Zippyjuan
Banned
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2008
- Messages
- 49,008
Okay. Notable government spending is the determining factor.
Which we need to talk to Congress about. Republicans only complain about deficits when they are not in charge.
Okay. Notable government spending is the determining factor.
Which we need to talk to Congress about. Republicans only complain about deficits when they are not in charge.
Those darned tax and spend liberals ringing up debt right and left! Wait- this was the cut taxes and spend Republicans bringing back the $trillion deficits.
Those darned tax and spend liberals ringing up debt right and left! Wait- this was the cut taxes and spend Republicans bringing back the $trillion deficits.
Should have said "isn't". Republicans should worry about spending. Deficits and surpluses don't matter. All that matters is spending takes resources out of the private economy. If they run deficits from a tax shortfall, that isn't a big deal at all.
As far as the interest on the debt which I see you bring up, that is the best thing government can spend money on. It doesn't take any physical resources away from the private economy.
Pelosi is back, so things could start happening faster now:
[h=3]Trump, Schumer, Pelosi Consider Repealing Debt Ceiling Altogether[/h]
White House budget projects $1 trillion deficit in 2019
The White House’s midyear budget projections see federal deficits surpassing $1 trillion in 2019.
In an annual budget review, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimated that new legislation enacted since the release of its February budget — alongside new projections on other spending and receipts — would add $101 billion more to the 2019 deficit, pushing it above $1 trillion.
That figure would amount to 5.1 percent of the United States's gross domestic product, the nation’s total economic output.
The midyear budget review was released quietly on Friday.
Estimates from the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office had forecast the deficit to near $1 trillion in 2019, but not pass it until 2020.
Budget watchdogs said that deficits had doubled in recent years as a result of bipartisan spending agreements and the GOP tax-cut law passed in December.