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			<title>Reason Magazine - Staff</title>
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			<managingEditor>info@reason.com (Reason Online)</managingEditor>
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<title>Deficit Delusions</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/29584.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;
President Clinton's crowing over the apparent progress made in reducing the
federal deficit since he took office is reaching near thunderous proportions.&lt;p&gt;
&quot;The decline in the deficit since 1992 is the largest two-year decline in our
history, and the first time in 20 years the deficit has gone down for two years
in a row,&quot; Clinton said in a speech October 24 in Cleveland, where he announced
that the deficit was now $203 billion. &quot;If we hadn't passed the deficit
reduction plan last year, the deficit would have been off the charts, up here
at $305 billion.&quot;&lt;p&gt;
A problem with Clinton's conclusion: It isn't true. A wide range of evidence
suggests that the deficit's temporary decline--it is scheduled to resume
climbing next year--had little to do with the administration's 1993 budget
package. That package of $433 billion in deficit reduction over a five-year
period wasn't even passed until August 1993, less than two months before the
end of fiscal 1993. Thus, it could only have had minimal effect on that year.&lt;p&gt;
Also, most of the spending cuts that made up about half of the so-called
deficit reduction were aimed at the &quot;out&quot; years of the five-year period. For
the most part, they haven't happened yet. And some decline in the deficit had
already been predicted by the Congressional Budget Office in January 1993, a
month before Clinton took office.&lt;p&gt;
The truth is that most of the so-called deficit reduction over the past two
fiscal years would have happened no matter who was in the White House.
Fortunately for Bill Clinton, he was in the right place at the right time.&lt;p&gt;
In January 1993, the CBO projected that the deficit would hit $310 billion at
the end of that fiscal year (on September 30) and then drop to $291 billion for
1994. Instead, the deficit dropped to $255 billion in 1993 and $203 billion in
1994. What accounts for the $144 billion decline over the two years?&lt;p&gt;
&quot;The deficit reduction has been generated by a reversal of the earlier
cash-flow outlays for the savings and loan bailouts, legislated tax hikes and
stronger economic growth,&quot; writes economist Mickey Levy of NationsBanc Capital
Markets Inc. In a September paper for the Shadow Open Market Committee, a group
of monetarist-oriented Federal Reserve watchers, Levy notes that progress in
reducing the deficit has been largely &quot;illusory&quot; because the basic structural
problems with the budget remain intact.&lt;p&gt;
According to an analysis by Sen. Pete Domenici (N.M.), ranking Republican
member of the Senate Budget Committee, the administration can probably claim
credit for about 12 percent of the deficit reduction that occurred in fiscal
years 1993 and 1994. &lt;p&gt;
&quot;Of the $144 billion reduction in the cumulative deficit over the last two
years, nearly three quarters (73 percent) or $107 billion results from
'technical re-estimates.' These technical factors are completely unrelated to
any specific policy proposed, legislation enacted by the 103rd Congress, or any
action taken by the president,&quot; he contends.&lt;p&gt;
The biggest technical re-estimate was the downward revision of the cost of the
savings &amp;amp; loan bailout--some $45 billion worth. That came about because
analysts overestimated the number of thrifts that would be taken over in 1993,
partly because improved economic conditions kept more of them from falling into
receivership. In addition, outlays for the thrift bailout peaked at $66.1
billion in 1991 and then abruptly changed direction when the Resolution Trust
Corporation, the government agency charged with cleaning up the mess, sold
S&amp;amp;L assets.&lt;p&gt;
Medical costs have also dropped faster than expected, which led to a
$22-billion technical re-estimate in projected Medicare and Medicaid costs.
Some of that drop may be attributed to presidential jawboning, but more of it
came from natural forces at work in the marketplace as health maintenance
organizations began lowering costs. Analysts had also overestimated interest
costs.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Revenue from new estimates unrelated to any tax law changes or economic
changes, such as higher-than-expected corporate profits, increased $24 billion,
according to Domenici. Another $22 billion is explained by stronger economic
conditions.&lt;p&gt;
The sole administration action that contributed to the reduction of the deficit
was raising $28 billion in new taxes and user fees in 1994--but spending on the
Los Angeles earthquake and the Midwest floods ate up an unplanned $11 billion.
That spending was added to the deficit under current budget rules, giving the
administration a net of $17 billion in deficit reduction because of policy
changes, under Domenici's analysis.&lt;p&gt;
In short, the drop in the deficit was largely because of the surging economic
recovery, which saw two strong quarters of growth just before Bill Clinton took
office, and from overestimates of the cost of cleaning up the S&amp;amp;L
debacle.&lt;p&gt;
The Office of Management and Budget, headed by Alice Rivlin, now sees the
deficit bottoming out at $168 billion in 1995 and then rising to $184 billion
in 1996 and $194 billion in 1997, according to the now-famous memo by Rivlin.
By the turn of the century, it will reach $235 billion. (The CBO estimate at
this point is even higher--$257 billion.)&lt;p&gt;
From there, OMB estimates that the deficit will climb to $285 billion in the
year 2004. (The CBO says $397 billion). OMB then projects a deficit of $456
billion in the year 2010, $1.5 trillion in 2020, and $4.1 trillion in 2030.&lt;p&gt;
As a share of gross domestic product, OMB projects that the deficit will remain
in the 2.5 percent range through the year 2004 but then begin to climb out of
sight, reaching 2.9 percent by 2010 and 5.9 percent by 2020. It then will
double to 10.4 percent of GDP in 2030.&lt;p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;
Those projections are why the administration is closely watching the Bipartisan
Commission on Entitlements. Its report, due out December 15, is expected to
call for a number of tough measures to stem the rising tide of entitlement
spending. (See &quot;Retirement Wrangle,&quot; November 1994.)&lt;p&gt;
The pre-election hullabaloo inside the Beltway over the leaked secret memo by
Rivlin merely reinforces the problems surrounding Clinton's claim that his
administration was responsible for the two years of lower deficits. Although
the White House spin was that the 11-page memo was a mere &quot;catalog&quot; of
proposals that have been floated by Republicans and various think tanks, any
reasonably intelligent observer would understand it was a set of talking points
for the immediate future. &quot;Decisions must be made soon about the policies to be
articulated in the FY 1996 budget, the State of the Union, and our response to
the Kerry-Danforth Commission report,&quot; Rivlin wrote in the October 3
memorandum.&lt;p&gt;
Levy, in his paper for the Shadow Open Market Committee, complained that policy
makers have &quot;left untouched&quot; the structural flaws that &quot;are the sources of the
fastest growing spending programs.&quot; He found that from 1990 to 1994, spending
on entitlements and other mandatory programs rose at an 8.8 percent annual
rate--even faster than in the 1980s, in part because of an increase in welfare
recipients during the recession and the slow-starting recovery. &lt;p&gt;
Tax revenue growth accelerated dramatically in 1994, increasing nearly 10
percent, he added, reflecting both the 1993 budget deal hikes as well as
stronger economic growth. He also hints that taxpayers could be forced to pick
up the cost of the administration's decision last year to alter the Treasury
Department's debt management strategy and shorten the duration of government
debt. In effect, the administration purchased more short-term securities
because interest rates had dropped. With interest rates now rising, that could
&quot;prove costly to taxpayers,&quot; Levy wrote.&lt;p&gt;
&quot;The administration has raised its projections of net interest outlays, and
uncertainty about future costs have [sic] heightened, particularly as the
Federal Reserve pursues a disinflationary monetary policy,&quot; wrote Levy. If
Clinton is around to preside over the possible deficit ballooning to come, his
crowing may have to give way to eating crow. &lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">29584@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Jan 1995 00:00:00 EST</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Robert G. Robinson Jr.)</author>
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