Analysis: CBO 2015 Long-Term Budget Outlook
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projects that the federal debt could reach 175% of GDP by 2040.
https://www.pgpf.org/analysis/congressional-budget-offices-2015-long-term-budget-outlook
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The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projects that the federal debt could reach 175% of GDP by 2040.
https://www.pgpf.org/analysis/congressional-budget-offices-2015-long-term-budget-outlook
The PGPF chart pack illustrates that budget-making involves many competing priorities, limited resources, and complex issues.
Interest costs are on track to become the largest category of spending in the federal budget.
https://www.pgpf.org/budget-basics/what-are-interest-costs-on-the-national-debt
The Peter G. Peterson Foundation leverages its unique role as an effective convener of individuals, organizations and ideas. In bringing together America's most respected voices from across the ideological spectrum, the Foundation demonstrates that good solutions not only exist, but they also can gain broad support.
The latest budget outlook released by CBO is the first to fully capture the budgetary impact of the pandemic.
The primary role of the Senior Director, Tax Policy, is to track, research, analyze and assess the impacts of current, proposed and potential federal tax and revenue policies.
https://www.pgpf.org/about/careers/senior-director-tax-policy
Policymakers should build on this foundation of bipartisanship to begin the significant further reforms that are necessary to put our nation on a sustainable fiscal path.
“No review of the state of our union is complete without acknowledging our nation’s high and rising debt," Michael A. Peterson, CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, said.
Relative to the GAO’s last update of their long-term simulation, the nation’s fiscal condition has deteriorated.
The Congressional Budget Office released its 2015 Long-Term Fiscal Outlook, which projects that by 2040, federal debt will climb to over 100 percent of GDP under current law and could reach 175 percent of GDP under less optimistic assumptions.