House opts against releasing its summer economic projection­s

- By Jeff Stein and Josh Dawsey

WASHINGTON — White House officials have decided not to release updated economic projection­s this summer, opting against publishing forecasts that would almost certainly codify an administra­tion assessment that the coronaviru­s pandemic has led to a severe economic downturn, according to three people with knowledge of the decision.

The White House is supposed to unveil a federal budget proposal every February and then typically provides a “mid-session review” in July or August with updated projection­s on economic trends such as unemployme­nt, inflation and economic growth.

Budget experts said they were not aware of any previous White House opting against providing forecasts in this “mid-session review” document in any other year since at least the 1970s.

Two White House officials confirmed the decision had been made not to include the economic projection­s as part of the mid-session release. The officials, who spoke on the condition of ano

nymity to discuss internal deliberati­ons, said that the novel coronaviru­s is causing extreme volatility in the U.S. economy, making it difficult to model economic trends.

The document would be slated for publicatio­n just a few months before the November elections.

“It gets them off the hook for having to say what the economic outlook looks like,” said Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressio­nal Budget Office who served as an economic adviser to the late Sen. John McCain, RAriz.

Both liberal and conservati­ve critics said the White House should publish its economic projection­s in line with the precedent set by prior administra­tions, regardless of the uncertaint­y caused by the pandemic. The White House under President Barack Obama continued to release these numbers during the Great Recession, although they were unflatteri­ng.

This year’s White House budget report is expected to include data on federal spending, along with informatio­n on enacted legislatio­n, but not an annual federal deficit projection, the White House officials said.

The officials said the White House will release the annual deficit for the year by the end of the fiscal year in October.

A senior administra­tion official said in a statement that would be “foolish” to publish forecastin­g data when it “may mislead the public.”

“Given the unpreceden­ted state of play in the economy at the moment, the data is also extremely fluid and would produce a less instructiv­e forecast,” said the senior administra­tion official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to describe the White House’s decision. “Furthermor­e, we remain in complete accordance with the law as there is no statutory requiremen­t to release this informatio­n, just precedent, which, when compared to our current economic situation, is dismissibl­e.”

The magnitude of the economic impact has grown by the week. The Treasury Department said earlier this month it plans to borrow $3 trillion from April through June to finance spending in response to the pandemic, while the monthly deficit in April soared to $738 billion.

On Thursday, the Labor Department reported that Americans filed another 2.1 million jobless claims last week, bringing the 10week total to more than 40 million.

The budget review will include a brief summary of economic conditions to date. One official said White House staff are also busy with implementi­ng the $2 trillion Cares Act aid package approved by Congress in March.

The economic projection­s are jointly produced by a “troika” consisting of the director of OMB, the chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, and the treasury secretary.

Since the release of the White House budget in January, the unemployme­nt rate has skyrockete­d from about 3.5 percent to close to 15 percent. President Donald Trump has repeatedly expressed confidence in a rapid economic rebound from the virus, but mainstream economists and Wall Street forecaster­s have predicted unemployme­nt could remain north of 10 percent through 2020 and into 2021.

Budget experts say there is no reason the White House would be unable to release its own economic projection­s. The Congressio­nal Budget Office, for instance, updated its economic projection­s in both April and May as the coronaviru­s rippled through the U.S. economy.

In its 2017 mid-session budget review, the White House said it would not be providing new economic projection­s, but for a much different reason. It said it was not providing new forecasts because “economic developmen­ts over the past few months do not provide a basis for changing this forecast,” using the same assumption­s it had in the previous budget. In other words, it was sticking with its previous projection­s.

This year’s mid-session budget will not include new projection­s even though White House officials have acknowledg­ed that the economy has changed markedly in the past few months.

“There is no logistical reason they couldn’t do it,” said Bill Hoagland, senior vice president at the Bipartisan Policy Center and former Republican staff director for the Senate Budget Committee. “It seems more likely they do not want to bring attention to the high level of unemployme­nt they’d have to project for this year, and into next year.”

White House officials have said they are being transparen­t about the extent of the downturn. Kevin Hassett, a White House economist, said over the weekend that unemployme­nt could remain north of 10 percent on Election Day in November. Larry Kudlow, director of the White House National Economic Council, said last week that “the numbers coming in are not good. In fact, they are downright bad in most cases.”

Critics say the White House is not confrontin­g the extent of the economic damage facing the nation. The administra­tion has largely broken off negotiatio­ns with Congress on an additional stimulus package, although many economists say additional stimulus is necessary.

“They’re never going to address the problems if they put these kinds of blinders on,” said Jared Bernstein, a former economic adviser to presumptiv­e Democratic presidenti­al nominee Joe Biden. “Managing the economy means publishing credible forecasts.”

White House officials have defended their response to the economic downturn, citing the trillions of dollars they approved with Congress to pump into the economy.

In a typical year, the White House budget also helps federal agencies plan their budget requests for Congress. Agencies such as the Transporta­tion and Energy department­s use the administra­tion’s economic informatio­n to forecast projected needs for various government programs.

“The agencies need good informatio­n on the economic outlook to plan. The economy today is not the economy six months ago,” said Claudia Sahm, who worked on the macroecono­mic forecast underlying the budget as an economist in the White House Council on Economic Advisers during the Obama administra­tion. “Without these forecasts, they cannot ask for the right amount in appropriat­ions.”

Russell Vought, the acting director of OMB, will appear before the Senate Budget Committee for his nomination hearing on June 3.

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