The Columbus Dispatch

US projects $3.12T budget deficit for this year, down $555B

- Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON – The Biden administra­tion is forecastin­g that this year’s budget deficit will be $555 billion lower than it estimated back in May, helped by an economy that is rebounding more quickly than had been expected.

But even with the improvemen­t, the administra­tion said Friday that it is forecastin­g a deficit of $3.12 trillion for the budget year that ends Sept. 30. That would be the second largest deficit in history, exceeded slightly by last year’s $3.13 billion deficit.

And for the next decade, the administra­tion never sees the annual deficits falling below $1 trillion. For the 2022 budget year, which begins Oct. 1, the administra­tion is projecting a deficit of $1.54 trillion. The non-partisan Congressio­nal Budget Office forecasts a lower deficit of $1.15 trillion next year.

However, the CBO forecasts are based on current law and do not take into account what the impact will be of two massive spending bills that have yet to pass Congress, a bipartisan measure of around $1 trillion in spending on traditiona­l infrastruc­ture projects such as roads and bridges and a $3.5 trillion measure backed only by Democrats to offer expanded health care, pre-school and junior college education and climate change initiative­s.

Even with the added infrastruc­ture and social spending, the Biden administra­tion said Friday that it sees the deficits over the next decade coming in $684 billion below its earlier forecast. However, that improvemen­t would still leave deficits over the next decade totaling $12.49 trillion.

In the last two years, deficit totals have worsened as the government approved trillions of dollars in support for individual­s and businesses caught in an economy reeling from the pandemic.

Last year’s deficit of $3.13 trillion surpassed the previous record-holder of $1.4 trillion set in 2009 during the Obama administra­tion.

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