Federal Budget Deficit Expected To Hit Second Largest Since World War II

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WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 24: Sheets of one dollar bills run through the printing press at the Bureau of Engraving and Printing on March 24, 2015 in Washington, DC. The roots of The Bureau of Engraving and Printing can be traced back to 1862, when a single room was used in the basement of the main Treasury building before moving to its current location on 14th Street in 1864. The Washington printing facility has been responsible for printing all of the paper Federal Reserve notes up until 1991 when it shared the printing responsibilities with a new western facility that opened in Fort Worth, Texas. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)

Congressional forecasters are projecting a federal deficit of $2.3 trillion this fiscal year, even without the additional $1.9 trillion in spending that President Biden has proposed.

That would mean a smaller deficit than the record $3.1 trillion in 2020, according to the forecast issued by the Congressional Budget Office on Thursday. But at $2.3 trillion, the budget gap in 2021 would still top 10% of the overall U.S. economy — making it the second-largest deficit since World War II.

$3.1 Trillion: Pandemic Spending Drives The Federal Budget Deficit To A Record
ECONOMY
$3.1 Trillion: Pandemic Spending Drives The Federal Budget Deficit To A Record
It would also be $448 billion larger than the CBO was projecting in September. Congress tacked on an extra $900 billion in spending in late December when they passed an additional coronavirus relief plan. The cost of the plan, however, is partly offset by a stronger-than-expected economic recovery.

The CBO notes that the federal government was already running large deficits before the pandemic. Since then, the budget gap has “widened significantly” as a result of falling tax revenues and increased spending.

The deficit in the 2020 fiscal year topped $3.1 trillion, or 14.9% of GDP.


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The overall federal debt last year — that is, the sum of past deficits — reached 100% of GDP. That’s expected to climb to 102% by the end of this year, and to a record 107% by 2031.

Federal spending is expected to decline this year and next, as the pandemic eases, but that could change if Congress approves all or most of the administration’s ambitious relief package.

The CBO expects a modest increase in both inflation and interest rates over the next decade.

The budget forecast assumes that U.S. economic output recovers to pre-pandemic levels by the middle of this year. The CBO doesn’t anticipate that employment will fully recover until 2024.

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