The Herald (Zimbabwe)

US booming economy and soaring deficits

- - Fortune.com

THE US is currently experienci­ng a disastrous “new normal”; the economy is booming at the same time that government debt and deficits are exploding. That scenario is a radical departure from the normally healthy, self-correcting interplay between economic growth and budget shortfalls - and its likely longterm consequenc­es are worth losing sleep over.

In almost every other period in recent history, US deficits have been counter-cyclical. When growth weakens, unemployme­nt rises, so that fewer people are paying taxes. Falling profits shrink revenues from corporate levies, and the government frequently enacts emergency spending measures to recharge the economy. The shrinking tax receipts and temporary outlays swell the deficit. When the economy revives, in contrast, an expanding workforce and a surge in earnings lifts revenues and narrows the budget gap.

What’s remarkable is that the countervai­ling forces have held debt and deficits in a relatively tight range, keeping our fiscal course well outside the danger zone. The gap between outlays and revenues generally fluctuates, from deficits seldom exceeding 4 percent of GDP to occasional surpluses, so that over the longterm, annual shortfalls have averaged around 2 percent. The US economy has been able to handle those modest deficits with ease. So long as GDP growth matched or exceeded 2 percent, federal debt as a share of national income remained constant, or even declined.

Today, that trend is reversing. Growth and deficits are moving upward in tandem, something that’s happened only briefly in the past. In 2018, GDP expanded at a robust 3,1 percent, and the Congressio­nal Budget Office forecasts a decent 2,4 percent reading for 2019. Yet the agency predicts that the deficit will jump by 46 percent to $970 billion in 2020, rising to 4,6 percent of GDP, and that the shortfall will grow to 7,1 percent of GDP by 2028 if Congress extends tax reductions that are scheduled to sunset, a likely outcome.

Breaking a historic pattern

A December 13 report from the non-partisan Committee for a Responsibl­e Budget (“The deficit has never been this high when the economy was this strong”) points out that past periods of big deficits were usually accompanie­d by high unemployme­nt and a large “output gap,” meaning that the economy was operating far below its potential because a big share of the workforce, and swaths of manufactur­ing capacity, stood idle.

The CRFB notes that at the time of the 1992 recession, the unemployme­nt rate was 7,4 percent, the output gap reached 3,5 percent, and GDP had contracted slightly the previous year, factors that drove the deficit up to 4,5 percent of GDP. In 2009, the US had a jobless reading of 8,5 percent, an output gap of 5,9 percent, and a no-growth economy that pushed deficits to 9,8 percent of GDP, a number inflated by a wave of emergency spending.

By contrast, today a record-low 3,4 percent of the workforce is unemployed, the economy is operating above potential, and growth last year exceeded 3 percent. Yet the deficit is projected to jump from 3,9 percent this year to 4,6 percent next year, with higher numbers to come. “Those numbers show that fast growth cannot wash away the deficit, and that deficits will keep getting bigger even at 3 percent growth,” says Marc Goldwein, CRFB’s senior policy director.

What’s really scary, says Goldwein, is that the CBO projects that the rate of US economic expansion will drop below 2 percent by 2020, and stay in the sub-2 percent range for the next eight years. As he points out, growth in the range the CBO projects would drive deficits to over $1,5 trillion by 2028, and push the ratio of total outstandin­g federal debt to GDP to around 100 percent, an extremely dangerous number.

As Goldwein acknowledg­es, the US could keep piling on seemingly unsustaina­ble debt and deficits for years, without triggering a financial crisis. “You don’t know if a crisis will come next year, or far in the future,” he says.

“What you do know is that even now, the deficits are curbing growth.”

The US must issue gigantic volumes of Treasury bills and bonds to fund the deficits, and many investors and companies purchase those safe securities instead of channellin­g that money into entreprene­urial ventures, or providing private enterprise­s with fresh capital for new plants and data centres. Each year, Goldwein says, deficits divert an estimated $5 trillion a year that could be spurring private enterprise­s into Treasuries, slightly lowering growth year after year in a cycle that will make the US economy significan­tly smaller in a decade than if deficits were shrinking.

Big and growing deficits pose a second near-term threat, even if the US avoids a funding crisis. Growing interest payments will crowd out spending that’s needed for social programs. “Government interest payments next year will exceed everything the federal government spends on children, including child tax credits, school lunches and the like,” says Goldwein.

“That means we’ll spend more for the past generation than investing in the future generation.”

By 2028, the CBO projects, interest on the debt could reach $1 trillion, or more than one dollar in eight of all spending, versus one in thirteen in 2018.

The deficit’s big driver is demographi­cs. Even if the economy expanded at 3 percent or more a year, revenues wouldn’t remotely rise fast enough to cover exploding healthcare and retirement costs for the fast-growing population of seniors.

Neverthele­ss, recent, mainly misguided, legislatio­n is making the problem a lot worse. The budget agreement of 2018 that expanded both military and domestic spending, and 2017 tax bill, will add a combined $420 billion to the 2019 deficit; if those measures hadn’t been enacted, the shortfall would be just 2,6 percent of GDP.

Goldwein fears that the Trump administra­tion and Congress will reach another budget-busting compromise this year. Both parties are championin­g a big infrastruc­ture deal.

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