Statement on CBO’s Analysis of the President’s Budget
“Today’s Congressional Budget Office analysis confirms that we need to do more to get America’s fiscal house in order. Increasing our public debt by more than 85% to $19 trillion in 2022 is obviously not a prudent starting point for future decades that present even greater fiscal challenges.
“The true test of any fiscal plan is whether or not it stabilizes the federal debt as a percentage of the economy. Unfortunately, the President’s budget projects that federal debt will increase significantly over the longer term. Making minor changes to the tax system and focusing on cuts to discretionary spending will simply not get the job done.
“We need our leaders to look beyond the next ten years and take action to tackle the real drivers of long-term debt. The 10-year budget window conceals the dangerous long term path that we are on, and does not show the rewards and savings of the structural changes that we need to enact, including reforming entitlements and our inefficient tax system.”
Further Reading
Even with Economic Growth Factored in, OBBBA Would Increase Deficits
The small, positive fiscal impact from slightly higher economic growth is projected to be more than offset by increased federal interest costs.
Social Security Faces Serious Financial Shortfalls and Other Takeaways From the Trustees Report
Without reform, the Social Security Trust Funds will soon be depleted and unable to pay full benefits.
Social Security and Medicare Trust Funds Could Be Depleted Within the Next Decade
Today, the Social Security and Medicare Trustees released their annual reports on the programs’ financing, showing that the future of these vital programs remain at risk.