The Columbus Dispatch

Most view US fiscal policy as too aggressive

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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 NABE, 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 6 in 10 have pegged it as “about right.” That’s the highest percentage in eight years, according to NABE.

“Overall, the (survey) panel expects the deficit to grow as a percentage of the economy in the longer term,” NABE Vice President 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 middleinco­me 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.

The Winking Lizard Tavern is scheduled to open at 4 p.m. Tuesday at 7995 E. Broad St. in Reynoldsbu­rg.

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