Chattanooga Times Free Press

Budget deficit to hit record $3.3 trillion due to virus

- BY ANDREW TAYLOR

The federal budget deficit is projected to hit a record $3.3 trillion as huge government expenditur­es to fight the coronaviru­s and to prop up the economy have added more than $2 trillion to the federal ledger, the Congressio­nal Budget Office said Wednesday.

The spike in the deficit means that federal debt will exceed annual gross domestic product next year, a milestone that would put the U.S. in the company of countries like Greece whose accumulate­d debt exceeds the size of their economies.

The $3.3 trillion figure is more than triple the 2019 shortfall and more than double the levels experience­d after the market meltdown and Great Recession of 2008-09. Government spending, fueled by four coronaviru­s response measures, would register at $6.6 trillion, $2 trillion-plus more than 2019.

The recession has caused a drop in tax revenues have fallen, but the changes are not as dramatic as seen on the spending side., with individual income tax collection­s running 11% behind last year. Corporate tax collection­s are down 34%.

The economy shut down in the spring so people could be in isolation, in a failed national attempt to defeat the pandemic. That shutdown led lawmakers and President Donald Trump to pump money into business subsidies, larger unemployme­nt benefits, $1,200 direct payments and other stimulus steps that have helped the economy in the short term.

Most economists are untroubled by such huge borrowing when the economy is in peril, and the debt was barely a concern when a cornerston­e $2 trillion coronaviru­s relief bill passed almost unanimousl­y in March.

But now that lawmakers and the White House are quarreling over the size and scope of a fifth virus relief bill, Republican­s are growing skittish at the enormous costs of battling the pandemic. The Democratic­controlled House passed a $3.5 trillion measure in May, though House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., says she is willing to cut that to $2.2 trillion.

Caseloads remain unacceptab­ly elevated, however, as the virus exacts a painful, lingering toll on the economy and sentiment remains high for a fifth virus rescue package that would include money to reopen schools, patch state budgets and continue enhanced jobless benefits that have kept families afloat.

Among Republican­s, there seems to be less ardor for a deal — at least at what they see as unfavorabl­e terms. GOP leaders had been pressing for a package in the $1 trillion range, but party talks during August have focused on a smaller package.

The enormous deficit is bringing the federal debt, as measured by the size of the economy, near levels not experience­d since the end of World War II, when explosive borrowing to finance the war effort caused a historic spike. But those levels quickly receded during the postwar boom — something that won’t happen now, since federal spending is now dominated by retirement programs like Medicare and Social Security, whose costs increase automatica­lly with inflation and the ongoing retirement of the Baby Boom generation.

Deficit scolds have long warned that rising levels of debt will serve as a drag on the economy in the coming years. If interest rates rise too high, servicing the debt will put significan­t strain on the budget. The Federal Reserve has stepped in to keep credit markets stable and interest rates low for years as debt levels have risen.

“At a certain point, Washington’s insatiable borrowing needs will crowd out other investment­s and harm growth,” said Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the conservati­ve Manhatten Institute. “Washington should help end the pandemic and rescue the economy, yet must also address these unsustaina­ble long-term deficits.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States