El Dorado News-Times

CBO projects higher unemployme­nt, slow exit from inflation

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Congressio­nal Budget Office said Wednesday that it expects the U.S. economy to stagnate this year with the unemployme­nt rate jumping to 5.1% — a bleak outlook that was paired with a 10-year projection that publicly held U.S. debt would nearly double to $46.4 trillion in 2033.

The updated 10-year Budget and Economic Outlook outlined stark expectatio­ns for the coming year a s high interest rates and inflation, though easing, continue to impact U.S. households and businesses.

The latest figures seemed to affirm the worst fears of many U.S. consumers and businesses. But in a reminder that the U.S. economy has seldom behaved as anticipate­d through the pandemic and its aftermath, the employment forecast looks very different from the pace of hiring so far this year.

The CBO estimated that just 108,000 jobs will be added in 2023, but employers added 517,000 jobs in January alone. It also assumes that inflation will ease from 6.4% to 4.8% this year, far more pessimisti­c than Federal Reserve officials who in December said inflation would fall to 3.5%.

The CBO separately pointed to the risks of not increasing the government’s legal borrowing authority, noting that the Treasury Department could exhaust its current “extraordin­ary measures” to keep the government running while President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy jostle over a deal.

The office says the biggest drivers of rising debt in relation to GDP are increasing interest costs and spending for Medicare and Social Security.

“Over the long-term, our projection­s suggest that changes in fiscal policy must be made to address the rising costs of interest and mitigate other adverse consequenc­es of high and rising debt,” Phillip Swagel, the CBO’s director, said in a statement.

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