Las Vegas Review-Journal

Economists group says U.S. fiscal policy now too aggressive

- The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — A majority of business economists now view the government’s tax and spending policy as moving too aggressive­ly to stimulate economic growth, setting up a potential increase in the deficit in the coming years, a new survey shows.

That view emerged from the latest economic policy survey by the National Associatio­n for Business Economics, polling 211 members at companies and industry groups. The survey, by a profession­al associatio­n for business economists, academics and others who use economics in the workplace, was released Monday.

The 52 percent of economists who consider the government’s fiscal policy “too stimulativ­e” compares with only 20 percent in August, in the previous economic policy survey.

This time, 37 percent of respondent­s judged tax and spending policy as “about right,” down from 46 percent in August.

By contrast, the economists are more supportive of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate policy: More than six in 10 have pegged it as “about right.” That’s the highest percentage in eight years, according to the associatio­n.

“Overall, the (survey) panel expects the deficit to grow as a percentage of the economy in the longer term,” Kevin Swift, chief economist of the American Chemistry Council, said in a statement.

The NABE economists, reflecting the prevailing view of corporate America, continue to have a strong preference for more conservati­ve fiscal policy in the long run.

The $1.5 trillion Republican tax-cutting legislatio­n signed into law late last year, President Donald Trump’s signature accomplish­ment in the Gop-controlled Congress, provides steep cuts for corporatio­ns and wealthy Americans while offering more modest reductions for most low- and middle-income families and individual­s. Coupled with a $400 billion bipartisan budget agreement enacted this month, it has raised the possibilit­y of greater inflation. That could make the Fed more likely to tighten credit.

Experts have said, and the new Trump budget proposal acknowledg­es for the first time, that the massive tax overhaul likely will add billions to the deficit and not “pay for itself ” with economic growth and higher revenues. The Trump federal spending plan unveiled in mid-february contains trillion-dollar deficits.

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