The Bconomic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 1994-1998
The Bconomic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 1994-1998
The Bconomic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 1994-1998
CBO Publication
n
January 1993
Questions concerning the budget projections should be directed to CBO's Budget Analysis Division (202-226-2880) and inquiries about the economic forecast to the Macroeconomic Analysis Division (226-2750). The Office of Intergovernmental Relations is CBO's Congressional liaison office and can be reached at 226-2600. For additional copies of the report, please call the Publications Office at 226-2809.
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Budget Projections and Underlying Assumptions
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Budget Projections (By fiscal year) in Billions of Dollars Total Deficit* Cyclical Deficit Deposit Insurance Spending13 Standardized-Employment Deficit^
290 310 291 284 287 319 357
91 -2
201
79 3
228
59 10
222
43 11
230
32 -1
256
24
-14 309
17
-10 351
Economic Assumptions (By calendar year) Nominal GDP (Billions of dollars) Real GDP (Percentage change) CPI-U (Percentage change)** Unemployment Rate (Percent) Three- Month Treasury Bill Rate (Percent) Ten-Year Treasury Note Rate (Percent)
SOURCE:
5,943
2.0 3.1 7.4 3.5 7.0
6,255
2.8 3.0 7.1 3.1 6.7
6,594
3.0 2.7 6.6 3.7 6.6
6,942
2.9 2.7 6.2 4.4 6.6
7,288
2.7 2.7 6.0 4.7 6.5
7,627
2.4 2.7 5.8 4.8 6.5
7,953
2.0 2.7 5.7 4.9 6.4
NOTE: The projections include Social Security and the Postal Service, which are off-budget. a. b. c. d. The projections assume compliance with the discretionary spending caps in the Budget Enforcement Act, which limit annual appropriations through 1995. Projections for 1996 through 1998 are CBO extrapolations. The projections assume the provision of additional resources to the Resolution Trust Corporation (or a successor) beyond those in current law. The 1992 figure also includes final contributions of $5 billion from allied nations for Operation Desert Storm. Excludes deposit insurance. Desert Storm contributions, and cyclical factors. Shown as a percentage of potential GDP. The CPI-U is the consumer price index for all urban consumers.
February 1993 ERRATA SHEET The Economic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 1994-1998
The figures in Table E-l on page 123 of the report should read as indicated on this sheet.
Table E-1. Standardized-Employment Oefidt and Related Series, Fiscal Years 1 956-1 992 (In billions of dollars) Standardized-Emolovment Outlays'* Deficit(-)" Revenues
1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE: . b.
NAIRU' (Percent)
5.1 5.1 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.2 5.2 5.4 5.4 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.8 5.8 6.0 5.9 6.0 5.9 5.9 5.9 6.0 5.9 5.9 5.8 5.8 5.7 5.7 5.7 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.5
73.1 79.5 84.3 82.4 95.2 100.5 103.4 109.8 112.6 114.7 124.1 142.6 146.5 178.6 190.8 191.2 210.6 224.6 260.6 296.7 317.5 367.4 402.4 462.7 538.9
71.2 77.3 82.0 91.2 92.1 96.8 106.5 111.4 118.9 119.3 136.7 160.1 181.1 187.6 199.0 210.9 231.2 247.8 272.3 327.7
-12.7 -17.5 -34.7 -9.1 -8.1 -19.6 -20.6 -23.2 -11.7 -30.9 -463 -38.4 -553 -42.7 -47.7 -37.4 -46.7 -105.2 -133.1 -177.4
1,058 1,150 1,244 1386 1,579 1,751 1,955 2.158 2,425 2.729
1,051 1,148 1,274 1,404 1,510 1,684 1,917 2,155 2,430 2,644
363.7 405.7 457.7 5053 586.7 670.4 730.3 783.1 837.9 938.0 978.9 994.5 1,053.9 1,125.2 1,196.0 1,291.6 1,365.4
633.0 683.5 677.8 704.9 760.5 794.2 875.6 902.7 979.5 1,035.1 1,111.8 1,163.9
Congressional Budget Office.
3,080 3374 3^99 3^28 4,064 4308 4,526 4,784 5.137 5,485 5352 6,140
5,633 5,869
The NAIRU is the nonaccelerating inflation rat* of unemployment. It is the benchmark for computing potential GDP. Excludes deposit insurance.
1 1
For sale by the U.S. Government Printing Office Superintendent of Documents, Mail Stop: SSOP, Washington, DC 20402-9328 ISBN 0-16-041609-4
NOTES Unless otherwise indicated, all years referred to in Chapter 1 are calendar years and all years in Chapters 2 through 6 are fiscal years. Some figures in this report indicate periods of recession using shaded vertical bars. The bars extend from the peak to the trough of the recession. Unemployment rates throughout the report are calculated on the basis of the civilian labor force. Numbers in the text and tables of this report may not add to totals because of rounding. The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 is referred to in this volume more briefly as GrammRudman-Hollings. This act was amended by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990, which is Title XIII of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990.
Preface
his volume is one of a series of reports on the state of the economy and the budget that the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) issues periodically. It satisfies the requirement of sections 202(f) and 308(c) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 to submit an annual report to the Committees on the Budget with respect to fiscal policy and to provide five-year baseline projections of the federal budget. In accordance with CBO's mandate to provide objective and impartial analysis, the report contains no recommendations.
The analysis of the economic outlook presented in Chapter 1 was prepared by the Macroeconomic Analysis Division under the direction of Robert Dennis and John F. Peterson. John Sturrock wrote Chapter 1. Chapter 5 was written by Robert Dennis, with contributions from Matthew Salomon. The baseline outlay projections were prepared by the staff of the Budget Analysis Division under the supervision of C.G. Nuckols, Paul N. Van de Water, James Horney, Michael Miller, Charles Seagrave, and Robert Sunshine. The revenue estimates were prepared by the staff of the Tax Analysis Division under the supervision of Rosemary D. Marcuss and Richard A. Kasten. Kathy A. Ruffing wrote Chapter 2. Ellen Hays wrote Chapter 3. Richard A. Kasten wrote Chapter 4. Chapter 6 was written by James Horney and Philip Joyce. The appendixes were written by James Horney (Appendix A); Kathy A. Ruffing (Appendixes B and C); Jeffrey Holland (Appendix D); and Karin Carr (Appendix E). Paul N. Van de Water wrote the summary of the report. An early version of the economic forecast underlying this report was discussed at a meeting of CBO's Panel of Economic Advisers. Members of this panel are Barry Bosworth, Andrew F. Brimmer, Robert Dederick, Martin Feldstein, Benjamin M. Friedman, Lyle E. Gramley, Edward M. Gramlich, Lawrence R. Klein, John Makin, Rudolph Oswald, Rudolph G. Penner, George L. Perry, William Poole, Alice M. Rivlin, Jeffrey Sachs, Paul Samuelson, Charles L. Schultze, James Tobin, and Murray Weidenbaum. Robert J. Gordon, Burton Malkiel, Allan Meltzer, and Laurence H. Meyer attended as guests. In addition, William Poole gave valuable comments on Chapters 1 and 5. Despite the considerable assistance afforded by these outside advisers, this document does not necessarily reflect their views.
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Paul L. Houts supervised the editing and production of the report, assisted by Sherry Snyder. Major portions were edited by Paul L. Houts, Sherry Snyder, Sherwood D. Kohn, and Leah Mazade. Christian Spoor provided editorial assistance and coordinated the graphics. The authors owe thanks to Jeanne Burke, Marion Curry, Dorothy Kornegay, Linda Lewis, and L. Rae Roy, who assisted in the preparation of the report. With the assistance of Martina Wojak-Piotrow, Kathryn Quattrone prepared the report for final publication. Robert D. Reischauer Director January 1993
Contents
SUMMARY
ONE
Xlll
THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK CBO's Economic Forecast: 1993 Through 1994 1 Exogenous Factors Will Provide Little Stimulus 2 Restriction Caused by Long-Term Adjustments Will Ease 10 Recent Economic Developments Turn Optimistic 15 Slow Growth of Output Will Dampen the Growth of Jobs, Wages, and Prices 17 CBO's Economic Projections for the Medium Term: 1995 Through 1998 19 Forecast Comparisons and Risks 22
TWO
THE BUDGET OUTLOOK The Deficit Outlook 27 How Has the Budget Outlook Changed Since August? 33 The Longer-Term Budget Outlook 35
27
THREE
THE SPENDING OUTLOOK Discretionary Spending: Defense, International, and Domestic 42 Entitlements and Mandatory Spending 47 Deposit Insurance 50 Offsetting Receipts 54 Net Interest 55
41
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FOUR
THE REVENUE OUTLOOK Baseline Projections 59 Revenue Trends Since 1960 63 Recent Trends in Tax Progressivity 66
59
FIVE
THE ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF DEFICIT REDUCTION The Question of Timing 71 The Long-Term Benefits of Eliminating the Deficit 73 Redirecting Spending and Reducing Foreign Borrowing 75 Implications of Deficit Reduction for Monetary Policy 76 How Much Does Credibility Matter? 80 Conclusion 80
69
SIX
THE BUDGET PROCESS AND DEFICIT REDUCTION Gramm-Rudman-Hollings and the Budget Enforcement Act 84 Lessons Learned 86 The Budget Process in 1993 90 Conclusion 93
83
CONTENTS
APPENDIXES A B C D E F GLOSSARY Discretionary Spending Limits 97 An Analysis of Congressional Budget Estimates 103 How the Economy Affects the Budget 109 The Federal Sector of the National Income and Product Accounts 115 Historical Budget Data 121 Major Contributors to the Revenue and Spending Projections 135
95
137
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TABLES
Comparison of Forecasts for 1993 and 1994 Medium-Term Economic Projections CBO Deficit Projections Changes in CBO Deficit Projections The CBO Forecast for 1993 and 1994 The Fiscal Policy Outlook Medium-Term Economic Projections for Calendar Years 1993 Through 1998 Medium-Term Economic Projections for Fiscal Years 1993 Through 1998 Comparison of Forecasts for 1993 and 1994 Comparison of Projections for 1995 Through 1998 The Deficit Outlook Under Current Policies CBO Projections of Trust Fund Surpluses Changes in CBO Budget Projections Since August The Budget Outlook Through 2003 Outlays by Category, Assuming Compliance with Discretionary Spending Caps How Tight Are the Discretionary Caps? CBO Baseline Projections for Mandatory Spending, Excluding Deposit Insurance Outlays for Deposit Insurance in the Baseline Offsetting Receipts in the Baseline CBO Projections of Interest Costs and Federal Debt CBO Baseline Revenue Projections by Source
xiv
XV
xvi
xvii
2 5
20
1-4.
21 23 24 28 32 34 38
2-4. 3-1.
44 46
3-2. 3-3.
49 51 54 56 60
CONTENTS
Effect of Extending Tax Provisions That Expire in 1993 Through 1998 CBO Estimates of End-of-Session Discretionary Spending Limits for Fiscal Years 1994 and 1995 Comparison of 1992 Budget Resolution with Actual Outcomes Sources of Differences Between Actual Budget Totals and Budget Resolution Totals for Fiscal Year 1992 Sources of Differences Between Actual Budget Totals and First Budget Resolution Estimates for Fiscal Years 1980-1992 Effects on CBO Budget Projections of Selected Changes in Economic Assumptions Relationship of the Budget to the Federal Sector of the National Income and Product Accounts
62 98 104
105
B-3.
Projections of Baseline Receipts and Expenditures Measured by the National Income and Product Accounts 118 Standardized-Employment Deficit and Related Series, Fiscal Years 1956-1992 Revenues, Outlays, Deficits, and Debt Held by the Public, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) Revenues, Outlays, Deficits, and Debt Held by the Public, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (Asa percentage of GDP) Revenues by Major Source, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) Revenues by Major Source, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP) Outlays for Major Spending Categories, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) 123
124
E-3.
__i
jiunm
...
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E-7.
Outlays for Major Spending Categories, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP) Discretionary Outlays, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) Discretionary Outlays, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP) Outlays for Entitlements and Other Mandatory Spending, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 ( In billions of dollars) Outlays for Entitlements and Other Mandatory Spending, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP)
129
E-8. E-9.
E-10.
130
131
132
E-ll.
133
FIGURES
The Economic Forecast and Projection Year-End Balances of States Spread Between Long- and Short-Term Interest Rates The Velocity of M2 Personal Saving Rate Household Burden of Debt Repayment Population of First-Time Homebuyers Nonresidential Business Construction Permanent and Temporary Job Losses Employment in Wholesale and Retail Trade Goods Sales and the Ratio of Inventory to Sales Inflation and Excess Productive Capacity Closing the Gap: GDP Versus Potential GDP
3 6
8 9 11 11 12 13 13 14 15 16 19
CONTENTS
The Deficit Outlook Outlays by Category as a Share of GDP Total Revenue as a Share of GDP Revenue by Source as a Share of GDP Federal Effective Tax Rates for 1979, 1985, 1989, and 1993, by Income Group Baseline Deficit and Alternative Paths to a Balanced Budget Discretionary Spending Net Exports of Goods and Services A Comparison of NIP A and Budget Deficits, Fiscal Years 1980-1998
29 43 63 65
67
5-1.
72 72 76
119
BOXES 1-1. Why Is This Business Cycle Different from All Others? What Is the Standardized-Employment Deficit? Whatever Happened to the $400 Billion Deficit? A Comparison with the Bush Administration's Projections The Debt Ceiling Reducing the Deficit Versus Increasing Government Investment The Simulation Models How Long Does Monetary Policy Work? Changes in the Deficit Outlook Since the Budget Agreement
4 6 29
36 57
3-1. 5-1.
70 77 79
85
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6-2.
Would a Balanced Budget Amendment Reduce the Deficit? What Is the Likely Effect of the Item Veto? Will Caps on Mandatory Spending Work?
87 91 92
6-3. 6-4.
Summary
t long last, the U.S. economy seems to be entering a period of self-sustaining growth. But this expansion will differ from previous ones in two key respects. First, in 1993 and 1994, the economy will grow at only three-fourths of the pace that is typical for this stage of the business cycle. Second, the rate of growth will be insufficient to bring down the federal budget deficit, which will hover near $300 billion for several years and will then grow even larger. Under current budgetary policies, the deficit will climb from $310 billion in 1993 to $357 billion in 1998 and about $650 billion in 2003. Such lackluster expansion and large budget deficits are not merely coincidental. Living standards are projected to grow so slowly, in part, because of the decline in the national saving rate over the past decade. And the federal budget deficit has been a major contributor to that drop in saving. By the same token, reducing the deficit is the most direct and reliable way to increase national saving and long-run economic growth. Increasing the share of government spending devoted to investment could also spur growth, but the specific projects would have to be chosen carefully so that their benefits exceeded their costs. At first, efforts to eliminate the deficit would tend to weaken income and employment, but a more stimulative monetary policy could largely offset this disruption. Over the long run, a higher rate of saving would encourage new investment, boost workers' productivity, reduce net bor-
rowing from abroad, and raise real incomes and living standards.
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xiv THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
est rates are expected to remain nearly constant through 1993, though short-term rates will rise during 1994, once the expansion is firmly established. CBO's forecasts of economic growth and unemployment are close to those of the Blue Chip consensus of private forecasters (see Summary Table 1). CBO is slightly more optimistic, however, about the prospects that low inflation and low short-term interest rates will continue. But even if CBO has underestimated
Summary Table 1. Comparison of Forecasts for 1993 and 1994 Actual 1991
inflation, the deficit projections would be little affected; although higher inflation would add slightly more to outlays than to revenues, the deficit would be no higher as a share of GDP.
Estimated 1992
Forecast
1993
1994
Fourth Quarter to Fourth Quarter (Percentage change) Nominal GDP CBO Blue Chip Real GDPa CBO 8/ue Chip Implicit GDP Deflator CBO Blue Chip Consumer Price lndexb CBO Blue Chip
2.7 3.6
Congressional Budget Office; Egc)ert Economic Enteiprises, Inc., Blue Chip Economic Indicators; Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
NOTE: The Blue Chip forecasts through 1994 a re based on a survey of 50 private forecasters, published on January 10,1993. a. b. c. In constant 1987 dollars. The consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U). Blue Chip does not project a 10-year note rate. The values shown here for the 10-year note rate are based on the Blue Chip projections of the Aaa bond rate, adjusted by CBO to reflect the estimated spread between Aaa bonds and 10-year Treasury notes.
SUMMARY
xv
tions are based on trends in the labor force, productivity, and national saving. Over the 1995-1998 period, CBO projects that real GDP will grow at an average annual rate of about 2 percent (see Summary Table 2). By comparison, potential output grows only 2 percent a year. The gap between actual and potential real GDP will therefore gradually shrink to its historical average of about 0.6 percent of potential GDP by 1998. Because GDP remains below its potential throughout the period of the projections, inflation is not likely to rise. Long-term interest rates are also assumed to remain steady at about 6.5 percent, although short-term rates
are projected to rise from 3.7 percent in 1994 to 4.9 percent by 1998.
Summary Table 2. Medium-Term Economic Projections (By calendar year) Estimated 1992 Nominal GDP (Billions of dollars) Real GDP (Billions of 1987 dollars) Real GDP (Percentage change) Implicit GDP Deflator (Percentage change) CPI-U (Percentage change) Unemployment Rate (Percent) Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate (Percent) Ten-Year Treasury Note Rate (Percent)
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
1995
1998
5,943 4,918
2.0
2.6 3.1
6,255 5,054
2.8
6,594 5,204
3.0
6,942 5,354
2.9
7,288 5,497
2.7
7,627 5,628
2.4
7,953 5,740
2.0
2.4 3.0
2.4 2.7
2.3 2.7
2.3 2.7
2.2 2.7
2.2 2.7
7.4
7.1
6.6
6.2
6.0
5.8
5.7
3.5
3.1
3.7
4.4
4.7
4.8
4.9
7.0
6.7
6.6
6.6
6.5
6.5
6.4
NOTE: CPI-U is the consumer price index for all urban consumers.
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January 1993
percent of GDP, higher than at any time since the aftermath of World War H.
spending controlled by annual appropriations) in 1994 and 1995 is assumed to be held to the tight limits established in the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA). These caps require that discretionary outlays be cut by roughly 7 percent in real terms between 1993 and 1995. CBO assumes that discretionary outlays will grow at the same pace as inflation after 1995. One can see the rising trend in the deficit most clearly in the standardized-employment deficit, which removes the effects of the business cycle from government revenues and spending. CBO projects that the standardizedemployment deficit will rise, with only one slight interruption, from $180 billion (3.1 percent of potential GDP) in 1991 to $351 billion (4.4 percent of GDP) in 1998.
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
In Billions of Dollars Total Deficit Standardized-Employment Deficits Deficit Excluding Social Security and Postal Service
270 290 310 291 284 287 319 357
180 322
201 340
228 361
222 347
230 351
256 364
309 402
351 445
As a Percentage of GDP Total Deficit Standardized-Employment Deficits, b Deficit Excluding Social Security and Postal Service Memorandum: Gross Domestic Product (Billions of dollars)
SOURCE: a. b. Congressional Budget Office.
5,633
5,869
6,173
6,508
6,855
7,202
7,543
7,873
Excludes cyclical deficit as well as deposit insurance and Desert Storm contributions. Shown as d percentage of potential GDP.
SUMMARY
xvn
Why this grim budget outlook? After all, revenues are projected to keep pace with GDP, and most major spending programs are projected to grow no faster than the economy. However, the costs of the two major health care entitlements-Medicare and Medicaid are expected to continue to explode. Together, Medicare and Medicaid benefits represented 3.4 percent of GDP in 1992, but they are projected to swell to 5.1 percent of GDP by 1998. The runaway growth in these programs parallels the projected growth of 10 percent a year in national health expenditures and stems largely from continued increases in the cost and use of medical care. Health care reform is currently high on the public policy agenda. But reform will almost certainly entail using public resources to extend health insurance coverage to the 37 million Americans who are
now uninsured, as well as controlling health care costs. It will prove difficult, therefore, to reduce federal health costs significantly. More rapid economic growth is also not going to slay the deficit dragon. Even if the economy were to expand 1 percent a year more rapidly than CBO assumes~an unlikely outcome-the deficit would still total $230 billion in 1998.
Summary Table 4. Changes in CBO Deficit Projections (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1993
Summer Baseline Deficit Changes Policy changes Economic assumptions Revenues'3 Net interest Other outlays Subtotal Technical reestimates Revenues15 Deposit insurance0 Medicaid Medicare Other major benefits Net interest^ Other outlays Subtotal Total Changes Winter Baseline Deficit
SOURCE: a. b. c. Congressional Budget Off ice.
1994
268
1995
244
1996
254
1997
331
290
15 -5
a
6 -45 2 a 3 -2 6 -30
-21 310
23 -12 -1 10
4 -5 5 5 2 -4 4 11
27
-15 .7
6 5 8 8 8 2 -1 4 34
28 -17 -17 -6
6 8 10 11 2 1 a 37
23
291
40
284
32
287
29
319
Less than $500 million. Revenue losses are shown with a positive sign because they increase the deficit. Excludes changes in interest paid by deposit insurance agencies to the Treasury. These interest payments are intrabudgetary and do not affect the deficit.
January 1993
tion, which on balance has had a negligible effect on the deficit. Nor do the revisions stem from CBO's updated economic assumptions, which worsen the deficit through 1995 but improve it thereafter. The culprit is changes in other, so-called technical factors that determine revenues and spending (see Summary Table 4). In 1993, the largest technical reestimate is a reduction of $45 billion in projected spending for deposit insurance. That shortfall is largely the result of a delay in providing necessary funds to the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), the agency charged with closing or merging hundreds of insolvent savings and loan institutions. But it also reflects a modest reduction in CBO's estimate of the long-run cost of resolving troubled thrift institutions and banks, as well as a decrease in RTC's estimated need for working capital. Therefore, only part of the lower spending in 1993 is projected to be made up in the next few years. In 1994 and beyond, higher Medicare and Medicaid spending dominates the technical reestimates. Although CBO has upped its projections for these two programs several times in the past few years, actual spending continues to outpace the estimates. In Medicare, the most rapid increases have been for care at home and in skilled nursing facilities. The growth in Medicaid is fueled by unexpected increases in the number of aged and disabled beneficiaries.
sure that subsequent legislation would not erode those savings. Because the 1990 package has proved insufficient, and now that the economy has resumed growing, reducing the deficit is rightly receiving renewed attention. The size of the problem today, however, is bigger than it was in 1990. Another five-year, $500 billion effort would not quite halve the deficit by 1998. Eliminating the deficit over the next five years would require tax hikes and spending cuts about twice as large as those adopted in 1990. The Congressional Budget Office does not endorse particular changes in taxing or spending policies. But in the second volume of its annual report, Reducing the Deficit: Spending and Revenue Options, CBO provides a menu of some 250 ways to trim the deficit. The final two chapters of the present volume consider the economic consequences of reducing the deficit and the role of the budget process in enforcing a deficit reduction plan.
SUMMARY
xix
planned steady reduction in the deficit should not throw the economy back into recession, as long as the economy is growing at the moderate rate that is projected. Third, whether the deficit is closed in five years or 10 years makes little difference to the economy in either the short or long run, provided that the effort is credible and is carried through. Because much of the expected rise in the deficit occurs after 1998, a program to balance the budget in 10 years would come close to its goal after five years as well. In either case, the more credible the effort, the more likely that the Federal Reserve will provide the necessary monetary boost, and the more likely that private investment will rapidly fill the gap left by lower public and private consumption.
stead, policymakers turned to budgetary gimmickry and unrealistic assumptions to avoid the strictures of the law. The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 scrapped much of Gramm-Rudman-Hollings. It replaced the previous focus on fixed deficit targets with a concentration on enforcing the $500 billion of deficit reduction that had been adopted at the budget summit. The BEA set up two major enforcement mechanismsannual limits on discretionary appropriations and a pay-as-you-go requirement for revenues and mandatory spending. These procedures have succeeded in preventing new legislation from making the deficit worse, even though economic and technical factors have again caused a substantial increase in the projected deficits. The experience of the past seven years suggests that the chances of reducing the deficit will be enhanced if attention is focused on policy first, process second. Once the Congress and the President have agreed on specific spending cuts and tax increases, then they should put in place a process to ensure that those measures are carried out. At a minimum, this process should include giving the discretionary spending limits and pay-as-yougo procedures in the BEA a new lease on life.
Conclusion
As was widely expected in 1990, when the Budget Enforcement Act was adopted, deficit reduction seems likely to return to the top of the political agenda in 1993. At least three factors increase the likelihood of action this year. First, the public debt will reach its statutory limit in March, and the need to increase the limit may again force a revision of the budget process, as it did in 1985, 1987, and 1990. Second, the President and the Congress may desire some flexibility in meeting the discretionary spending limits, which are
I.
January 1993
pinching more tightly. Third, the pay-as-yougo rule could use strengthening; because this requirement is scheduled to expire in only two years, it is becoming relatively easy to shift costly programs beyond the reach of the BEA's enforcement arm. Although these factors can set the stage for deficit reduction, they cannot make it happen,
nor will they ease the political choices. The deficit will come down only when both elected officials and the public conclude that the borrowing binge must stop. They must be willing to pay higher taxes and receive fewer government benefits in the 1990s for the sake of higher living standards in the next century.
Chapter One
he economy finally appears to have reached a long-awaited stage of selfsustained growth. As it has reported for the last year, however, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) expects growth to be less robust than typically occurs during a similar stage of expansion. The recession and the subsequent recovery have been atypical in many respects, and the sluggish rate of expansion that is anticipated may make the normal fits and starts of the growth process seem more daunting than usual.
second quarter of 1992, the recovery from the recession of 1990 and 1991 moved at an annual rate of less than 2 percent, too slowly to keep the unemployment rate from rising. The 3 percent rate of growth currently forecast, however, will ensure continued, though slow, improvement in the rate of unemployment without requiring further fiscal or monetary stimulus. The mild pace of the expansion will keep rates of inflation and interest low by recent standards. CBO expects that inflation will remain at about 2.7 percent through the next few years. Interest rates, both long-term and short-term, are also expected to remain fairly constant through 1993, although short-term rates will rise during 1994, once the expansion has firmly established itself. The main contributors to expansion in 1993 and 1994 will be investment in producers' durable equipment and residential structures. Purchases of durable goods by consumers will also add to demand later this year. Although investment in nonresidential structures will decline in 1993, mainly because of the continued high vacancy rates for office and retail space, it will not dampen overall expansion as much as it did in 1992, when it fell by an estimated 7.4 percent. In 1994, investment in nonresidential structures and inventories should pick up as the expansion continues. Government purchases and net exports will not be strong sources of growth because the federal government must control the deficit under current policy, state and local govern-
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ments continue to face tight budgets, and the current and prospective status of foreign economies has weakened markedly. CBO's forecast rests on an analysis of three groups of factors. The first group consists of exogenous factors-that is, factors outside the control of private individuals and firms in the domestic economy. This group includes fiscal policy, monetary policy, and economic developments in foreign countries. On balance, these three major exogenous factors are expected to provide little, if any, stimulus to the economy during the forecast period. The second group of factors reflects longterm adjustments that various sectors of the economy are undergoing as they respond to fundamental imbalances that developed during the 1980s, along with demographic and institutional changes. Such factors include overhanging debt burdens of consumers; declining numbers of households in their prime first-time homebuying years; overbuilding in commercial real estate; and restructuring in
such sectors as automobiles, retail trade, computers, manufacturing, and defense-related industries. The adjustments within these sectors have retarded growth during the recovery. The adjustment process appears to be close to completion in some of these sectors, however, so that they will no longer act as such a drag on the economy. The third group of factors consists of recently released data about the economy that bear on the near-term outlook. Recent developments appear to augur steady, if unspectacular, growth in the future.
Table 1-1. The CBO Forecast for 1993 a nd 1994 Actual 1991 Estimated 1992 Forecast
1993
1994
Fourth Quarter to Fourth Quarter (Percentage change) Nominal GDP Real GDPa Implicit GDP Deflator Fixed-Weighted GDP Price Index
3.5 0.1 3.4 3.5 3.0 5.1 2.7 2.4 3.1 3.1
Calendar-Year Averages (Percent) Civilian Unemployment Rate Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate Ten-Year Treasury Note Rate
SOURCES: Congressional Budget Office; Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis; Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics; Federal Reserve Board. a. b. Based on constant 1987 dollars. Consumer price index for all urban consumers.
CHAPTER ONE
so weak in its recovery. Moreover, they are generally not likely to help economic expansion much in the next year or so.
1994. (This projection does not reflect the possible impact of policies that may be proposed by the Clinton Administration or by the Congress.) State and local governments also face budget problems and are likely to follow slightly restrictive policies. Federal Fiscal Policy Provides Little or No Stimulus. Although the Congress consid-
Figure1-1.
The Economic Forecast and Projection
Inflation*)
Percent
12
Actual Projected
I
1980 1984 1988 1992 1996
1980 1984 1988 1992 1996
Interest Rates
15
Percent Actual Projected
10
10
'
T"'
J i
1980
1984
1988
1992
1996
1980
1984
1988
1992
1996
SOURCES: a. b.
Congressional Budget Office; Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis; Federal Reserve Board.
NOTE: All data are annual values; growth rates are year-over-year. The annual value for real GDP growth for 1992 is estimated by CBO. Consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U). The treatment of home ownership in the official CPI-U changes in 1983. The inflation series in the figure uses a consistent definition throughout.
IMP
IIII II IIIBII
.JI1IL
January 1993
ered several important budgetary initiatives in 1992, it did not undertake any major departures from the policy adopted two years ago under the budget agreement of 1990. Since August, the Congress increased spending by $7 billion in 1993 and $2 billion in 1994, using
Box 1-1. Why Is This Business Cycle Different from All Others?
During the last few years, the economy has behaved differently from the way it usually does during similar phases of the business cycle. The decline during the recession was about average, but growth following the recession was so feeble that it was not clear that recovery had actually begun. Indeed, only in December 1992 did the official arbiter of the business cycle, the National Bureau of Economic Research, determine that the trough occurred in the first quarter of 1991. Moreover, employment and hours worked have moved little from their levels at the trough; increased productivity has accounted for nearly all of the expansion in output to date. Furthermore, the economy has grown only sluggishly since the trough. Growth in the early stages of expansion is usually rapid-six quarters after a recession ends, on average, real GDP exceeds its trough value by nearly 7 percent. But in the third quarter of 1992, output exceeded the trough value by less than half of that. Partly as a result of such slow growth, the unemployment rate continued to climb during the recovery. Even after a decline from its high in June 1992, the unemployment rate for the fourth quarter of 1992 stood more than 1 percentage point higher than it did in the quarter of the trough. If the expansion had been average, the unemployment rate would have fallen by nearly 1 percentage point. Although the expansion has been slow and faltering until now, in one sense it has actually proceeded more smoothly than is usual. During the first six quarters following the latest trough, growth averaged 2 percent at an annual rate, with an average quarterly fluctuation of plus or minus 1 percentage point. In previous expansions, both the average rate of growth and its average quarterly fluctuation have typically been more than twice those values, respectively.
the emergency provisions of the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA) for disaster relief in the aftermath of Hurricanes Andrew and Iniki and for U.S. spending related to Operation Desert Storm. At the same time, however, the Congress also reduced spending for defense in 1993 to $5 billion below the level allowed by the BEA. The net effect on the budget and the economy of these and other changes since CBO's August report is essentially zero. According to the basic measure of fiscal stimulus-the year-to-year change in the standardized-employment deficit relative to potential GDP (the highest rate of output that available resources of capital and labor could sustain without increasing the rate of inflation)current federal policy provides no overall boost in the next two years (see Table 1-2; also Box 1-2 briefly explains the standardized-employment deficit). As in 1992, a small increase in the standardized-employment deficit relative to potential GDP will impart a mild stimulus in 1993. But the fiscal policy limitations of the BEA will impose an equal amount of restraint in 1994. The role of fiscal policy could change if the new Administration and the Congress decide that some short-term stimulus is needed to boost growth in 1993. They could do this either by invoking the emergency provisions of the BEA or by modifying the current budget process. Most forms of fiscal stimulus work by increasing the federal deficit, however, so most proposals discussed have concentrated on temporary measures rather than on permanent ones. But how effective would such stimulus be? Broadly speaking, a temporary fiscal stimulus that increases the federal deficit by about $50 billion could add around 1 percentage point to the growth of GDP over a four-quarter period, provided that the Federal Reserve does not slow money growth to offset the stimulus. The exact increase in growth, however, would depend critically on how the deficit was raised. For example, all other things being equal, an increase in federal purchases would provide
CHAPTER ONE
more boost than a broad-based tax cut because all of the purchases would go directly into aggregate demand, whereas part of a tax cut would be saved. In any case, when the temporary stimulus has run its course and taxes rise or spending falls, growth would be correspondingly weakened for a period of four to six quarters. After about two or three years, output would be approximately what it would have been otherwise. One commonly discussed approach to shortrun fiscal stimulus would accelerate spending on infrastructure projects. The difficulty with this approach is that such projects usually take a long time to get into full swing. The stimulus they impart, therefore, may not be timely. And too rapid an acceleration risks committing funds to projects that really should not be undertaken. Another frequently mentioned approach, which appears to promise the biggest gain in output for a given rise in the deficit, involves
an investment tax credit (ITC) for equipment. The ITC could stimulate investment by reducing its after-tax cost. Some economists advocate an incremental ITC, which would apply only to investment above some base. For example, the base might be defined as a specified fraction of investment that a firm made in an earlier period. The purpose of limiting the credit in such a way is to try to avoid giving credits for investment that would have been made anyway-thereby reducing the revenue loss to the Treasury-while still encouraging firms to make additional investment. Yet an ITC for equipment also has drawbacks, which, in general, are magnified if it is incremental. Although an ITC would encourage more total investment, it would also encourage misallocation of some investment because it would favor investment in equipment over structures, in short-lived equipment over long-lived equipment, and by firms with current tax liabilities rather than those without. If the ITC is temporary, it would also favor
Table 1-2. The Fiscal Policy Outlook (By fiscal year, on a budget basis)
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
In Billions of Dollars Total Budget Deficit3 Standardized-employment deficit Cyclical deficit Memorandum: Deposit Insurance Desert Storm Contributions
246
293
201 91
3 -5
307
282
273 230 43
11 0
288 256 32
-1 0
333
180 66 66 -43
228 79
3 0
222 59
10 0
309 24
-14 0
As a Percentage of Potential GDP Total Budget Deficits Standardized-employment deficit Cyclical deficit
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
4.8 3.3
1.5
NOTE: Negative values denote surpluses. a. These measures of fiscal policy exclude outlays for deposit insurance and allied contributions for Operation Desert Storm.
mini I iii!
in unman
January 1993
that operate in declining industries. Finally, an incremental ITC would introduce administrative complexity to deal with such issues as how to define the level of base investment for partnerships, new firms, and firms that have merged or split since the base period, or how to prevent firms with high bases from using credits by selling capital to low-base firms, then leasing it from them. State and Local Governments Face Fiscal Restrictions. The current financial conditions of state and local governments preclude much stimulus from this sector. The recession has strained the resources of states and localities by reducing tax collections and requiring recession-related services. At the same time, the demand for other services, especially in education and health, continues to grow. In addition, there is a backlog of demand for the repair or building of infrastructure, such as highways, bridges, prisons, and schools. Those demands will continue, but financial resources available to meet them are limited. For example, the reserves that states main-
10
equipment that can easily be installed earlier than originally planned. An incremental ITC could also arbitrarily put some firms at a disadvantage because their planned investment is low relative to their investment in the base period-for example, firms that made unusually large investments in the base period or
1979
1981
1983
1985
1987
1989
1991
SOURCES: NOTES:
Data are for July-to-June fiscal years. Value for 1992 is estimated by the National Association of State Budget Officers.
CHAPTER ONE
tain for unforeseen circumstances now stand at historic lows, and restoring more normal levels will probably require some combination of spending restraint and higher taxes (see Figure 1-2). Most analysts expect that, given current conditions, less essential services will be curtailed, so spending by the state and local sector will grow less rapidly than the economy as a whole.
o Broad measures of money, M2 and M3, have grown quite slowly for the past three years, but narrow measures of money, including both Ml and banking system reserves, have grown substantially faster than M2.1 These indicators appear to send conflicting signals. The rapid growth in bank reserves and narrowly defined money suggest that the financial system is quite liquid and that monetary policy has been stimulative. If so, excess liquidity could eventually overstimulate the economy, imperiling the hard-won reductions in inflation of the last two years. But the growth of M2~whose movements have been more closely related to movements in GDP than narrower measures of money-fell below its target range, and the velocity of M2 (the ratio of GDP to M2) rose. This pattern would seem to suggest that monetary policy has been restrictive. These conflicting signals present a dilemma to the Federal Reserve. Should it soak up excess liquidity indicated by the narrower monetary measures? Or should it maintain, or even lower, short-term rates of interest to boost the growth of M2? The Federal Reserve appears to have decided that velocity will remain high-that a given amount of M2 will sustain a higher amount of GDP than previouslyso that further easing may be unnecessary. Why Did Interest Rates Behave as They Have? Although short-term rates have fallen substantially, long-term rates have not matched those declines, so that, by most measures, the spread between long-term rates and short-term rates now stands at its highest
1.
The aggregate Ml consists primarily of currency and deposits on which checks can be drawn. The aggregate M2 consists of Ml plus primarily savings and small time deposits plus general-purpose and broker-dealer money market funds. The aggregate M3 consists of M2 plus primarily large time deposits, term repurchase agreements and Eurodollars, and institution-only money market funds.
i until
January 1993
post-war level (see Figure 1-3). Between the third quarter of 1990 (the cyclical peak) and September 1992, the Federal Reserve acted to reduce interest rates only gradually and in many small steps, whereas it usually reduces rates in a few large steps during recessions. The cumulative effect of this policy was to cut short-term interest rates substantially. The rate on three-month Treasury bills fell from about 8 percent in 1988 and 1989, when the Federal Reserve was trying to slow the economy, to about 3 percent in late 1992. The declines in short-term rates, however, were not enough to promote a stronger rebound. Many observers believe that the Federal Reserve did not act aggressively enough to combat the recession. The many small steps it took to cut rates suggest that it was following, rather than leading, the market-that a weak economy, rather than strong monetary policy, substantially accounts for the fall in interest rates. Support for this view is given by the fact that, in a weak and faltering recov-
ery, short-term rates continued to fall until December 1992. Three possible reasons could explain why long-term rates have not matched the fall in short-term rates. First, financial markets may expect real interest rates to rise in the future. For example, during this decade European integration and growth of the newly industrializing countries of Asia and Latin America will probably raise the demand for capital relative to its supply, leading to higher real rates of interest. Furthermore, unless policies change over the next 10 years, the ratio of U.S. federal debt to GDP will rise from 51 percent to 78 percent, draining capital from world markets and pushing up interest rates. Second, markets may expect more inflation in the future. Usually inflation falls in the first two years of an expansion, but markets may expect eventual pressure to monetize the deficit if it is never adequately dealt with. Finally, markets may find holding long-term securities to be riskier than before if the future is now harder to predict. In general, the value of long-term securities fluctuates more than the value of short-term securities when interest rates change. To compensate for this risk, investors holding long-term securities require a higher rate of interest. If investors feel the future has become more unpredictable, they will require even higher rates to hold long-term securities. Why Has M2 Growth Been So Low? The velocity of M2 has probably climbed to the unusually high level shown in Figure 1-4 because both the demand for and supply of assets that are included in M2 have fallen. High yield spreads have reduced the demand for M2 by inducing investors to shift out of assets that are included in M2-especially small time deposits-and into assets that are not included in M2. With the fall in shortterm rates, high long-term rates make longterm investments more attractive, and such instruments as bond and equity funds make shifting assets easy to do at little cost. As a result, small time deposits fell by $89 billion dollars in 1991 and at an annual rate of $201
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
SOURCES:
NOTES: Composite Treasury bonds minus three-month Treasury bills. Shaded areas indicate recessions.
CHAPTER ONE
renewed at such unrealistic rates, thereby reducing the attractiveness of such deposits. Second, the need to restore profits and meet tightened capital requirements may have made banks and thrift institutions more cautious in lending and creating deposits. Very high profits of banks and savings and loan associations during the first three quarters of 1992 have probably eased the need for stringency in lending. What Is the Outlook for Monetary Policy and Interest Rates? The most recently published minutes of Federal Reserve deliberations indicate that it will continue to focus on reducing inflation in 1993. Even with slow growth in money, CBO expects that the weaker-than-normal rate of expansion will not put much upward pressure on short-term interest rates until 1994. Short-term interest rates in the CBO forecast reach 3.3 percent by the end of 1993 and 4.0 percent by the end of 1994. In addition to smoothly rising shortterm rates, CBO expects that the yield spread will revert to a more normal level. Therefore, CBO's forecast contains essentially no change in long-term rates.
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
SOURCES:
Congressional Budget Office; Federal Reserve Board; Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
NOTES:
M2 velocity is the ratio of nominal GDP to the M2 measure of the money supply. M2 consists primarily of currency, deposits on which checks can be drawn, savings and small time deposits, and general-purpose and broker-dealer money market funds. Shaded areas indicate recessions.
billion through the first three quarters of 1992. At the same time, investments in mutual funds grew by $129 billion in 1991 and at an annual rate of $208 billion through the first three quarters of 1992. Weak demand for loans also reduced the need to create M2 assets. In addition to a weak economic environment, the need for firms and households to reduce high debt burdens that they had undertaken in the 1980s reduced the demand for loans. The supply of M2 deposits may have fallen for two reasons. First, the ongoing resolution of the savings and loan debacle has reduced unhealthy competition for deposits. Many insolvent institutions had offered unusually high rates to attract deposits in a gamble to stave off bankruptcy. As short-term rates fell and these deposits came due, they were not
January 1993
Current international conditions stem, in part, from inconsistent policy goals among the nations of the European Community (EC) following the unification of Germany in 1990. German unification should enhance the longrun growth prospects of western Europe, and it initially spurred growth. But the efforts to dampen the ensuing inflation also dampened growth in 1992. The capital needs of eastern Germany are expected to place massive demands on credit markets and have rapidly driven up the German fiscal deficit, which reached 4.1 percent of gross national product (GNP) in 1991. In addition, the one-to-one conversion of eastern German ostmarks into deutsche marks (DM) and the stimulus arising from the process of unification together caused a huge increase in the German money supply. As a result, the German current-account balance tumbled from a DM76 billion surplus in 1990 to deficits of DM33 billion in 1991 and an estimated DM37 billion in 1992. These declines led to an increase in inflation that in turn raised long-term interest rates. To redress these imbalances, Germany instituted tight monetary and fiscal policies. The German central bank raised the discount rate to its highest level since 1931, and the federal government imposed tax increases and budget cuts in a planned attempt to reduce the federal deficit to 2.5 percent of GNP by 1995. Although these restrictive policies have lowered long-term interest rates, they have also weakened the German economy, which experienced declines of real GNP in the second and third quarters of 1992. Moreover, further fiscal restrictions are in store. A one-percentagepoint increase in the German value-added tax took effect in January of this year, and Chancellor Kohl has warned that more tax increases will be necessary to cover the costs of unification. The economies of the other EC countries have also suffered as a result of recent events in Germany. When German growth fell last year, German demand for imports from its European trading partners also fell. More
important, high German interest rates forced other EC central banks to raise their interest rates to defend the values of their currencies under the requirements of the European exchange rate mechanism (ERM). The ERM specifies a tight band of exchange rate parities that each EC country must maintain relative to the currencies of the others. Because high interest rates in Germany strengthened the mark as foreigners bid it up in order to buy high-yielding German securities, central banks in other EC countries were forced to follow suit and raise their interest rates to maintain the values of their currencies. In mid-September, Italy and the United Kingdom found the squeeze intolerable and temporarily withdrew from the ERM, allowing their currencies to find lower levels against the mark. But they are expected to reenforce relatively tight monetary policies in order to contain the inflationary impact of having their currencies fall even farther. Fiscal policies in Europe are also likely to be tight, with nine European countries having announced plans to reduce their deficits by an amount that equals more than 1 percent of their combined GNP.
CHAPTER ONE
12
Consumers behaved differently, however, during this episode of recession and recovery. The sluggish growth in income before the peak made it more difficult for consumers to reduce their consumption during the recession. As a consequence, the personal saving rate remained flat throughout the recession. Furthermore, households remained reluctant to increase their borrowing during the recovery, so that consumption did not rebound as strongly as it usually does. The high burden of debt, fear of permanent job loss, and worries about asset values all probably contributed to the atypical behavior of consumers.
I
_L
1960 1965 1970 1975 1980
_L
1990
1985
SOURCES:
NOTES: The last data point, the fourth quarter of 1992, is estimated by CBO. Shaded areas indicate recessions.
Households, however, may not remain so tightly constrained by financial considerations. The ratio of debt service to income has fallen since 1990, and disposable personal income has risen faster than household debt through the first three quarters of 1992 (see Figure 1-6). Although consumer installment debt has fallen throughout the first three
20
18
Percent
16
14
r~i i i i I
I i : i tI
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
i I i i 1 i i IT 1985 1990
SOURCES: NOTES:
The repayment burden of household debt is composed of scheduled principal and interest payments on home mortgage and consumer debt (as estimated by the Federal Reserve Board) as a percentage of disposable personal income. The last data point is the third quarter of 1992. Shaded areas indicate recessions.
i mi MIT
7T"
..MI
January 1993
quarters of 1992, some of this reduction may reflect increased reliance on other forms of debt, especially home equity loans, which are favored because they offer lower interest rates, longer repayment periods, and taxdeductible status.
-1 1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
SOURCES:
NOTE: Population of first-time homebuyers is defined as the population between the ages of 25 and 34.
sion and the recovery to date, but it is likely to be less of a drag on the economy this year than last. Office buildings, retail space, and hotels-the commercial construction category that accounted for about half of business construction in the mid-1980s-weakened before the recession and then tumbled (see Figure 1-8). The recovery has been severely undermined by this sector. In the five quarters from the second quarter of 1991 to the third quarter of 1992, the weakness of commercial construction reduced the rate of growth of aggregate demand by 0.3 percentage points. If other categories of demand had grown as they did in the period, and if commercial construction had simply held to its early 1991 level, aggregate demand would have grown at an annual rate of 2.2 percent instead of the actual 1.9 percent registered over those quarters. Tentative signs, however, indicate a smaller rate of decline in business construction this year. The monthly declines in commercial construction slowed in the closing months of 1992, and other business construction (primarily industrial, utilities, and mining) ap-
CHAPTER ONE
90
70
so
30
SOURCES:
NOTES: Three-month moving average of data through November 1992. Commercial construction includes offices, retail space, hotels, and motels. Shaded areas indicate recessions.
pears to have stabilized as well. In addition, data on construction contracts compiled by F.W. Dodge suggest that commercial construction will hold near its current level. Although total business construction will probably firm up, office construction may not recover for years to come. Vacancy rates for office buildings now stand at all-time highs. Furthermore, demand for space will grow slowly both because of moderate growth in the labor force and in the overall economy and because of restructuring by firms to reduce the proportion of middle managers. These factors imply that vacancy rates will continue to be high throughout the forecast period and perhaps, in many metropolitan areas, throughout the decade.
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
SOURCES: NOTES:
Temporary job losses are those currently unemployed classified as layoffs; permanent are all other job losses. Shaded areas indicate recessions.
nr
January 1993
With the end of the Cold War, cutbacks in defense industries will probably contribute more to permanent job losses than any other source. Job losses in this sector-including civilian and military jobs in the Department of Defense and defense-related jobs in the private sector-might approach 1.5 million from 1993 through 1997.2 Most of the losses will occur in 1993 and 1994. Demand for workers in this sector will continue to fall beyond 1994, but the rate of decline will abate. Capacity in auto manufacturing in the United States will exceed demand for many years to come. General Motors, for example, plans to close more than 20 plants in North America and cut its work force by 74,000 employees over the next five years. In the short term, however, auto and truck sales respond quickly to improved conditions, as households and businesses undertake purchases they had delayed. The unusually high average age of the current fleet also enhances the possibility that, in the short run, the auto sector can contribute to the transition to self-sustained growth. In the late 1980s, overbuilding and overborrowing caught up with the retail and wholesale trade sector, which suffered major bankruptcies and takeovers. Growth of employment in trade, which accounts for slightly more than one-quarter of the work force, slackened well before the cyclical peak and entered its greatest decline in postwar history (see Figure 1-10). But declines in employment have abated, and total hours worked in trade have stabilized. In short, the worst of the slump now appears to be over. Some large firms in other industries are undergoing long-term adjustments, which will
Millions
25
20
15
10
I I I I I 1 I I I 1. I I I I I I
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
SOURCES:
Congressional Budget Office; Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. NOTE: Shaded areas indicate recessions.
continue throughout 1993. For example, sharply declining computer prices and weak demand for mainframes in the wake of the personal computer revolution have led IBM to slash its work force by 100,000 workers over the last eight years, including about 40,000 workers in 1992. The downsizing will continue; IBM announced plans to cut its work force by an additional 25,000 by the end of 1993, necessitating the firm's first dismissals in more than 50 years. The case of IBM represents one of the most dramatic examples of a widespread condition. A recent survey of more than 800 firms found that one in four plans to reduce its work force by the middle of 1993the highest proportion in the six years since the survey began.3
2.
R. William Thomas, "The Effects of Reduced Defense Spending on States and Industries" (paper presented at a meeting of the Allied Social Science Associations, Anaheim, Calif., January 5,1993).
3.
Survey by the American Management Association, reported in the New "fork Times, December 17,1992.
CHAPTER ONE
2,000
1,800 1,600
Ratio
2.9
2.8
2.7
1,400
2.6
1,200 1,000
Ratio of Inventory to Sales (right scale) i i I i i i i I i
2.5
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
SOURCES:
The outlook for investment in equipment, which supported growth during 1992, remains good. Orders for nondefense, producers' durable goods continue to be high, and this pattern implies continued strength in this sector. The Commerce Department's fourth-quarter survey of the plans of firms for spending on plant and equipment for 1993 indicates that real spending will increase by 7.6 percent in 1993, after a hike of 5.4 percent in 1992. A huge turnaround in plans for spending by manufacturing industries, which declined last year, accounts for the increase this year. By contrast, nonmanufacturing industries, especially the transportation and commercial sectors, plan to slow their spending for plant and equipment this year. Final sales of goods recovered during the last half of 1992, but production did not keep pace, so the ratio of inventories to sales fell (see Figure 1-11). That ratio is now slightly below its average during the expansion from 1983 to 1991. The drop in the ratio bodes well for the first half of this year, since it suggests
innr
16 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Figure 1-12. Inflation and Excess Productive Capacity
Shortfall of Gross Domestic Product Below Potential8
Percent
January 1993
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
Inflationb
Percentage Change from Year Ago
10
Actual I Projected
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
SOURCES:
Congressional Budget Office; Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics; Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. NOTE: Shaded areas indicate recessions. The shortfall is the difference between actual and potential real gross domestic product. Consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U), excluding food, energy, and used cars. The treatment of home ownership in the official CPI-U changes in 1983. The inflation series in the figure uses a consistent definition throughout. b.
a.
CHAPTER ONE
that manufacturers will increase production rates and employment. Not all of the news is positive. Employment has not recovered as well as hours worked. Although hours worked is often a leading indicator of the direction of employment, the lack of growth in employment is a reminder that self-sustaining growth is still a forecast, not a fact. In addition, both the number of layoffs and the number of people working part time for economic reasons remain high. Finally, the slump in sales of passenger cars remains a concern. Light trucks have captured more of the market, but total sales of vehicles through last December still remain relatively weak. On balance, economic developments during the last four months of 1992 support a forecast of a shift from 2 percent to 3 percent growthan expansion weaker than in the past, but enough to remain self-sustaining.
for the unemployment rate, the growth of wages, and the inflation rate.
Slow Growth of Output Will Dampen the Growth of Jobs, Wages, and Prices
If the economy grows over the next two years at the 3 percent rate that CBO forecasts, the unemployment rate should improve modestly, with a corresponding drop in the excess productive capacity of the economy. CBO estimates that the potential output of the economy has been growing at a 2.1 percent average rate over the last few years, and it will continue to grow at a similar rate through the forecast period. The shortfall of GDP below its potential, commonly referred to as the GDP gap, has therefore been large (see Figure 112). This difference is a measure of the excess capacity of the economy. The persistence of substantial excess capacity throughout the forecast period has important ramifications
January 1993
say they are not looking for work because they feel they could not possibly get a job-which did not increase inordinately. If a large number of retail workers are only marginally attached to the labor force, they may not have categorized themselves as being discouraged workers. The CBO forecast assumes that growth in the labor force will increase as job growth (particularly in the retail sector) picks up. The slow decline in the unemployment rate that is forecast during 1993 occurs, therefore, because of the likelihood that a new person will be entering the labor force for virtually every new job created.
Growth of Total Labor Compensation Will Start to Catch Up to Growth of Labor Productivity
The slow recovery has restrained the growth of total labor compensation-wages and salaries, fringe benefits, and employers' share of taxes for social insurance-but CBO expects it to grow faster this year than last, in spite of the slow decline in the unemployment rate. Compensation has already increased moderately from the torpid growth rates of mid1992, and these gains, combined with low inflation, have increased the real purchasing power of workers. Inflation is expected to remain low, in part because the recent low rates of growth in compensation reflect efforts by employers to cut costs. Compensation is expected to post moderate but sustained gains this year, enabling it to start to catch up to the gains in productivity of past years. The continued growth of fringe benefits, however, will keep wages from growing as fast as total compensation. In particular, medical benefits continue to grow about 5 percentage points faster than wage and salaries at annual rates.4 The growth of such benefits will keep long-term growth of wages lower than gains in productivity.
4.
See Congressional Budget Office, Projections of National Health Expenditures (October 1992).
CHAPTER ONE
the outlook for supply and demand this year indicates little upward price pressure. A mild expansion in the United States, coupled with slow growth in Europe and Japan, is expected to keep the growth of demand low, and structural or political restraints on supply are not evident. Of course, adverse developments-such as foreign crises, storms, or accidentscould cause a. spurt in commodity prices. Foreign inflation is also easing, and the recent strength of the dollar implies that dollardenominated prices of foreign goods will not gain much this year. Monetary policies in Europe continue to restrain inflation, and the recent economic weakness in Europe and Japan has brought substantial excess capacity to their economies.
5,500
5,000
4,500
I
1987 1989 1991 1993 1995
. I
1997
CBO's Economic Projections for the Medium Term: 1995 Through 1998
Over the medium term, from 1995 through 1998, CBO projects that real GDP will grow at an average annual rate of 2.5 percent-a rate about 0.4 percentage points faster than CBO's estimated rate of growth for potential real GDP. Given these growth rates, the gap between potential and actual real GDP will reach its historical average of about 0.6 percent of potential real GDP by 1998 (see Figure 1-13). However, because the gap is greater than its historical average through the projection period, inflation is not likely to rise. Therefore, CBO projects inflation to remain steady throughout the medium term at about 2.7 percent. Long-term interest rates are also projected to remain steady at about 6.5 percent, although short-term rates are projected to rise from 3.7 percent in 1994 to 4.9 percent by 1998 (see Tables 1-3 and 1-4). Those medium-term projections do not reflect cyclical factors in the economy. Instead,
URCES:
trey are based on CBO's analysis of fundamental factors underlying the economy, incl iding growth of the labor force, national saving, and productivity. Real GDP is projected yond the forecast period by assuming that it w 11 grow smoothly to reach its historical relati >nship with potential GDP by 1998.
_JIUL
20 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table 1-3. Medium-Term Economic Projections for Calendar Years 1993 Through 1998 Estimated 1992 Nominal GDP (Billions of dollars) Nominal GDP (Percentage change) Real GDP (Percentage change) Implicit GDP Deflator (Percentage change) Fixed-Weighted GDP Price Index (Percentage change) CPI-U (Percentage change) Unemployment Rate (Percent) Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate (Percent) Ten- Year Treasury Note Rate (Percent) Tax Bases (Percentage of GDP) Corporate profits Other taxable income Wage and salary disbursements Total Forecast 1993 1994
1995
January 1993
1998
5,943
4.7 2.0 2.6 3.0 3.1 7.4 3.5 7.0
6,255
6,594
5.4 3.0 2.4 2.6 2.7 6.6 3.7 6.6
6,942
5.3 2.9 2.3 2.6 2.7 6.2 4.4 6.6
7,288
7,627
4.7 2.4 2.2 2.5 2.7 5.8 4.8 6.5
7,953
4.3 2.0 2.2 2.5 2.7 5.7 4.9 6.4
6.6 20.5
7.2 20.3
7.3 20.5
7.2 20.7
7.3 20.9
7.2 21.0
7.1 21.1
49.0 76.1
48.8 76.4
48.9 76.7
49.0 77.0
49.1 77.2
49.0 77.3
48.9 77.2
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office. NOTE: CPI-U is the consumer price index for all urban consumers.
proportion of women in the labor force is projected to grow at a slower rate than in the past. Using projections made by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, CBO assumes that the underlying rate of growth of the labor force will average 1.4 percent during the 1995-1998 period, down noticeably from its recent rate of 1.6 percent in the 1980s and 2.0 percent for the longer period of the 1960s through the 1980S.5
CBO projects the productivity of labor (output per worker) to grow at an average annual rate of 0.8 percent through the projection period. That rate is nearly the average achieved over the period from 1959 through 1991, when the productivity of labor grew at an average annual rate of 1.0 percent, and somewhat better than the more recent experience of the 1980s, when it grew at an annual rate of 0.7 percent.
CBO expects a low rate of inflation to remain a continuing legacy of the recession and the
CHAPTER ONE Table 1-4. Medium-Term Economic Projections for Fiscal Years 1993 Through 1998 Actual 1992 Nominal GDP (Billions of dollars) Nominal GDP (Percentage change) Real GDP (Percentage change) Implicit GDP Deflator (Percentage change) Fixed-Weighted GDP Price Index (Percentage change) CPI-U (Percentage change) Unemployment Rate (Percent) Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate (Percent) Ten-Year Treasury Note Rate (Percent) Tax Bases (Percentage of GDP) Corporate profits Other taxable income Wage and salary disbursements Total
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
1995
1998
5,869
4.3 1.4 2.8 3.1
3.0
6,508
5.4 2.9 2.4 2.7 2.7
6,855
5.3 2.9 2.3 2.6 2.7
7,543
4.7 2.5 2.2 2.5 2.7
7,873
4.4 2.1 2.2 2.5 2.7
49.2 76.1
48.8 76.3
48.9 76.7
49.0 76.9
49.1 77.2
49.0 77.3
48.9 77.2
NOTE: CPI-U is the consumer price index for all urban consumers.
tightness in monetary policy that surrounded it. Projected real growth and the fall in the rate of unemployment through 1998 are too modest to reignite inflation. As with CBO's projections of the real rates of growth and interest rates, the projection of inflation in the medium term reflects an assessment of underlying factors rather than a prediction of cyclical behavior. For the 1995-1998 period, CBO projects the rate of inflation to average 2.7 percent as measured by the consumer price index for urban consumers (CPI-U), and about 2.2 percent as measured by the implicit GDP deflator. The
two measures differ primarily because of the way computer prices affect them. Computers constitute a much bigger share of GDP than they do of the basket of goods used to calculate the CPI-U. Because computer prices are expected to continue to fall significantly, they will dampen the growth of the GDP measure of price far more than that of the CPI-U. Furthermore, computers are projected to grow as a share of GDP. The weight of computers in the implicit GDP deflator grows with its share of GDP, whereas the weight of computers in the CPI-U is fixed at its share of the market basket during the 1982-1984 period.
JILLI1M1I
January 1993
lar to those of the Blue Chip consensus of forecasters. There are, however, important risks associated with both the forecast and the projection, and the uncertainties inherent in predicting the future are greater than the similarity of forecasts would seem to suggest.
CHAPTER ONE Table 1-5. Comparison of Forecasts for 1993 and 1994 Estimated 1992 Fourth Quarter to Fourth Quarter (Percentage change) Nominal GDP CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 Real GDPa CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 Implicit GDP Deflator CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 Consumer Price lndexb CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 5.1 5.3 5.3 2.7 2.7 2.5 2.4 2.6 2.7 3.1 3.0 3.3 Calendar-Year Averages (Percent) Civilian Unemployment Rate CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 Ten- Year Treasury Note Rate CBO current Blue Ch/pc CBO August 1992
SOURCES:
23
Forecast
1993 1994
5.4 6.0 6.3 2.8 3.0 3.2 2.5 2.9 3.0 2.8 3.2 3.4
5.4 6.4 5.7 3.0 3.2 2.7 2.4 3.1 3.0 2.7 3.6 3.4
Congressional Budget Office; Eggert Economic Enterprises, Inc., Blue Chip Economic Indicators (January 10, 1993); Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
NOTE: The Blue Chip forecasts through 1994 are based on a survey of 50 private forecasters, published on January 10,1993. a. b. c. Based on constant 1987 dollars. The consumer price index for all urban consumers (CPI-U). Blue Chip does not project a 10-year note rate. The values shown here for the 10-year note rate are based on the Blue Chip projections of the Aaa bond rate, adjusted by CBO to reflect the estimated spread between Aaa bonds and 10-year Treasury notes.
TUT
January 1993
tentially damaging-although remote-possibility. The lack of a clear pattern in spending and saving by consumers represents one example of the extent of how uncertain the forecasts are. The personal saving rate can quickly move by 1 or more percentage points for extended periods. For instance, if households raised their saving rate to a level just 0.7 percentage points higher than CBO forecasts, then the drop in consumption would lower the growth rate of real GDP over the next year by one-half a percentage point, even if one ignores the effect that such a drop in aggregate demand would have on the rest of the economy.
1995
1996
1997
1998
2.0 2.5
n.a.
2.7 3.5 n.a.
CBO current
Blue Chip CBO August 1992
Calendar-Year Averages (Percent) Civilian Unemployment Rate CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992 Three-Month Treasury Bill Rate CBO current Blue Chip CBO August 1992
SOURCES: a. b.
5.7 5.7
n.a.
4.9 5.1 n.a.
Congressional Budget Office; Eggert Economic Enterprises, Inc., Blue Chip Economic Indicators (October 1992).
NOTE: n.a. = not applicable. Based on constant 1987 dollars. Consumer price index for all urban consumers.
CHAPTER ONE
the resulting nominal rate of interest about 0.4 percentage points lower than that of the Blue Chip. Far more uncertainty surrounds these projections, however, than their near agreement might suggest. In order to get a numerical estimate of that uncertainty for the projection of real GDP, CBO examined the historical record of variability in the growth rate of GDP
over six-year periods. This exercise indicates that there are about two chances in three that CBO's projection of real GDP in 1998 will be within 6 percent of its actual value. Given the CBO projection for GDP of $5,740 billion (in 1987 dollars) in 1998, this result translates into a likely band of error of plus or minus $344 billion. By contrast, the projections of real GDP in 1998 by the Blue Chip consensus differ from CBO's by less than $20 billion.
Chapter Two
n 1992, the federal deficit reached $290 billion, a new record. Under current taxing and spending policies, it will dip slightly from that level through 1995, according to the Congressional Budget Office's latest estimates. The deficit then starts to climb againnot just in dollar terms but, more worrisomely, in relation to the size of the economy as measured by gross domestic product. This message differs little from the one CBO has relayed for the last two years, ever since it became painfully clear that the 1990 budget summit pact, an ambitious plan to chop nearly $500 billion from the deficit over five years, would not balance the budget as first thought but merely prevent the situation from being vastly worse.
annually. This chapter focuses on the deficit outlook, and Chapters 3 and 4 contain more detail about CBO's new projections for federal spending and revenues.
This chapter summarizes CBO's new baseline projections. The baseline shows the budget outlook if current taxing and spending policies remain unchanged. It is not a forecast of budget outcomes, but is essential for sketching the consequences of today's policies and serves as a benchmark in weighing proposed changes. Crucially, the projections assume continued compliance with the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA), enacted after that year's budget summit talks between Congressional leaders and the Bush Administration. The BEA's key provisions bar lawmakers from increasing the deficit, on balance, through revenue or entitlement legislation and set strict limits through 1995 on total appropriations for programs that are funded
JIUL
January 1993
Temporary Factors: Deposit Insurance and Contributions for Operation Desert Storm. One variant of the total deficit excludes deposit insurance spending and Desert Storm contributions. CBO has long emphasized that spending for deposit insurance-that is, money spent and received in the course of closing or merging insolvent savings and loan institutions and banks-does not spur the economy like other federal spending. Insured depositors do not become richer when the government honors its commitment to them; rather, the transaction represents a rearrangement of the financial assets and liabilities already present in the economy. Recognizing
this, credit markets absorb the Treasury securities issued to pay for deposit insurance with relative equanimity. The true waste of resourcesthe squandering of physical assets that deposit insurance losses represent-largely occurred in past years, when institutions made bad loans and investments. Deposit insurance outlays have fluctuated widely in the past few years, marked by spurts of spending or asset sales and interrupted by funding cutoffs. Deposit insurance outlays soared from near zero before 1988 to $66 billion in 1991. They plummeted to just $3 billion in 1992, chiefly because policymakers
Table 2-1. The Deficit Outlook Under Current Policies (By fiscal year) Actual 1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
In Billions of Dollars Total Deficit Assuming Discretionary Caps Deficit Excluding Deposit Insurance and Desert Storm Contributions Standardized-Employment Deficit* On-Budget Deficit (Excluding Social Security and Postal Service) Memoranda: Deposit Insurance Desert Storm Contributions Off-Budget Surplus Social Security Postal Service Total, Off-Budget Surplus Hospital Insurance Surplus
290 310 291
292 201
340
307 228
361
3 -5
51 -1
3 0
11 0 67 _b 67 -7
-1 0
53 -2 51
7
59 _^J 56 -1
76 _2 78
-14
82 83
-23
88 _b
50 11
88
-32
As a Percentage of GDP Total Deficit Assuming Discretionary Caps Deficit Excluding Deposit Insurance and Desert Storm Contributions Standardized-Employment Deficit - c
SOURCE: a. b. c. Congressional Budget Office.
3
4.9
5.0 3.3
5.0
5.0 3.6
4.5
4.3 3.3
4.2
4.4 4.1
Excludes cyclical deficit as well as deposit insurance and Desert Storm contributions. Less than $500 million. Expressed as a percentage of potential GDP.
CHAPTER TWO
have failed since last April to approve additional funds for the Resolution Trust Corporation, the agency in charge of the savings and loan cleanup. This nosedive in outlays for deposit insurance, in fact, is the main reason that the 1992 deficit came nowhere near the $400 billion mark that was so widely publicized a year ago (see Box 2-1).
Projected deposit insurance outlays are not rribly volatile in CBO's newest projections: they peak at about $11 billion in 1995, then turn negative as projected losses decline and ongoing sales of assets dominate the totals. But this is a notoriously uncertain category of s sending and should be isolated when eyeing tfle deficit's trend. Another volatile category, Desert Storm contributions, has already faded from the scene. These contributionscollected from allied nations to help finance the United States' costs in the Persian Gulf conflict two years ago-totaled $43 billion in 1991 and $5 billion in 1992 but have now stopped. As Figure 2-1 shows, the deficit excluding deposit insurance and Desert Storm contributions lies slightly below the total deficit through 1995 but then climbs more steeply. Cyclical Factors: The Standardized-Employment Deficit. A deficit measure cornonly used by economists removes the cyclical 'ects of a lackluster economy on the budget, hen the nation is in recession, and even uring recovery when it has not yet caught up
Billions of Dollars
4(0
300
Total Deficit \
Total Deficit Excluding Deposit Insurance and Desert Storm Contributions \ ., _ ^ -^ Standardized^"" Employment Deficit
200
1(10
I
1992 1993 1994
I
1995 1996
I
1997 1998
SOURCE:
January 1993
to its potential, the deficit automatically worsens--principally because of lower revenues, less dramatically because of extra benefits for unemployment compensation and other programs. These cyclical effects remain very big in 1992 and 1993 but then shrink gradually. As explained in Box 1-2 in Chapter 1, changes in the standardized-employment deficit are used as a measure of the stimulus or drag exerted by fiscal policy. This measure homes in on the deficit that policymakers can fundamentally control, in contrast to the part that stems automatically from a tepid economy. More clearly than the total deficit, the standardized-employment deficit points to a fairly sharp rise in the deficit just as soon as the BEA's caps on discretionary spending expire after 1995 (see Figure 2-1). All of the deficits discussed so far point to a worsening deficit outlook after the mid-1990s, but they do not illuminate the reasons. Why does the gap between spending and revenues widen? Fingering the culprits is a sensitive task. Blaming a fast-growing area of the budget, for example, is often misinterpreted as a call for slashing it. Conversely, failing to cite a slowly growing area might erroneously imply that no savings are to be found there. But given these caveats, the deficit's upward path clearly demands explanation. A special section at the end of this chapter presents a broadbrush picture of the budget outlook for a full 10-year period and traces the burgeoning deficit largely to the uncontrolled growth of health care spending.
On- and Off-Budget Programs. The two Social Security trust funds--Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurancehave enjoyed off-budget status since 1985's Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act, known informally as Gramm-Rudman-Rollings. This shift nevertheless did not affect the choice of fiscal policy targets. The 1985 act and its 1987 successor still focused on the total deficit, including Social Security, in setting out a daunting timetable to balance the budget by the early 1990s. Following adoption of an ambitious deficit reduction package, 1990's Budget Enforcement Act took a respite from fixed deficit targets at least until 1994. Once deficit targets resurface, though, they apply to the on-budget deficit-that is, they exclude Social Security and the much smaller Postal Service, which is also legally off-budget. A program with somewhat ambiguous status is Medicare's Hospital Insurance, also known as Part A of Medicare. A 1983 law granted this program off-budget status beginning in 1993. But all three of the major budget process laws already mentioned-the 1985 Balanced Budget Act, its 1987 successor, and the 1990 Budget Enforcement Act-included Hospital Insurance in setting deficit targets. Moreover, the Office of Management and Budget has not yet made the switch to presenting Hospital Insurance as off-budget. The budget picture looks quite different if off-budget programs are excluded (see Table 2-1). In isolation, Social Security runs a surplus; its income from payroll taxes, interest, and other sources exceeds its outlays for benefits and other, minor categories of spending. Thus, removing Social Security makes the remaining deficit even more gaping. The Social Security surplus is entirely in the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance fund. The Disability Insurance fund is hemorrhaging fast and, in the absence of legislative action to raise or reallocate taxes or to stabilize benefits, is expected to exhaust its balances in 1996. Hos-
CHAPTER TWO
pital Insurance also faces a mismatch between its earmarked income and its spending. In the face of soaring medical expenditures, the hospital fund incurs worsening deficits after 1993 and exhausts its balances at the turn of the century. Does the on-budget deficit convey useful information? Most economists would say no. The programs that enjoy off-budget status are huge and fast-growing: Social Security benefits alone account for about one-fifth of federal spending, and its payroll taxes for over onefourth of government revenues. Hospital Insurance accounts for smaller but still significant shares. If the purpose of analyzing the budget is to summarize the government's role in the economy and its drain on the credit markets, then excluding such big programs wholesale hinders this effort. Federal Trust Funds. Gauged by taxes collected and benefits paid, Social Security and Hospital Insurance are the two biggest federal trust funds. But they share the trust fund label with many other federal programs. The federal government runs more than 150 trust funds, which together spent more than half a trillion dollars in 1992. Most funds fall under one of three broad rubrics. Infrastructure funds, led by the Highway and the Airport and Airway trust funds, are credited with earmarked taxes on users (such as gasoline and airplane ticket taxes) and pay for construction and maintenance. These funds account for barely 5 percent of trust fund outlays. Staff retirement funds for federal employees include the Military Retirement and Civil Service Retirement programs and a few smaller ones. These programs are somewhat akin to pension plans for private employees or state and local government workers. Like those counterparts, the federal employees' staff plans are a form of deferred compensation for current workers; unlike those other systems, however, the federal plans are not vulnerable to adverse developments in a particular industry or geographic area, so that the argument for advance funding is not strictly parallel. The staff retirement plans
account for about 10 percent of trust fund outlays. And finally, social insurance funds, led by Social Security and Medicare, cover nearly the whole population and have no counterpart in the private or state and local sector. This last cluster is by far the biggest, comprising 85 percent of trust fund outlays and attracting by far the most public attention. Ironically, public understanding of trust funds has seemingly come full circle since the report of the President's Commission on Budget Concepts in 1967. Until then, the budget was typically divided in two: the so-called trust funds budget and the administrative budget, which contained everything else. Combined or consolidated totals were shortchanged in budget presentations. The commission criticized this practice, arguing that consolidated measures most accurately represent the government's overall importance in the economy and its claim on national saving in the form of deficit financing. This goal of clarity and completeness has generally guided budget presentation since then. Yet, in a throwback to the days before the commission's report, many people still think that the deficit excluding trust funds (known as the federal funds deficit) is somehow the "true" deficit. Viewed in isolation, trust funds run surpluses because their earmarked income exceeds spending for benefits, administration, and other costs. The total trust fund surplus is expected to inch up from about $101 billion in 1993 to $110 billion in 1998 (see Table 2-2). The federal funds deficit mounts from $411 billion to $468 billion in the same period. But efforts to paint the federal funds deficit as the true deficit-one that is simply being masked by trust funds-are misguided, for two reasons. First, no large federal program is truly self-supporting, whether it is labeled a trust fund program or whether (like defense or Medicaid) it lacks this label. Trust fund receipts come from taxing one group, such as current workers, to confer benefits on others, such as retirees; in other words, the programs are redistributive. And much of their income,
January 1993
in fact, simply comes from transfers within the budget. Such transfers shift money from the general fund (boosting the federal funds deficit) to trust funds (swelling the trust fund surplus). These intrabudgetary transfers total $209 billion in 1993 and even larger amounts later (see Table 2-2). Prominent among them are interest paid to trust funds (about $83 billion in 1993), government contributions to retirement funds on behalf of its own employees ($66 billion), and the general fund contribution to Supplementary Medical Insurance ($46 billion), which finances threequarters of that program's costs. Clearly, most of these transfers were instituted purposely~for example, to show the cost of funding future retirement benefits as part of the
budgets of federal agencies. But equally clearly, transferring money from one part of the government to another does not change the total deficit or borrowing needs by one penny. Without such transfers, the trust funds would exhibit deficits, not surpluses. The second reason is more compelling. Setting trust funds aside, and looking only at non-trust-fund programs, can distort budget decisionmaking. The same economic pie, namely GDP, supports trust fund programs and other programs alike. Putting trust fund programs on a favored footing shifts the onus of deficit reduction to other programs that lack this protective label. Sound decisionmaking, in contrast, demands that spending and reve-
Table 2-2. CBO Projections of Trust Fund Surpluses (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
Social Security3 Medicare13 Military Retirement: Civilian Retirement^ : Unemployment rt Highway and Airport Other* Total Trust Fund Surplusf Federal Funds Deficit* Total Deficit Memorandum: Net Transfers from Federal Funds to Trust Funds
SOURCE: a. b. c. d. e. Congressional Budget Office.
53 11 11
28
d
-3 2
101
59 -1 10 29 3 -1 2
101
67 -7 9 30 6 -1 2
107
76 -12 8 32 9 -1 2
113
82 -20 7 33 9 -1 2
113
88 -29 7 34 9 -1 3
110
-411 -310
-393 -291
-391 -284
-400 -287
-432 -319
-468 -357
209
210
223
244
264
283
Old-Age and Survivors Insurance and Disability Insurance. Hospital Insurance and Supplementary Medical Insurance. Civil Service Retirement, Foreign Service Retirement, and several smaller funds. Less than $500 million. Primarily Railroad Retirement, employees' health insurance and life insurance. Hazardous Substance Superfund, and various veterans' insurance trust funds. Assumes that discretionary spending reductions are made in non-trust-fund programs.
f.
CHAPTER TWO
because spending takes longer to respond to the economic revisions than do revenues. CBO has lowered its assumptions about future taxable incomes and has reduced revenues accordingly~by $15 billion in 1993 and by $36 billion in 1997, as shown in Table 2-3. Most of the revision occurs because CBO has shaved its estimates of future inflation; its assumptions about real GDP growth are little altered. Outlays also respond to lower inflation and to lower interest rates, but with a longer lag. Savings in net interest outlays mount from $5 billion in 1993 to $20 billion in 1997, as interest rates on Treasury notes and bonds and especially on short-term Treasury bills lie below last summer's assumptions. Savings in other programs, mainly benefit programs that have cost-of-living adjustments, pick up steam beginning in 1994. And built-in lags delay adjustments in discretionary spending for inflation, postponing any significant savings in that area until even later.
Recent Legislation
Legislative changes have boosted both revenues and outlays slightly since last summer, with little net effect on the deficit. Most of the action took place on the appropriation front. Emergency spending of about $7 billion in 1993-roughly split between domestic programs to aid victims of natural disasters and another installment of Desert Storm-related money for defense-added to outlays. But these extra dollars were largely offset by the decision of legislators to hold defense outlays about $5 billion below the allowable caps. Other major legislation averted a cut in food stamp benefits and raised energy-related taxes and fees. In November, President Bush vetoed a bill that would have made much more extensive changes in taxes and in a few spending programs. In sum, enacted legislation has altered future deficits by no more than $1 billion a year.
Technical Reestimates
Technical revisions are any that are not ascribed to a new economic forecast or to legislation. In 1993, all other technical changes pale next to revisions in CBO's outlook for deposit insurance spending, almost wholly the result of the failure of policymakers to grant additional funds last fall. After 1993, revisions are increasingly dominated by the government's two major health care programs, Medicare and Medicaid. Last fall, the Congress did not pass legislation to fund the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) before adjourning, thus prolonging another of the agency's periodic funding droughts. Policymakers have no choice but to fund the RTC (or a successor) eventually, and CBO assumes that they will do so by this spring. Legislators face no procedural hurdle; under the rules of the Budget Enforcement Act, any measure that merely funds the gov-
Economic Changes
Revisions to the economic outlook worsen the deficit slightly through 1995 but then improve it modestly. This pattern occurs basically
.-..
i_j_j
.WL
34 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table 2-3. Changes in CBO Budget Projections Since August (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1993 1994 1995 1996
January 1993
1997
Revenues August 1992 Estimate Policy Changes Economic Assumptions Technical Reestimates Total Current Estimate 1,162 1,242 1,323 1,390 1,455
1 -15 -6
-19
a -23 -4
-27
a -27 -5 32
1,291
a -28 -6
-34
a -36 -5
-41
1,143 Outlays
1,215
1,356
1,414
August 1992 Estimate Policy Changes'5 Economic Assumptions Net interest Benefits and discretionary spending Subtotal Technical Reestimates Deposit insurance0 Medicaid Medicare Other benefit programs Net interest Other Subtotal Total Current Estimate
1,493
1,511
1,567
1,644
1,745
1 -5 a -5
-45 2 a 3 -2 6 -36 -40
2
-12 -1 -12
a
-15 -7 -21
a
-17 -17 -34
a
-20 -29 -49
-5 5 5 2 -4 4 7 -4
1,507
8 8 8 2 -1 4 29 8
1,575
8 10 11 2 1 a 32 -1
1,643
4 12 14 3 3 a 37
-12
1,453 Deficit
1,733
August 1992 Estimate Policy Changes^ Economic Assumptions Technical Reestimates Total Current Estimate SOURCE: Congressional Budget Off ice. a. b. c. Less than $500 million. Includes additional debt-service costs.
331
268
244
254
290
1 9 -30
-21 310
1 10 11 23
291
a 6 34 40
284
a -6 37 32
287
a -13 42 29
319
Adjusted for changes in interest paid by two deposit insurance agencies-the Bank Insurance Fund and the Resolution Trust Corporation-to the Treasury. These payments are intrabudgetary and do not affect the deficit.
CHAPTER TWO
ernment's current commitment to depositorswithout expanding that commitment's scope-does not demand offsetting tax hikes or spending cuts elsewhere. The hiatus in the RTC's activity dominates the 1993 reestimates, and its effect is heightened because it also diminishes the RTC's need for working capital. Working capital is money the RTC needs temporarily until it can sell the assets of failed thrifts. But institutions that remain in conservatorship-a stage that precedes resolutionwhile the RTC awaits funding are already shedding many assets, lessening the RTC's need for working capital once they finally enter the resolution pipeline. Together, the delay in funding and the reduced need for working capital have led CBO to cut its estimate of RTC outlays by $42 billion in 1993; revisions to other deposit insurance spending drive the total reduction for this category to $45 billion (see Table 2-3). For the five-year period from 1993 through 1997, CBO has lowered its total estimates of deposit insurance spending by $29 billion-by $24 billion for savings and loan resolutions and by $5 billion for the Bank Insurance Fund (BIF), which covers commercial and savings banks. (Excluded from these figures are changes in projected interest payments by the RTC and BIF to the Treasury's Federal Financing Bank; these intrabudgetary transactions do not alter the total deficit.) The deposit insurance agencies also spent slightly less in 1992 than CBO had expected last summer. These revisions reflect a cautious but growing view that the cost of tackling troubled financial institutions is shrinking modestly, as more vigorous regulation and unusually wide spreads between short- and long-term interest rates (a key factor influencing the profits of institutions) leave their mark. More on the outlook for deposit insurance spending appears in Chapter 3. Offsetting this mildly cheering news is a gloomier outlook for health care spending. Projections of Medicaid and Medicare outlays are up by $9 billion for technical reasons in 1994 and by $26 billion in 1997. Medicaid is
witnessing even faster growthespecially for its highest-cost participants, the elderly and disabled-than was previously anticipated. And in Medicare, the Hospital Insurance fund faces burgeoning costs in two areas that, despite the program's name, pay for care in nonhospital settings: at home and in skilled nursing facilities. Other technical reestimates are much smaller. Revenues are down by between $4 billion and $6 billion a year, with relatively small revisions in several tax sources (as discussed in Chapter 4). Major benefit programs, led by Social Security and Supplemental Security Income, face higher outlays, chiefly because more applicants are seeking and receiving disability benefits. Net interest is up because other technical revisions boost borrowing and, hence, the cost of servicing debt.
llilll illlii
January 1993
Comparison of the Administration's and CBO's Deficit Projections (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1993
1994
291
1995
284
1996
287 -15 -1 -16 -33 13 12 -7
1997
319 -30 -2 -32 -48 21 14 -13
1998
357 -45 -4 -50 -75 30 14 -31
CBO Baseline Deficit Conceptual Differences Discretionary spending Net interest Subtotal Economic Differences Revenues'3 Benefit programs Net interest Subtotal Technical Differences Revenues'1 Deposit insurance Net interest Other outlays Subtotal Total Differences OMB Baseline Deficit
310
-1 a -1
-17 1 8 -8 2 6 2
-1 a -1
-23 6 12 -5 8 -18 1 3 -6 -11 272
a 11 1
292
11 -14 1 5 2
-20 266
22 2 4 2 30
-14 305
33 3 7 a 43
-38 320
SOURCES: Office of Management and Budget; Congressional Budget Office. NOTE: n.a. = not applicable, a. Less than $500 million, b. Larger revenues are shown with a negative sign because they reduce the deficit.
GDP, but is still pronounced. The deficit briefly dips from today's level of 5 percent of GDP, but it returns there by 1999 and heads steadily toward 7 percent in 2003. Revenues and discretionary spending are not at the root of the deficit's growth. From 18.5 percent of GDP in 1993, revenues climb to about 18.7 percent of GDP in 1994 and stay there. Discretionary spending falls by a full percentage point of GDP between 1993 and 1995, disciplined by the BEA's caps, and drifts
down less precipitously thereafter. (Following standard baseline methodology, CBO assumes that discretionary spending simply keeps pace with inflation once the BEA's caps expire.) Since neither revenues nor discretionary spending explains a growing deficit, the search ends up pointing to two other areas: entitlement spending, led by health care programs, and net interest. Both Medicare and Medicaid spending are estimated to grow by 10 percent or more a year, propelling them
CHAPTER TWO
37
toward 6.9 percent of GDP in 2003 (up from 3.7 percent today). A milestone of sorts is reached in 1998, when the two big health care programs actually overtake Social Security in size. Social Security benefits barely change in relation to GDP from today's level of 4.9 percent; by 2003, the final year of this projection, the first members of the baby-boom generation are still five years away from eligibility for Social Security retirement benefits.
Net interest is the only major category of spending besides health care that rises steadily in relation to GDPfrom 3.2 percent today to 4.5 percent in 2003. Because the economic assumptions (as described below) contain no sharp jumps in interest rates, this growth can be traced squarely to the government's large and growing debt. The debt held by the public climbs to $7.5 trillion in 2003, nearly 78 percent of GDP-a ratio of debt to GDP that
HIT
38 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table 2-4. The Budget Outlook Through 2003 (By fiscal year)
1993
January 1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
In Billions of Dollars
Revenues Outlays Discretionary Mandatory Social Security Medicare Medicaid Civil Service and Military Retirement Other Subtotal Deposit insurance Net interest Offsetting receipts Total Deficit Deficit Excluding Deposit Insurance Debt Held by the Public
1,143
547 302 146 80
1,215
539 319 167 92
1,291
539 335 188 105
1,356
554 351 211 118
1,414
569 368 234 131
1,482
584 385 259 146
1,540
600 403 286 162
1,600
616 420 316 179
1,664
633 439 350 198
1,733
650 459 389 219
1,804
668 480 432 240
75 176 984
-14 270 -76
79 182 1,051
-10 292 -78
85 192 1,193
-10 339 -84
2,055
89 197 1,274
-10 368 -87
1,733
319 333
4,496
1,839
357 367
4,863
2,178
513 523
455 465
5,739
653 663
3,290
4,169
6,261
7,512
As a Percentage of GDP Revenues Outlays Discretionary Mandatory Social Security Medicare Medicaid Civil Service and Military Retirement Other Subtotal Deposit insurance Net interest Offsetting receipts Total Deficit Deficit Excluding Deposit Insurance Debt Held by the Public SOURCE: a.
18.5
8.9 4.9 2.4 1.3
18.7
8.3 4.9 2.6 1.4 1.0 2.7 12.5 0.1 3.2 -1.0
18.8
7.9 4.9 2.7 1.5 1.0 2.5 12.6 0.2 3.4 -1.1
18.8
7.7 4.9 2.9 1.6 1.0 2.3 12.7
18.7
7.5 4.9 3.1 1.7 1.0 2.3 13.0
18.8
7.4 4.9 3.3 1.9 1.0 2.3 13.3
18.8
7.3 4.9 3.5 2.0 1.0 2.3 13.7
18.7
7.2 4.9 3.7 2.1 1.0 2.2 14.0
18.7
7.1 4.9 3.9 2.2 1.0 2.2 14.3
18.7
7.0 4.9 4.2 2.4 1.0 2.2 14.7
18.7
6.9 5.0 4.5 2.5 1.0 2.2 15.1
a 3.2 -1.1
23.5
5.0 5.0
a 3.5 -1.0
22.8
4.0 4.0
23.2
4.5 4.3
23.0
4.1 4.0
53.3
55.1
56.5
57.9
59.6
61.8
64.4
67.2
70.3
73.8
77.6
CHAPTER TWO
was last seen in 1950, when the debt was swollen by the huge deficits associated with World War II. Of course, tremendous uncertainties surround these projections. One question mark is the economy's performance. CBO's assumptions about the economy for the 1993-1998 period were extensively discussed in Chapter 1, and most of the key barometers of economic performance are assumed to remain steady in the 1999-2003 period. Thus, real economic growth is posited to continue at about 2 percent a year and the unemployment rate to equal 5.6 percent. Short-term interest rates (as measured by three-month Treasury bills) and longer-term rates (such as 10-year Treasury notes) stay at 4.9 percent and 6.4 percent,
respectively. Inflation chugs along at 2.7 percent. Although all of these assumptions are reasonable, the economy is bound to deviate from them in one direction or the other in the next decade, with potentially large budgetary effects. In addition to the economy's performance, other uncertainties surround the budget projections. Developments in particular sectors or programs will influence the continuation of surging health care costs, the amount and timing of outlays for deposit insurance, and so forth. Despite these uncertainties, CBO's 10year projections clearly challenge the reassuring notion that the deficit will eventually fade of its own accord without concerted action by the nation's leaders.
TIT
Chapter Three
he Congressional Budget Office expects federal spending in 1993 to be $1,453 billion, an increase of $71 billion (or 5.1 percent) from the 1992 level. For 1994 and beyond, CBO projects further increases averaging 4.8 percent a year. By 1998, federal outlays willunder baseline assumptionsreach $1,839 billion. This projection represents a leveling off of federal spending at about 23 percent of gross domestic product for the next few years.
whether defense, international, or domestic-policymakers decide each year how many dollars will be devoted to continuing old activities and funding new ones. CBO's baseline projections depict the path of discretionary spending through 1995, assuming compliance with the discretionary caps in the BEA, and adjustments for inflation after 1995. Entitlements and other mandatory spending consist overwhelmingly of benefit programs, such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Spending for these programs is controlled by laws already on the books, which set rules for eligibility, benefit formulas, and so forth. Policymakers do not vote for dollar amounts. For this category, the baseline depicts CBO's best estimates of future spending, assuming that current laws and policies remain unchanged. Deposit insurance is subject to special treatment under the BEA because it reflects past commitments that the government made to protect depositors in insolvent institutions. Neither the pay-as-you-go requirements nor the discretionary caps apply to spending for deposit insurance. (Pay-as-you-go requirements demand that new spending or tax cuts be matched, either by spending cuts in other programs or by tax increases in other areas.)
As a share of GDP, this spending level is a full percentage point higher than the projection CBO made a year ago; the increase is almost entirely the result of upward adjustments in Medicare and Medicaid outlays. Crucial to the projection is continued compliance with the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA), which sets a lid on discretionary spending and prevents policymakers from increasing the deficit through revenue or entitlement action. Failure to comply with the act would make the outlook even worse. This chapter summarizes the prospects for federal spending through 1998, using the broad spending categories formalized in the BEA. Policymakers had used these categories for a decade before their enactment into law. A key criterion is whether the Congress controls spending directly or indirectly: o Discretionary spending encompasses programs whose funding levels are determined directly through appropriation bills. For these programs-
TIT
January 1993
Offsetting receipts are fees and similar charges that are recorded as negative outlays and controlled indirectly, in the same manner as entitlements and other mandatory spending.
o Net interest spending is not subject to any direct budgetary control because its growth is wholly driven by the government's deficits and by market interest rates. The major spending categories have waxed and waned since the early 1960s (see Figure 3-1). More detailed historical data can be found in Appendix E, which lists annual spending for each of these broad categories and for the largest entitlement programs.
roughly the same level as that of the late 1970s-before the buildup of the Reagan era. In contrast, domestic discretionary spending climbed slowly in the 1960s and 1970s to almost 5 percent of GDP before its rise was abruptly reversed in the early 1980s. Increases in the past few years have brought domestic discretionary spending back up to almost 4 percent of GDP.
CHAPTER THREE
tial military requirements after the breakup of the Soviet Union. Not all analysts agree, however, with the Bush Administration's assessment of the forces needed to meet future military require-
men ;s. For example, early in 1992, Represent. itive Les Aspin, recently tapped to be Pres dent Clinton's Secretary of Defense, develo >ed four options for reducing defense spen ling to levels below those in the Bush Adm inistration's request. Aspin's analysis
Actual
Actual
Proj.
12 10 8 6 4 2
g
12 10
8
Total (Domestic ^,^,-^XX. and International) s^*--^^^^* " ^^^>^ > /' Domestic ""** ** _
>,
- \/\
i i
1970
4 2
i
1980
i
1990
1960
196 9
Net Interest
^ P srcentage of GDP
lt
Percentage of GDP
^r~S
S\ l ^ f J S f
^f^
Actual
12 10 -
Proj.
Total f*P
8 6 -
" -
Actual
Proj.
4 -
i i
1970
^- S^ l-^'
i
1980
i
1990
1
1970
1
1980
1
1990
1960
196 0
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office. a. Assumes compliance with discretionary spending caps in the Budget Enfc rcement Act. Caps are not specified in detail after 1993.
Jill
44 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
recognized the diminished Soviet threat but identified other continuing threats, including those from regional aggressors in the Middle East, Southwest Asia, Korea, and elsewhere. The United States might also be called on to deploy forces to stop the spread of nuclear and other weapons, quell terrorism or drug traf-
ficking, or participate in humanitarian or peacekeeping efforts. Aspin's options describe paths that end in a 1997 budget authority level ranging from $270 billion (option C) to $231 billion (option A). As an illustration, option C would cut
Table 3-1. Outlays by Category, Assuming Compliance with Discretionary Spending Caps (By fiscal year) Actual 1992
Spending Category
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
In Billions of Dollars
Discretionary Defense International Domestic Subtotal Mandatory Spending, Excluding Deposit Insurance Deposit Insurance Offsetting Receipts Net Interest Total On-budget Off-budgef>
304
19 214 537
711
294 21 232
547 770
a a
a 539
816
a a a 539
866
a a a 554
913
a a a
569 984 -14 -76 270
a a a
584
1,051
-10 -78 292
3
-69 199
3
-65 198
10
-68 211
11
-72 231
-1
-73 250
1,382 1,129
252
1,453 1,186
267
1,575 1,285
289
1,733 1,423
310
1,839 1,516
323
As a Percentage of GDP Discretionary Defense International Domestic Subtotal Mandatory Spending, Excluding Deposit Insurance Deposit Insurance Offsetting Receipts Net Interest Total On-budget Off-budgetb
SOURCE: a. b. c. Congressional Budget Office.
a a a 8.3
12.5
0.1
a a a 7.9
12.6
0.2
a a a 7.7
12.7
a a 7.5
13.0 -0.2 -1.0
3.6
a a a 7.4
13.3 -0.1 -1.0
3.7
12.1
c
12.5
c
c
-1.0
3.5
-1.2
3.4
-1.1
3.2
-1.0
3.2
-1.1
3.4
23.5 19.2
4.3
23.5 19.2
4.3
23.2 18.8
4.3
23.0 18.8
4.2
23.4 19.3
4.1
Discretionary spending caps are set by category through 1993 and in the aggregate for 1994 and 1995. Projections for 1996 through 1998 represent 1995 spending adjusted for inflation. Social Security and the Postal Service. Less than 0.05 percent of GDP.
CHAPTER THREE
three active Army divisions (out of 12), 90 Navy ships (out of 450), and five tactical air wings from the Bush proposal by 1997. Options B and A would make progressively deeper cuts in force structure.
Domestic discretionary spending is the category of spending that is most likely to benefit in the upcoming competition for funds within the 1994 and 1995 discretionary caps. The entire category will receive a great deal of attention as a result of President Clinton's stated interest in increasing government investments to stimulate the economy in the short run and to increase the nation's longterm potential for economic growth. Although no criteria are widely accepted for determining what constitutes an investment (much less what constitutes a worthwhile investment), spending for physical infrastructure such as highways is almost universally considered an investment. Many people also consider spending for purposes such as education, training, research and development, and disease prevention to be investment spending. The domestic discretionary category encompasses all of these types of outlays.
inr
!'Ill'III I
Ill it II
January 1993
The BEA sets limits on both budget authority (the authority to obligate funds, which is the basic currency of the appropriation process) and outlays (actual spending). Not surprisingly, one constraint can at times prove more stringent than the other. The BEA specified the initial caps on budget authority and outlays and also listed a series of required adjustments, chiefly for emergency appropriations and for inflation that was higher or (as it turned out) lower than that anticipated when the act was passed. Both CBO and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) must keep a running tally of these adjustments. Appendix A explains the derivation of CBO's latest estimate of the caps.
The outlay cap is the stricter constraint in 1994 and 1995. Overall, complying with these caps demands that legislators freeze resources at 1993's nominal level for two more years. Because inflation-even at today's low rates-continues to chip away at real resources, a freeze implies a cut in real funding. A twoyear freeze on resources, however, would bring the appropriators into close compliance with the outlay caps (see Table 3-2). A two-year freeze of this kind would keep total discretionary appropriations at $507 billion in both 1994 and 1995, well under the budget authority cap. The caps seemingly permit more appropriations, but lawmakers
Table 3-2. How Tight Are the Discretionary Caps? (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1994 1995
Outlays
539
Budget Authority
517
Outlays
539
Amount Needed to Preserve 1993 Real Resources (Including adjustment for inflation)19 Defense Discretionary International Discretionary Domestic Discretionary Total Amount over or under (-) caps
287 22
215 525 12
289
22 240
551 13
296
23 222
540 23
293
22 249
564 25
Amount Needed to Preserve 1993 Dollar Resources (Without adjustment for inflation)11 Defense Discretionary International Discretionary Domestic Discretionary
The estimated caps are based on those published in Office of Management and Budget, OMB Final Sequestration Report to the President and Congress for Fiscal Year 1993 (October 23,1992), as modified by CBO (see Appendix A). Excludes emergencies and International Monetary Fund quota funded in 1993 appropriations. Less than $500 mil lion.
CHAPTER THREE
cannot plausibly appropriate funds right up to the budget authority ceilings without flouting the caps on outlays. The estimates in Table 3-2 provide the raw material to construct a variety of possible approaches to complying with the 1994-1995 caps. For example, if policymakers chose to shield domestic and international discretionary programs by funding them at the 1993 level adjusted for inflation, this strategy would swallow up $262 billion and $271 billion, respectively, of the allowable outlays in 1994 and 1995. Defense would get whatever is left: $276 billion in 1994 and about $268 billion in 1995, with correspondingly deep cuts in budget authority. This level of 1994 spending is $17 billion less than 1993's outlays of $294 billion. Although it is unlikely to be used, another approach would preserve defense spending and let domestic and international programs shoulder the necessary cuts. In sum, complying with the discretionary caps for the next two years requires that the managers of discretionary programs live with 1993's nominal resources during this period. Within this constraint, policymakers will be forced to pick the programs they consider most deserving of funds.
cent of GDP in 1993 and 1994 to 13.3 percent of GDP in 1998. The BEA lumped mandatory programs together with revenues and subjected them to pay-as-you-go discipline. Consequently, the Congress must match any liberalizations in mandatory programs, such as changes in eligibility rules or payment formulas, with cutbacks in other mandatory spending or tax increases. Similarly, the Congress can fund tax cuts by increasing other taxes or cutting mandatory spending. A little more than one-fifth of this spending is means tested-that is, paid to beneficiaries who must prove their need based on limited income or assets and, in many cases, age or family status as well. Medicaid, a joint federal and state program, accounts for a little less than half of all means-tested spending. The remaining four-fifths of entitlement dollars go to beneficiaries who do not have to satisfy a test of means. Social Security is by far the largest non-means-tested program, followed by the smaller but faster-growing Medicare program. The remaining entitlements are retirement and disability programs (chiefly for federal civilian and military retirees and railroad retirees); unemployment compensation (boosted in 1992 and 1993 by the recession and by three separate legislative liberalizations); and other programs, including veterans' benefits and farm price supports.
Means-Tested Programs
Medicaid, the joint federal and state program that provides medical care to some of the poor, currently accounts for almost half of all spending on means-tested entitlements and fuels two-thirds of the projected growth of such spending over the 1993-1998 period. Medicaid spending has grown sharply over the past several years. After climbing an average of about 13 percent annually from 1985 through 1990, the cost of the program jumped by 28 percent in 1991 and 30 percent in 1992; CBO estimates it will increase by 18 percent in
"Traiumir
II11-111111
..Jill
January 1993
1993. After 1993, the CBO baseline projects that the growth rate will subside to rates typical of the late 1980s, driving federal Medicaid spending to $146 billion by 1998 (see Table 3-3), This growth constitutes a substantial 82 percent rise in spending over the five-year period. The rapid growth in Medicaid spending continues to be driven by pressures from increasing population and higher costs, and by the fiscal concerns that push state and local governments to secure the maximum in Medicaid funds from the federal government. For example, states that formerly funded programs for mental health services and developmental screening are shifting these activities into Medicaid to gain federal matching payments. The program has also seen a continuing surge in the number of disabled poor people applying for benefits, a change that affects the Supplemental Security Income program as well (see below). The effects of nursing home reforms, enacted in 1987 but only recently effective, are uncertain. Finally, a rash of lawsuits has resulted in sharply higher reimbursements to health care providers under a 1980 law, which requires that Medicaid payments to health care providers be "reasonable and adequate." CBO projects that spending for other means-tested programs will increase as well. The baseline shows that the Supplemental Security Income program for aged, blind, and disabled people is expected to grow from $20 billion to $30 billion over the 1993-1998 period, as more beneficiaries, especially disabled people, are added to its rolls. Another growing program in this category is the refundable portion of the earned income tax credit (EITC) for low-income working families with children. The budget treats direct EITC payments to families who otherwise owe no income taxes as an outlay because they are tantamount to benefit payments. The rapid growth in EITC outlays between 1992 and 1995 reflects a phased-in benefit increase that the Congress enacted in 1990. These outlays are expected to reach $14 billion by 1998. In contrast, CBO expects that growth in the Food Stamp and
family support (Aid to Families with Dependent Children) programs will be modest-particular ly in the latter, as financially squeezed state governments place limits on eligibility and benefits.
Non-Means-Tested Programs
Social Security has now overtaken the defense budget as the government's single biggest spending item. The CBO baseline shows Social Security benefits increasing in a relatively modest fashionfrom $302 billion in 1993 to $385 billion in 1998. This 27 percent increase over the period is largely the result of relatively slow growth in the number of new recipients of old-age and survivors benefits, and relatively low inflation. Social Security disability benefits, however, are growing rapidly; CBO estimates that they will increase about 44 percent over the 19931998 period. The Disability Insurance Trust Fund faces ever-increasing annual deficits, with the recession and projected slow nominal wage growth eroding the trust fund's income. At the same time, caseloads are expanding because of increased claims, higher rates of claims allowances, and lower rates of termination. CBO estimates that the Disability Insurance Trust Fund will require additional resources by 1996. Most Social Security beneficiaries participate in Medicare as well. Although Medicare outlays currently are roughly half those for Social Security, the rates of growth projected for Medicare rival those of Medicaid: from outlays of $146 billion in 1993, Medicare is projected to grow to $259 billion in 1998, a 77 percent increase over the period. During the past decade, Medicare spending grew by an average of 10 percent a year, compared with 6 percent annual spending increases for Social Security. Neither program faced acute demographic pressure during this time: only a small fraction of their growth was driven by increases in their beneficiary populations, which generally grew between 1 per-
CHAPTER THREE Table 3-3. CBO Baseline Projections for Mandatory Spending, Excluding Deposit Insurance (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
Actual 1992
49
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Means-Tested Programs Medicaid Food Stamps3 Supplemental Security Income Family Support Veterans' Pensions Child Nutrition Earned Income Tax Credit Stafford Loansb Other Total, Means-Tested Programs
68 23 18 16 4 80 24 20 17 3 6 92 24 24 18 3 7
105
24 24
6 8
2 _3
146
18 3 7
13 3 _3
200
9
2 _3
10 3 _3
183
118 24 24 19 2 8 13 3 _4 214
131 25 28 19 2 8 14 3 _4 234
146 26 30 20 3
9 14 3 _4
255
165
Non-Means-Tested Programs Social Security Medicare Subtotal Other Retirement and Disability Federal civilian^ Military Other Subtotal Unemployment Compensation Other Programs Veterans' benef itsd Farm price supports Social services Credit reform liquidating accounts Other Subtotal Total, Non-Means-Tested Programs All Mandatory Spending, Excluding Deposit Insurance SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
285 129 414 302 146 449 319 167 486 335 188 523 351 211 562 368 234 602 385 259 644
37 24 5 67 37
39 26 5 70 33
41 27 5 73 26
44 28 5 77 25
48 29 5 82 25
51 31 5 86 25
54 32 5 91 25
16 9 5 4 13 47
565
16 16 5 3 13 54
605
18 10 6 1 14 48
633
17 9 5 2 11 40
666
16 9 5 -9 9 30
699
18 9 5 -6 9 36
749
18 9 5 -6 9 36
796
Total
711 770 816 866 913 984
1,051
NOTE: Spending for major benefit programs shown in this table includes benefits only. Outlays for administrative costs of most benefit programs are classified as nondefense discretionary spending; Medicare premium collections are classified as offsetting receipts. a. b. c. d. Includes nutrition assistance to Puerto Rico. Also includes Supplemental Loans for Students (SLS), Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students (PLUS), and the direct loan pilot programs. Includes Civil Service, Foreign Service, Coast Guard, and other retirement programs, and annuitants' health benefits. Includes veterans' compensation, readjustment benefits, life insurance, and housing programs.
TIT
.Ml
January 1993
cent and 2 percent a year. General inflation accounts for the remainder of the increase, supplemented--in the case of Medicare--by rapid increases in the cost of medical care and the use of covered services. The rapid growth in spending for Medicare and Medicaid (as discussed earlier) is a continuing saga, and it presents the Clinton Administration with one of its most urgent and potentially explosive challenges. Reducing the deficit will be difficult unless this growth is curtailed. At the same time, however, the Clinton Administration's desire to make affordable health care coverage available to all Americans will make it difficult to reduce total spending for health care-even if the Medicaid and Medicare programs are reformed to make them more efficient. Other retirement and disability programswhich, taken together, are less than onequarter the size of Social Security-are dominated by benefits for civilian and military retirees of the federal government and railroad retirees. This category includes fast-rising health care costs for Civil Service annuitants, another aspect of the government's growing health care bill. Unemployment compensation and farm price supports are among the few entitlement programs that are expected to shrink in the next few years. Unemployment Insurance benefits totaled $37 billion in 1992, a new record, but will taper off to $33 billion in 1993 and $25 billion by 1998 as the unemployment rate falls. Farm price supports, after peaking at $16 billion in 1993 because of an unusually large harvest that caused market prices to drop, fall to roughly $9 billion annually through 1998. Other non-means-tested entitlements encompass a diverse set of programs, mainly veterans' benefits and certain social service grants to the states. The credit reform provisions of the BE A created an unusual (and fading) member of this category. The act dictated that, beginning in 1992, the government must measure any new loans on a subsidy-cost basis-the amount that the government expects to lose over the lifetime of the
loan-rather than on the old cash flow basis. This accounting change does not affect loans that were obligated before 1992. Instead, those loans have been moved wholesale into the mandatory category, because only a narrow range of legislative actions (such as beefed-up collection efforts or decisions to forgive debts) can alter their future path.
Deposit Insurance
CBO's projections of outlays for deposit insurance reflect the estimated cost of the savings and loan cleanup as well as the estimated cost of protecting deposits in troubled banks. These estimates depend on a number of factors that are both volatile and difficult to forecast, such as macroeconomic conditions, especially changes in the level and structure of interest rates; economic conditions in certain areas of the country, particularly in the real estate market; the effects of legislation, such as the imposition of risk-based premiums; the availability of funding for the savings and loan cleanup; and regulatory behavior, including how strictly institutions are regulated, how many are closed, the form of the resolutions, and the methods used to dispose of acquired assets. In addition, the failure of even a small number of large institutions can significantly affect outlays in a particular year. Spending for deposit insurance in the baseline reflects a general pattern, as shown in Table 3-4. It begins with positive net outlays in the short run, as the Resolution Trust Corporation and the Bank Insurance Fund disburse funds to protect the depositors of failed institutions. These net outlays eventually turn negative, as the government receives more proceeds from selling assets acquired from closed institutions than it disburses to resolve newly failed institutions. But net outlays tell little about the overall picture for deposit insurance and merely sum up much larger flows of funds. Deposit insurance outlays include spending for losses, which are funds that the government will not recover,
CHAPTER THREE
and for working capital, which are outflows that the government expects to recoup eventually from the sale of assets. The exact split between losses and working capital will not be known until the last asset is sold, which will be years from now.
The BEA specifies that legislation to provide funding for deposit insurance does not count on the pay-as-you-go scorecard--offsetting tax increases or spending cuts are not required. The reason is that deposit insurance is considered a mandatory obligation of the
Table 3-4. Outlays for Deposit Insurance in the Baseline (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
Estimate 1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Savings-and-Loan-Related Resolution Trust Corporation and Savings Association Insurance Fund Insurance losses3 Working capital Disbursements Receipts Interest costs Insurance premiums Total FSLIC Resolution Fund
10 21
-43 3 _0
11
11 19 -22
2
12 -32
2 -9 4
17 -24
2 4 2
15 -21
2 4 b
-19 2
-5 b
8 -14 2
-1 0
-9
8
Bank-Related and Other Bank Insurance Fund Losses Working capital Liquidations Net interest Other outlays (Net) Total Otherd
c c
9
14 -10
8
13 -12
1
11
-13 1
-9
b
b 8 b
Total
5 8 -13 1 -5
4 6
-13
1
4 6
-12 b
-9 b
10
11
-1
-14
-10
The Resolution Trust Corporation is currently scheduled to stop accepting new cases after September 30, 1993, and to turn over responsibility for future resolutions to the Savings Association Insurance Fund. It is possible that the transfer of responsibility could be delayed by the Congress, but the costs incurred would not be significantly affected by such a change. CBO therefore presents the estimates on a combined basis. FSLIC = Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation.
a.
b. c. d.
Less than $500 million. Total resolution outlays in 1992 were $19 billion. Details on losses and working capital are not yet available. Primarily activities of the National Credit Union Administration.
jimimiii
January 1993
government, and legislation that merely funds existing obligations is not considered new spending under the BEA. In addition, unlike other spending, deposit insurance spending is generally believed to have a minimal impact on the economy.
them (that is, liquidate them or arrange a merger with a healthier institution) except in the rare case in which this can be done at no cost. The RTC can, however, continue to sell assets from its huge inventory of performing and nonperforming loans, foreclosed real estate, securities, and so forth. The negative outlays in 1992 and 1993 reflect the excess of the sales of these assets relative to disbursements in these years. The outlays associated with new resolutions are pushed into the future and result in positive outlays for fiscal years 1994 through 1996. Fewer savings and loan failures in subsequent years, coupled with proceeds from the sale of assets, result in negative outlays again in 1997 and 1998. Since the BEA was enacted, both CBO and OMB have highlighted the full cost of honoring the government's commitments for deposit insurance, rather than limit their projections by the funds actually approved to date. CBO's current projections assume that the Congress will provide additional funding in the spring of 1993. They also assume that the Congress will provide subsequent amounts, if needed, in a timely manner. Projected net outlays for the RTC and SAIF include outright losses, working capital disbursements, interest paid to the Treasury's Federal Financing Bank (FFB), premiums paid by savings and loans, and receipts from the sale of acquired assets (see Table 3-4). CBO believes that the RTC and SAIF could tackle the remainder of the cleanup with additional funding of about $50 billion. Because projections of thrift failures are so uncertain, this figure could vary by as much as $15 billion in either direction. The additional funds, along with premium income, would cover the losses that are currently projected from 1993 through 1998. They would also allow about $7 billion to build up the net worth of SAIF, as required by law. Underlying CBO's baseline is the assumption that, over the next several years, the RTC and SAIF will resolve, at some cost, institutions with assets totaling between $225 billion and $300 billion. These resolutions would be
CHAPTER THREE
in addition to the 653 thrifts that the RTC had closed as of December 1992. Precise caseload estimates are treacherous. Many of the institutions that are still to be resolved are the marginal cases. Some may go out of business on their own, and others may find a merger partner-in either case, at little or no cost to the government. Right now, the Office of Thrift Supervision is moving slowly to shut down weak institutions, opting instead to work with them in developing business plans that might bring their capital up to acceptable standards. The Congress has already provided the RTC with $87 billion in funding to resolve 653 institutions, and, as mentioned above, CBO projects that the RTC and SAIF will require roughly $50 billion in new funding to finish the job and recapitalize SAIF. Currently projected nominal losses over the 1989-1998 period would therefore be about $137 billion, though that amount could vary by as much as $15 billion in either direction. On a net present-value basis-a useful measure of the costs of an activity spread out over a long period of time-the costs of the cleanup are now estimated at roughly $120 billion (in 1990 dollars), an amount lower than the $135 billion (in 1990 dollars) cited by CBO in August. Probably the single biggest factor explaining this drop is more favorable interest rates, which allow more of the institutions that formerly were considered on the brink to mend themselves-at least for the time being. In addition, the industry overall has been purged of high-flying, relatively irresponsible institutions, and those remaining have been subjected to more stringent regulation. Another agency involved in the savings and loan cleanup is the FSLIC Resolution Fund, which inherited the books of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) when that fund was closed down in 1989. Accelerated appropriations in 1991 and 1992 have allowed the federal government to renegotiate contracts with the acquirers of thrifts
that failed in 1989 or earlier, thereby reducing future payments dramatically. The outlays for this fund will taper off markedly after 1995 (see Table 3-4). CBO estimates this fund's total costs (in 1990 dollars) at $60 billion, which generally represents losses FSLIC incurred before 1989. This figure, when combined with the $120 billion cited above, brings CBO's estimate of the total cost of the savings and loan cleanup to $180 billion in 1990 dollars.
Commercial Banks
Outlays to resolve failed banks are expected to increase the deposit insurance totals through 1995, although the amounts pale next to those for savings and loan institutions. Furthermore, unlike the thrift industry, the commercial banking industry appears able to finance its own insurance fund. The Bank Insurance Fund (BIF) has had to borrow from the FFB to cover expenses, but it appears that BIF is capable of repaying the loans through premiums paid by banks and proceeds from the sale of assets. CBO's projections for BIF are shown in Table 3-4. CBO expects BIF's outlays to peak at $8 billion this year and gradually drop to a net negative $9 billion in 1998. The outlook is more encouraging than that depicted in CBO's August 1992 baseline and reflects the fact that, overall, banks are more profitable because of the relatively large spread between long- and short-term interest rates. CBO believes that these flows can be managed comfortably within resources already provided to BIFthat is, the authority to borrow $30 billion from the Treasury for losses incurred, and to borrow from the Treasury's FFB for working capital. Unlike its previous projections, CBO's current estimates assume no further increases in premiums, which are assumed to average about 25 cents per $100 of insured deposits.
TIT
January 1993
Offsetting Receipts
Offsetting receipts are income that the government records as negative spending. They are either intrabudgetary (reflecting a payment from one part of the federal government to another) or proprietary (reflecting a payment from the public). The revenue side of the ledger is generally reserved for receipts that stem from the government's power to tax (see Chapter 4). Because offsetting receipts do not meet that description, the budget records them as negative outlays. A decision to collect more (or less) in offsetting receipts normally requires a change in the laws that generate such collections. Thus, offsetting receipts are more like mandatory spending and revenues than like discretionary appropriations; like the former, they are subject to pay-as-you-go discipline.
More than half of all offsetting receipts are intrabudgetary transfers representing agencies' contributions for their employees' retirement (see Table 3-5). Because future retirement benefits are an important part of federal workers' overall compensation, failing to charge agencies for these contributions would understate personnel costs. The payments are a component of an agency's budget, and the corresponding deposits in retirement funds (principally Social Security, Military Retirement, and Civil Service Retirement) are offsetting receipts. These intragovernmental flows net to zero, and only the actual benefit payments (which appear in the budget as entitlements) and current administrative costs (which appear in the discretionary category) boost total outlays. Medicare premiums collected from elderly and disabled people grow from an estimated $15 billion in 1993 to $23 billion in 1998, as the monthly premium climbs from $36.60 in
Table 3-5. Offsetting Receipts in the Baseline (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars) Category Employer Share of Employee Retirement Social Security Military Retirement Othera Subtotal Medicare Premiums Energy-Related Receipts'
3
Actual 1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
-4 -3
-4 -3 ^9
-65
-5 -3 ^8
-68
-5 -3
_JI -72
-5 -3
_J_ -73
-5 -3
-5 -3
_j7 -78
il l -69
_2
-76
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office. a. Primarily Civil Service Retirement. b. Includes proceeds from sales of power, various fees, and receipts from the naval petroleum reserves and Outer Continental Shelf. c. Includes timber and mineral receipts and various user fees. d. Includes $5 billion in 1992 for contributions from foreign nations to finance Operation DesertStorm.
CHAPTER THREE
1993 to an estimated $50.00 in 1998. Yet despite this growth, the premiums fund less than one-quarter of the Supplementary Medical Insurance (SMI) program (Part B of Medicare), which covers mainly physician and outpatient charges. By 1998, CBO projects that enrollees will be paying less than 19 percent of the program's costs, with general revenues financing the rest. (In contrast, the Hospital Insurance program, or Part A of Medicare, has been designed so as not to rely on general fund appropriations.) Other offsetting receipts come mostly from charges for energy, minerals, and timber and from various fees levied on the users of government property or services. Not included in the offsetting receipts category are offsetting collections. The budget traditionally counts these collections (for example, deposit insurance premiums) as offsets within particular spending programs. The programs for which they are earmarked are simply recorded on a net basis in the budget. Contributions from foreign nations to help finance Operation Desert Storm, an unusual category of offsetting receipts, totaled $43 billion in 1991 and $5 billion in 1992. The leading contributors were Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and Japan. The contributions covered nearly all of the estimated marginal costs of the United States' military operations, although the associated defense spending-much of it to replace items consumed in the conflictis stretched out over a longer period.
in 1992 and are estimated at $198 billion in 1993. This stability is astonishing, given that the government is adding new debt at the rate of about $300 billion a year-a clear testimonial to the powerful budgetary effects of interest rates. In CBO's baseline projections, net interest resumes its upward march after 1993. As Chapter 1 discusses, the projections assume that the rates on short-term securities such as Treasury bills climb gradually over the 19931998 period, whereas medium- and long-term rates show little change. Thus, CBO expects net interest costs to reach $292 billion, or 3.7 percent of GDP, in 1998. As a percentage of GDP, interest will be two to three times the levels typical of the 1960s and 1970s~an unfortunate legacy of record deficits. Interest costs cannot be directly controlled because they depend on the government's debt and on interest rates. The Congress and the President influence the level of debt by making decisions about taxes and spending, and hence borrowing. They exert no direct control over interest rates, which are determined by market forces and the policies of the Federal Reserve. The importance of interest rates to the budget projections is illustrated in Appendix C, which describes this relationship using a simplified "rule of thumb." If, from 1993 through 1998, interest rates are 1 percentage point higher than CBO assumed, net interest costs will be greater-by about $5 billion in 1993 and $46 billion in 1998. In fact, budget outlays would be even more sensitive to rising (or falling) interest rates, were it not for the Treasury's strategy of borrowing about threefourths of the debt in medium- and long-term securities, with maturities ranging from two to 30 years. This practice has triggered lively debate recently among some economists, with one camp arguing that the Treasury could save large sums by moving more of the debt into short-term securities. Unfortunately, huge savings from such a shift are unlikely if the economy follows a path similar to CBO's baseline. With short-term interest rates head-
Net Interest
In late 1992, interest rates on short-term Treasury bills briefly slid below 3 percent, their lowest level in three decades. Mediumand long-term rates posted more modest declines. Federal net interest costs have responded dramatically to these declines. In 1993, CBO expects net interest costs to be virtually flat for the third year in a row (see Table 3-6). Interest costs totaled $199 billion
irar
January 1993
ing up, and the spread between rates for shortand longer-term maturities narrowing, the potential savings are constricted. Hindsight is not necessarily apt in this instance; some
advocates of shorter-term debt management look back to the 1980s, when the government sold 30-year bonds at rates as high as 15.8 percent (bonds that are still outstanding). Yet a
Table 3-6. CBO Projections of Interest Costs and Federal Debt (By fiscal year)
Actual 1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Net Interest Outlays (Billions of dollars) Interest on Public Debt (Gross interest)3 Interest Received by Trust Funds Social Security Other trust fundsb Subtotal Other Interest Total, Net Interest Outlays
292
295
310
333
356
380
407
-49 -55
-104
-11
199
198
211
231
250
270
292
Federal Debt, End of Year (Billions of dollars) Gross Federal Debt Debt Held by Government Accounts Social Security Other government accountsb Subtotal Debt Held by the Public Debt Subject to Limitd
4,003
4,392
4,789
5,189
5,600
6,044
6,524
3,290 4,360
3,585 4,757
3,874
5,156
4,169
4,496
6,010
4,863 6,489
5,566
51.1
53.3
55.1
56.5
57.9
59.6
61.8
NOTE: Projections of interest and debt assume compliance with the discretionary spending caps in the Budget Enforcement Act. Excludes interest costs of debt issued by agencies other than the Treasury (primarily deposit insurance agencies). Principally Civil Service Retirement, Military Retirement, Medicare, Unemployment Insurance, and the Highway and the Airport and Airway trust funds. Primarily interest on loans to the public and to the Resolution Trust Corporation and the Bank Insurance Fund. Differs from the gross federal debt primarily because most debt issued by agencies other than the Treasury (currently about $20 billion) is excluded from the debt limit.
CHAPTER THREE
similar plunge in interest rates from today's levels seems less plausible. Some policymakers and citizens like to use gross interest when discussing interest costs, a preference that often forces them to burrow through stacks of budget documents. For good reason, published reports do not prominently display this measure of interest costs. Gross
interest is much less useful as a measure of the government's debt-service burden than is net interest, the figure emphasized by CBO and most budget experts. Gross interest exaggerates the amount of interest the government pays, a figure that is already quite formidable. (See Table 3-6 for the components of the government's interest costs and the corresponding amounts of federal debt.)
1993
Debt Subject to Limit, Start of Year Changes Deficit Trust fund surplus Other Total Debt Subject to Limit, End of Year 3,973
310 101 -24 387
4,360
1994
4,360
4,757
The $60 billion of elbow room that was left on December 31 will not last long in the face of heavy borrowing. The government will actually register a big surplus in January 1993, the
JIUL
January 1993
The government has sold trillions of dollars of securities to finance the deficit. But it also issues securities to its own trust funds (mainly Social Security and the other retirement funds) and collects interest on loans and on its cash balances. Broadly speaking, net interest is interest the government pays to the public. Gross interest, in contrast, includes interest the government pays to itself and thereby exaggerates the debt-service burden. The overstatement is easy to document. In 1993, the government will pay an estimated $295 billion in gross interest costs, but $83 billion of this amount is simply credited to trust funds and does not leave the government or add to the deficit. Moreover, the government collects $14 billion in other interest income, a figure that has tapered off gradually since the mid1980s and will continue to do so. Net interest costs thus total $198 billion. The driving force behind net interest costs of the federal government is borrowing. Under CBO's baseline assumptions, debt held by the public-Treasury bills, notes, bonds, and other securities, such as savings bonds, that are sold to raise cash-grows to $4.9 trillion by 1998. This amount, up from $3 trillion at the end of 1992, comes from the government's financing of $1.8 trillion in deficits over the six-year period. Although the deficit is the key factor in determining annual federal borrowing, the two figures do not move in lockstep. Borrowing is influenced by miscellane-
ous other factors, such as changes in the Treasury's bank balance and cash flows for loan programs, that are not a part of the deficit and thus typically drive a small wedge between it and borrowing. As a percentage of GDP, debt held by the public reaches nearly 62 percent in 1998. Not since 1952, when the debt was still dominated by the effects of the huge deficits associated with World War II and the debt-to-GDP ratio was falling, has the federal debt been so large in relation to the economy. Debt held by the public, which represents the government's demand for credit, is the most useful measure of federal debt. But many people are better acquainted with a larger figure, the gross federal debt. The gross debt includes the securities (about $1 trillion and climbing) issued to government trust funds. As explained above, the interest on these securities is both paid and collected by the government and adds nothing to net interest or the deficit. The chief reason that the gross debt is so familiar is that its close cousin, the debt subject to limit, is the focus of periodic legislative wrangling (see Box 3-1 on previous page). The Congress is almost certain to face the need to increase the debt limit in March, a necessity that often brings with it a host of proposals to deal with the deficit and to reform the budget process.
Chapter Four
he current recovery will boost revenues in 1993 to $1,143 billion, an increase of $51 billion over the 1992 level. This increase of 4.7 percent is the highest rate of growth in revenues since 1989. For 1994 through 1998, the Congressional Budget Office projects that the growth in federal revenues under current tax laws will average 5.3 percent annually, with revenues growing from $1,215 billion in 1994 to $1,482 billion in 1998. As a percentage of gross domestic product, revenues are expected to rise from 18.5 percent in 1993 to 18.8 percent in 1995 and then to remain essentially at this level through 1998. This chapter presents the outlook for federal revenues under current tax laws, summarizes recent revenue trends, and reviews recent changes in the distribution of the tax burden among income groups.
All of CBO's baseline projections for revenue assume that current tax law remains unchanged. However, the projections take into account that some provisions are scheduled to change or expire during the 1993-1998 period. The baseline assumes that these changes and expirations occur on schedule. One category of taxes-excise taxes dedicated to trust funds-constitutes an exception to this rule. CBO assumes that these taxes will be extended, even if they are scheduled to expire. The current baseline thus assumes that the following three taxes will be extended: aviation taxes, Superfund taxes, and taxes to clean up leaking underground storage tanks. Individual income tax receipts are the largest source of federal revenue, contributing about 45 percent of the total. CBO projects that individual income taxes will grow from $501 billion in 1993 to $531 billion in 1994 and then to $662 billion in 1998. As a percentage of GDP, individual income taxes will grow from 8.1 percent to 8.4 percent between 1993 and 1998. The growth projected for real incomes (adjusted for inflation) pushes up the percentage share of GDP for these receipts, despite the expiration of several revenue-raising tax provisions. Social insurance taxes (mostly for Social Security) are the second largest source of federal revenue, contributing about 38 percent of the total. CBO projects that this source of revenue will produce $434 billion in 1993 and then rise to $462 billion in 1994 and $559 billion in 1998. Social insurance taxes remain relatively stable as a share of GDP--at about 7 percent-because the tax bases for the two major
Baseline Projections
Although the CBO baseline projects a larger increase in revenues in 1993 than in recent years, revenue as a share of GDP will drop to its lowest level since 1986. Revenue growth of more than 6 percent in 1994 and 1995 will raise revenue's share of GDP through 1995. In 1996, however, revenue growth will slow as economic growth slackens and some revenueraising tax provisions enacted in 1990 expire. (For CBO's baseline projections for each major tax source, see Table 4-1.)
TIT
" i 1 1 I III 1:
January 1993
components, Social Security and Medicare, are adjusted annually for changes in average wages. The CBO baseline expects that corporate income taxes, which represent 10 percent of all federal revenues, will grow from $110 billion in 1993 to $120 billion in 1994 and then to $147 billion in 1998. With the economic recovery, CBO expects corporate taxes to reach 1.9 percent of GDP in 1995. However, the expiration on December 31, 1996, of accelerated estimated payment rules for large corporations causes the GDP share of corporate taxes to dip slightly in 1997. The relative stability of this GDP share in the CBO forecast reflects
a stable GDP share for corporate profits and a stable ratio of taxes to profits. The Bush Administration's forecast of corporate income taxes also reflects a stable GDP share for profits, but in its forecast, the ratio of taxes to profits falls over the forecast period. This other view produced much of the technical difference between the revenue estimates made by the Bush Administration and by CBO (see Chapter 2). According to the baseline, excise taxes will provide $48 billion in receipts in 1993; they will peak at $50 billion in 1995 and then drop back to $48 billion in 1998. Excise taxes will provide 4 percent of all federal revenue in
Table 4-1. CBO Baseline Revenue Projections by Source (By fiscal year) Actual 1992
Source
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
In Billions of Dollars Individual Income Corporate Income Social Insurance Excise Estate and Gift Customs Duties Miscellaneous Receipts Total Revenues On-budget revenues Off-budget revenues
531 120
567 128
462 49
12 20 21
1,215 879 336
489 50
12 21 23
1,291 934 356
662 147
559
48 14 25 27
1,482 1,071 411
1,414 1,021
393
As a Percentage of GDP Individual Income Corporate Income Social Insurance Excise Estate and Gift Customs Duties Miscellaneous Receipts Total Revenues On-budget revenues Off-budget revenues
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
18.5
13.4 5.1
CHAPTER FOUR
1993 and 3 percent in 1998. A major factor in the drop in this source of revenue after 1995 is the expiration on September 30, 1995, of the 2.5-cent portion of the motor fuels tax that is currently deposited in the general fund of the Treasury. Other receipts included in the CBO baseline (estate and gift taxes, customs duties, and miscellaneous receipts) are also projected to increase-from $50 billion in 1993 to $66 billion in 1998. The baseline projects that one component of this category, miscellaneous receipts, will drop between 1992 and 1993. Miscellaneous receipts include capital gains that the Federal Reserve System earns on its foreign currency. Although capital gains were earned in 1992, losses are expected in 1993. After 1993, however, CBO projects that revenue from these other sources will keep pace with GDP.
counts for most of the economic changes in the revenue forecast. The technical revisions to the baseline reflect new data about a number of different tax sources. For example, new data from individual income tax returns and self-employment tax returns for 1991 showed lower-thanexpected incomes and liabilities. With the tax code constantly evolving, data on tax receipts can provide analysts with more reliable information on taxable incomes than is provided by the incomes shown in the national income and product accounts (NIPAs). As a result of the new data, CBO has reduced its projections of individual income tax and social insurance tax revenues by between $2 billion and $3 billion per year. In addition, technical adjustments to CBO's estimates of excise taxes reduced revenues by $1 billion to $2 billion per year. Slowdowns in the growth of the taxable receipts of the airline and telephone industries and more rapid growth than expected in the use of tax-favored gasohol were responsible for much of this reduction. Another change in the latest projections is that they include no revenue from two excise taxes that the August baseline assumed would be extended. The tax to provide compensation for vaccine injury expired at the end of December 1992, and the tax to clean up oil spills will be suspended later this year when its trust fund has accumulated $1 billion. The net effect in the baseline of legislation enacted since the August update will be to increase revenues by less than $2 billion over the 1993-1998 period. The only legislation to have a significant effect on revenues was the Energy Policy Act. This act provided tax relief for certain groups, including the recipients of utility rebates, independent oil and gas producers, and users of clean-fuel vehicles and fuels containing alcohol. It also extended two expiring energy credits. The energy act raised revenue by increasing tax rates on ozonedepleting chemicals, charging premiums to fund health benefits for retired coal miners, and changing withholding and reporting requirements.
TIT
-Ill Mill I
62 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table 4-2. Effect of Extending Tax Provisions That Expire in 1993 Through 1998 (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars) Expiration Date 1993
January 1993
Tax Provision
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Provisions Expiring in 1993 or 1994 Generalized System of Preferences Reduced Tax Rate for OzoneDepleting Chemicals Used for Sterilizing Medical Equipment Deduction for Contributions to Private Foundations 7/4/93 -0.2 -0.7 -0.7 -0.7
-0.8 -0.8
12/31/93 12/31/94
n.a. n.a.
a n.a.
a a
a a
Provisions Expiring in 1995 Motor Fuels Taxes Remaining in the General Fund Fees for IRS Letter Rulings Corporation Tax Dedicated toSuperfund Limitation on Itemized Deductions 9/30/95 9/30/95 12/31/95 12/31/95 n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 2.6 b 0.4 1.7
2.7 2.7
b
0.7 3.8
b
0.7 3.9
Provisions Expiring in 1996 Phaseout of Personal Exemptions FUTA Surtax of 0.2 Percentage Points Accelerating Individual Tax Payments Accelerating Corporate Tax Payments Nonconventional Fuels Credit for Fuel from Biomass and Coal
SOURCE: Joint Committee on Taxation.
2.3 1.5
b
0.9
NOTES: No provisions are scheduled to expire in 1997 or 1998. n.a. = not applicable; IRS = Internal Revenue Service; FUTA = Federal Unemployment Tax Act. a. b. Loss of less than $50 million. Increase of less than $50 million.
CHAPTER FOUR
Expiring Provisions
Ten tax preferences expired during 1992, including the low-income housing credit, the credit for research and experimentation, the targeted jobs credit, and the deduction for health insurance premiums paid by the selfemployed. If the Congress were to extend all 10 preferences permanently, it would reduce revenue in 1998 by about $6 billion. All but one of the preferences-the exclusion for employer-provided legal assistance-would have been extended, some of them permanently, by the Revenue Act of 1992 (H.R. 11). President Bush, however, vetoed that bill in November of last year. (Other provisions of the Revenue Act would have extended the acceleration of individual and corporate estimated payments, set up enterprise zones, expanded the availability of deductible individual retirement accounts, changed the tax treatment of real estate, and repealed part of the luxury tax.) Two other changes occurred at the end of 1992: the tax to provide compensation for vaccine injury expired, and the top rate of the estate and gift tax dropped from 55 percent to 50 percent. Twelve tax provisions are scheduled to expire between 1993 and 1996 (see Table 4-2 for the effects on revenue of extending them). Their expiration reduces 1998 revenues by about $11 billion. The three provisions that have the largest revenue effects in 1998-the limitation on itemized deductions, the phaseout of personal exemptions, and the motor fuels taxes that remained in the general fundwere enacted in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA-90) and were scheduled to expire five years after enactment. In 1992, however, the Congress extended the phaseout of exemptions by another year, through 1996, to partially offset the costs of additional extended unemployment benefits.
Actual
Proj
20
15
10
j I
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
SOURCE:
inr
rr~
January 1993
higher tax brackets (so-called bracket creep). Large tax cuts enacted in the Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981 (ERTA), combined with the back-to-back recessions of 1980 and 19811982, brought the revenue share down to 18 percent in 1983. In addition to lowering tax rates, ERTA fundamentally reduced the elasticity of the federal tax system. Beginning in 1985, it indexed for inflation the bracket amounts of the personal income tax, the standard deduction, and the personal exemption, thus removing most of the inflationary bracket creep from the personal income tax. In subsequent years, the revenue share, bolstered by sustained economic growth and deficit reduction measures, climbed, reaching 19 percent by 1989. Recessions and periods of slow growth tend to reduce the revenue share of GDP, and recent years are no exception to that rule. Despite the tax increases enacted in OBRA-90, CBO expects the revenue share of GDP to be only 18.5 percent in 1993. This contraction", compared with the 1989 rate, is expected because the taxable portion of GDP will shrink between 1989 and 1993, as it normally does during periods of economic weakness. (Taxable personal income plus economic profits were 77.7 percent of GDP in 1989 but are projected to be only 76.4 percent of GDP in 1993.) Reinforcing the drop in the taxable share of GDP is a drop in individual income tax rates as family income failed to keep pace with inflation. In the recent recession, an unusually large factor in the reduced revenue share has been capital gains. The drop in the value of commercial real estate and closely held businesses led to a sizable drop in capital gains realizations-from $162 billion in 1988 to about $110 billion in 1991. Stronger economic growth in 1993 through 1995 is projected to push the revenue share of GDP back up to 18.8 percent by 1995. CBO estimates that the recovery will bring the taxable share of GDP back up to 77.0 percent, that growth in real income will push up the individual income tax rate, and that realizations of capital gains will move back to a more nor-
mal level. The CBO baseline shows the revenue share remaining at 18.8 percent except for a temporary dip in 1997, when the acceleration in estimated income tax payments, enacted in 1991, will end. Those speedups moved about $6 billion of individual and corporate revenue from 1997--a year that was then outside the budget window-to 1992 and 1993. Two years ago, in January 1991, CBO estimated that the revenue share of GDP in 1993 through 1995 would be 19.5 percent-0.7 to 1.0 percentage point higher than the current projection. The principal cause for the lower figures in the current projections is a reduction in the GDP share of individual income taxes, with revisions to the forecast of realizations of capital gains accounting for about half of the reduction in that tax source. In January 1991, the most recent final tax data available were for 1988-just before capital gains realizations began to fall. Subsequent data showed that the 1980s boom in realizations was only temporary. Consequently, CBO has cut back its projections of capital gains realizations for 1993 through 1995. In addition, the trend of increasing inequality in income that had prevailed since the mid1970s ended after 1988; CBO has therefore reduced the projected share of personal income that is taxed at the highest rates. Other factors that have reduced the projected share of individual income taxes are lower projected real incomes and a drop in the share of NIPA wages that appears on tax returns. The fluctuation of the federal revenue share of GDP since 1960 mirrors the fluctuation in the share of individual income taxes. These shifts were accompanied by a steady increase in the social insurance tax share and roughly offsetting decreases in the shares for corporate income taxes and excise taxes (see Figure 4-2). The individual income tax has maintained its importance as the primary source of federal revenue, contributing the same proportion of revenues-44 percent~in 1992 as in 1960. Until the mid-1980s, tax cuts periodically offset increases in individual income taxes caused by
CHAPTER FOUR
inflationary bracket creep. Further cuts in individual income taxes came in the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA), but some of the cuts for high-income taxpayers were offset, at least temporarily, by revenue-raising provisions in OBRA-90. In the CBO baseline, the individ-
ual income tax share continues to increase because of real income growth. The share of GDP claimed by social insurance taxes has increased steadily since 1960 as tax rates, coverage, and the share of wages
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
Excise Taxes
Proj.
10
Actual
10
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
SOURCE:
'"
I il Ml I! l
JUL
January 1993
subject to taxation have all increased. These additions have financed expanded benefits provided to current retirees and promised to future retirees. The contribution of social insurance taxes to total federal taxes, just 16 percent in 1960, reached 38 percent in 1992. With no further rate increases scheduled, CBO expects that both the GDP share and the revenue share of social insurance taxes will remain stable at their 1992 levels. The GDP shares claimed by corporate income taxes and excise taxes have declined since 1960. The corporate revenue share declined steadily until the mid-1980s because of a decline in corporate profits as a share of GDP and legislated reductions in tax liability. The Tax Reform Act of 1986 increased corporate taxes. After temporarily claiming a larger percentage of GDP from 1987 through 1989, the corporate share has shrunk in the past three years as a result of lower profits. In the CBO baseline, the corporate share recovers until 1995 and then holds nearly steady, reflecting a virtually flat share of GDP from corporate profits. Excise taxes-mostly specific taxes levied on each unit of a goodcontinue to be the smallest of the four major federal tax sources. These taxes have claimed a decreasing share of GDP since I960, and their importance as a source of federal revenues has diminished as their share has fallen from 13 percent of total revenues in 1960 to 3 percent in 1990. Nonetheless, increases in rates have kept their growth close to that of GDP in recent years. In the CBO baseline, excise taxes increase somewhat more slowly than does GDP because the growth in number of units sold does not keep pace with the growth in cash incomes on which income and social insurance revenues depend. In addition, two changes produce a significant drop in excise revenues between 1995 and 1996: the 2.5-cent portion of the motor fuels tax that does not go into the Highway Trust Fund expires, and the ban on certain ozone-depleting chemicals eliminates revenue from that tax.
CHAPTER FOUR Figure 4-3. Federal Effective Tax Rates for 1979,1985,1989, and 1993, by Income Group
Total
Percent
30 25
20
15 10
5 0
1979 1985 1989
1993
5 0 -5
1979 1985 1989 1993
5 0
1979
Lowest
1985
p Second i il Middle l
1989
i& Fourth {Ifl Highest
1993
SOURCE:
NOTE: Families ranked by adjusted family income, with an equal number of people per percentile. Rates for 1993 are projected.
TIT
I .Ill
68 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
in 1979. The total ETR measured here reflects the four major federal tax sources: individual and corporate income taxes, social insurance taxes, and excise taxes (except for the windfall profits tax). It excludes other federal receipts such as customs duties and estate and gift taxes. The measure of income used in computing ETRs is family income. Family income, which includes all cash income received by families plus their share of employer taxes and corporate income taxes, is smaller than GDP. The way tax burdens are distributed today is little different from their distribution in 1979 except for families with the highest incomes (see Figure 4-3). Although all other income groups saw either no change or a small decline in their ETR, the highest-income group had a decline of more than 1 percentage point. Within the highest-income group, those with the highest income had the largest cutsthe ETR for the income group comprising the 1 percent of families with the highest incomes (not shown separately in the figure) is projected to be 5 percentage points lower in 1993 than it was in 1979. Despite the decline in the ETRs for some income groups, the total ETR did not change because the highest-income groups with the highest ETRs have a larger share of total income in 1993 than in 1979. The small drops in the total ETR for all groups between 1979 and 1993 mask a number of offsetting trends. Although individual income taxes are more progressive than social insurance taxes, both became somewhat more progressive over this period. (A tax is progressive if income groups with higher incomes have a higher tax rate than those with lower incomes.) If the relative size of these two tax sources had remained constant during this time, the federal tax system as a whole would have become more progressive. Instead, the share of revenue from income taxes has shrunk and the share from social insurance taxes has grown, making the system slightly less progressive.
The average ETR for the individual income tax will be about 6 percent lower in 1993 than in 1979. Nonetheless, the individual income tax will be more progressive in 1993 than it was in 1979. A rough index of tax progressivity is the difference in the ETR for highand low-income families. (Individual income ETRs are less than zero for the lowest-income group because those families, on average, receive refundable earned income tax credits, or EITCs.) Between 1979 and 1985, the gap between the highest and lowest individual income ETRs narrowed, but it has since increased. In 1993, the difference between the rates for the highest- and lowest-income groups will be larger than it was in 1979. The added progressivity of the individual income tax did not come until the enactment of TRA and OBRA-90. Between 1979 and 1985, larger percentage cuts in ETRs went to groups with higher incomes. The net subsidy to the lowest-income group fell slightly as inflation eroded the value of personal exemptions, standard deductions, and the EITC. Both TRA and OBRA-90 lowered the ETRs for the lowest-income groups and raised the ETRs for high-income families. Although the ETR for individual income taxes will be lower in 1993 than in 1979, the ETR for social insurance taxes will be higher. The progressivity of social insurance taxes has increased slightly since the late 1970s. Barring further changes in the tax code, the total ETR should change relatively little over the next five years. However, the individual income ETR for the lowest-income group should fall even further after 1993. OBRA-90 greatly expanded the EITC, but it called for phasing in the increases, with the final one scheduled for 1994. The ETR of the highestincome group will drop in 1995 and 1996 when OBRA-90 provisions limiting itemized deductions and personal exemptions expire. Finally, the expiration of 2.5 cents of the motor fuels tax will lower the ETRs for all income groups, especially the lowest-income group.
Chapter Five
he 1992 election and the sluggish growth of the economy during the past four years focused the American public's attention on the possibility that U.S. living standards may advance more slowly in coming decades than they did during most of the period following World War II. In part, the slowdown is a result of the decline in the national saving rate in the last decade. The presidential candidates recognized that reducing the deficit is the most reliable way for policymakers to increase net national saving. Over the long run, a permanently higher rate of saving will stimulate new investment, increase productive capacity, stem the growth in net debt to foreigners, and raise the nation's standard of living. Increased spending on government investment could also raise living standards, although the effects would depend on choosing investments wisely (see Box 5-1). The long-term benefits of deficit reduction could, however, involve some short-term costs, a dimension of the problem that may not be fully recognized. Cutting the deficit necessarily involves some combination of increased taxes and reductions in valued government programs. Cutbacks in programs will hurt those who benefit both directly and indirectly from these government activities; tax increases will reduce the disposable incomes that individuals and businesses have for consumption and investment. A long time will pass before improvements in living standards that result from a deficit reduction are realized. In the meantime, deficit reduction
could disrupt the economy enough to affect most people. Substantial deficit reductions raise a number of issues. These issues include the appropriate timing and pace of deficit reduction, the magnitude of the long-term benefits, and the potential for short-term economic disruption that is likely to result from such an effort. The crucial importance of the Federal Reserve's monetary policy and the attitude of financial markets toward any deficit reduction plan must also be considered. The conclusions reported in this chapter are based, in part, on simulations of schedules for balancing the budget, using several macroeconomic models. The models, which are based on diverse views of how the economy works, were chosen to reflect a reasonable range of analytic uncertainty among economists. Although the Congressional Budget Office used the models to estimate the transitional effects of fiscal contractions that would eliminate the federal deficit within five to 10 years, there is nothing magical about the goal of a balanced budget. Some economists have argued that a modest surplus is desirable, given the fall in the private saving rate and the retirement of the baby boomers that will begin at the end of the first decade of the next century. Others have argued that if balancing the budget means shortchanging needed government programs, modest deficits should be tolerated. Even though the models differ considerably in design, they came to similar conclusions
January 1993
about the effects of eradicating the deficit. Among the conclusions: o The level of consumption that the economy can sustain in the next century would be substantially increased by erasing the deficit in the next few years, which would shift the composition of demand away from current consumption and move it toward private investment. Efforts to eliminate the deficit within the next five or 10 years could disrupt the economy, but the effect of this disruption on total demand and employment could be largely offset by a
monetary stimulus. Even without an offsetting monetary stimulus, a steady reduction of the deficit would not throw the economy into a recession, provided that the actions to erase the deficit were taken at a time when the underlying growth of total demand is at least moderate. o The amount of time taken to close out the deficit-five or 10 years-has little impact on the long-term benefits of eliminating it, provided that the effort is credible and carried through.
These general conclusions assume that the actions taken to eliminate the deficit are
CHAPTER FIVE
broad-based, including both increases in taxes and cuts in spending. The details depend, of course, on precisely which actions are chosen. In general, a program that relies disproportionately on tax increases would tend to disrupt the economy less in the short run but would yield somewhat smaller long-term benefits because it might reduce private saving and labor supply. Indeed, it is possible that some types of tax increasesuch as a large tax on income from capital-would so reduce private saving or investment as to eliminate most of the benefits of reducing the deficit. Reducing the deficit by slashing government investment spending would be similarly counterproductive. But few people advocate such changes.
doing the job quickly-say, within two years-could severely disrupt the economy, particularly since the underlying growth of the next few years is likely to be relatively weak compared with past business expansions (see Chapter 1). Rapid deficit reduction does not always bring economic problems; between 1968 and 1969, for example, an income tax surcharge combined with spending cuts eliminated a deficit equal to 3 percent of gross domestic product and replaced it with a small surplus.1 But the ability to erase the deficit so fast probably owed much to the fact that the budget deficit had only recently surged in 1968, and that the tax surcharge was intended to be temporary (although it was extended into 1970). Consumers took both events in stride without radically changing their spending on consumption. This experience probably has no current application when the nation must deal with a large structural deficit that has existed for more than a decade and will need permanent solutions. A very gradual approach to controlling the deficit-say, eliminating it over a period of 15 years-could also have disadvantages. Obviously, it would delay the increased productive capacity and reduced debt to foreigners that deficit eradication can bring. A languid pace may not convince financial markets that the deficit will ever be eliminated, because such a pace offers many chances for a reversal of fiscal policy. Thus, long-term interest rates may stay unnecessarily high, and the burden of interest payments on federal debt would continue to increase.
1.
Following the policy changes, the economy continued to grow for nearly a year and a half before a recession started in December 1969.
TUT
~ fill I ill
i limn
.Ml
January 1993
reason is that much of the rise in the deficit expected over the next decade occurs after 1998. Thus, even a plan to bring the deficit down to zero in five years--and hold it at zero thereafter-must implicitly be able to control the deficit in the late 1990s and the first years of the next century as well. And that is precisely the period over which a 10-year plan would have to accomplish its major work. In Chapter 2, CBO has projected the pattern of future deficits, assuming that the limits of the Budget Enforcement Act are adhered to until it expires at the end of 1995, and making somewhat conservative assumptions about spending in the 1996-2003 period (see Figure 5-1). Meeting the act's spending caps will already require substantial real cuts in discretionary spending programs. Beyond 1995, the projection assumes that discretionary spending will grow only with inflation-that is, the share of all discretionary spending in gross domestic product will continue to fall. Indeed, this baseline projection implies a 15year decline in discretionary spending in relation to GDP (see Figure 5-2).
Percentage of GDP
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
SOURCES:
Congressional Budget Office; Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis; Department of the Treasu ry.
Despite this fairly conservative assumption, the projection calls for an increase in the deficit, reaching about 6.8 percent of GDP by the year 2003; if the projection were extended farther into the next century, the ratio would continue to increase.2 The main culprits are the increase in the costs of the government's health care programs and the increase in the cost of paying interest on the national debt (see Chapter 2). Eliminating the deficit by 2003 would require broad policy changes-tax increases, or reductions in spending programs or entitlements--that would directly reduce the deficit by an average of about $48 billion a year.
2. General Accounting Office, Prompt Action Necessary to Avert Long-Term Damage to the Economy (June 1992). This study made similar assumptions about policy, but projected the assumptions without change through the first quarter of the next century. The growth of health care costs, retirement pensions, and interest on the debt would, under these assumptions, bring the federal deficit to 20 percent of gross national product. It is, of course, highly implausible that policies would remain unchanged over such a long period, so the GAO's conclusion must be understood only as pointing out that the current mix of policies cannot be sustained over the long term.
Baseline Deficit
Balanced \ in 1997
Balanced in 2003
~T
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
2002
SOURCES:
CHAPTER FIVE
That is, the cuts would reach $48 billion in the first year, $96 billion in the second year, and so on. The deficit need not, of course, be reduced smoothly. But if it is, the deficit would fall to near 1 percent of GDP in 1998 (see Figure 5-1). Policy actions that produced cuts averaging $64 billion a year, just one-third larger, would erase the deficit by 1998.
The most successful action to control the deficit in the past decade was taken in the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, as the economy slid into recession. Many economists supported the act, despite its unfortunate cyclical timing, because further delay seemed likely to confirm the belief of financial markets that serious action would never be taken. Just how weak the economy had become was not clear at that time.
5.
~~ i nil j in
JUL
January 1993
about 6.8 percent of GDP in 2003, by which time deposit insurance spending and the current cyclical weakness of the economy will not be distorting the deficit figures (see Chapter 2). On a comparable basisthat is, excluding spending on deposit insurance and the effects of the weak economythe structural deficit is likely to be about 3-J- percent in 1993. Thus, under current policies, the structural deficit would rise over the next 10 years by more than 3 percentage points of GDP. The deficit will increase despite the substantial policy changes necessary to meet the discretionary spending targets of the Budget Enforcement Act through 1995. Most economists believe that a sustained and substantial reduction in the structural deficit would raise net national saving and ultimately increase the nation's living standards. In fact, this is the central argument for reducing the deficit. The increased national saving that stems from deficit reduction represents, in effect, an increase in the domestic supply of financial capital. The immediate result of such an increase would be to raise net investment here and abroad by U.S. residents and to lower real interest rates. In time, the increase in the domestic capital stock would raise the economy's productive capacity, and both labor productivity and real wages would rise. Along with lower debt service on borrowing from other countries, higher real wages would raise living standards and the level of consumption per capita. These changes would also lower the exchange value of the dollar for several years. The lower dollar, in turn, would lead to a near-term improvement in the trade balance and to reduced net borrowing from other countries.
or lower government transfers, which in the short run cut directly into private saving as well as spending on consumption. Although the size of the effect is highly uncertain, some analysts have estimated that each dollar of deficit reduction could lead to a decline of about 30 cents in private saving. 6 Early elimination of the deficit-that is, by 1998-could thus increase national saving by around 5 percent of GDP in 2003, or about 70 percent of the reduction in government borrowing. That percentage probably underestimates the effect of eliminating the deficit on national saving early in the next century because the deficit would most likely continue to grow if the baseline projection were extended. But when compared with the current low level of net national saving-only 2-J percent of GDP even before the recession lowered it further-these increases are substantial.
How Much Will the Increase in National Saving Add to Living Standards in the Long Run?
A higher level of national saving works somewhat like an increase in an individual's saving; that is, it increases the resources available for future use, either for consumption or for investment. But as investment is increased, so also is the capital stock that must be maintained. Keeping track of the growth of capital and labor resources, of depreciation, and of how they affect future incomes and consumption possibilities is the job of growth accounting. That approach accounts separately for the contributions of labor, capital, and total factor productivity (that is, everything, including technical progress, that is not labor or capital
6. See Lawrence H. Summers, "Issues in Saving Policy," in Gerald F. Adams and Susan M. Wachter, eds., Saving and Capital Formation (Lexington, Mass.: Lexington Books, D.C. Heath & Co., 1986), p. 65; and Michael J. Boakin, "Concepts and Measures of Federal Deficits and Debt and Their Impact on Economic Activity," in R.J. Arrow and M.J. Boskin, eds., Economics of Public Debt (New York: MacMillan, 1988), p. 77.
CHAPTER FIVE
but contributes to growth) to the expansion of productive capacity. It predicts that for each percentage point of permanent increase in the ratio of national saving to GDP, consumption will eventually be permanently raised by about 1 percent above what it would have been without the saving increase.7 Thus, eliminating the deficit, which would raise national saving after 2003 by more than 5 percentage points, could add more than 5 percent to the sustainable level of consumption in the next century. Other approaches suggest the possibility of higher-perhaps much higher-gains, although they are not as well supported and therefore probably should not be the basis for policy decisions. New theories of economic growth suggest that the contribution of capital could be larger than that assumed by the growthaccounting framework, in part because of benefits that spill over from growing firms to the rest of the economy.8 At the same time, some historical studies appear to show that investment in equipment has disproportionately boosted growth.9 However, it is probably prudent to stay with the results of the well-established growth-accounting approach-namely, that deficit elimination will eventually increase consumption forever by more than 5 percent. Most economists are hesitant to rely heavily on apparent empirical regularities-such as the link between equipment spending and growth-that are not well understood, since they could easily turn out to be spurious. Similarly, they are wary of economic theories that lack empirical support. Moreover, there are strong
7. See Congressional Budget Office, 'Implications of Federal Deficits for Economic Growth," Chapter m in CBO, The Economic and Budget Outlook: Fiscal Years 19901994 (January 1989). For a recent survey of this literature, see X. Sala-iMartin, "Lecture Notes on Economic Growth (II): Five Prototype Models of Endogenous Growth," Working Paper No. 3564, (National Bureau of Economic Research, December 1990). J. Bradford De Long and Lawrence H. Summers, "Equipment Investment and Economic Growth," Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 106, no. 2 (May 1991).
empirical arguments for the traditional growth-accounting approach. 10 Although a good deal of macroeconomic research on new growth theories is taking place, the issue is not yet settled.
8.
9.
January 1993
value of the dollar that occurred in the first half of the 1980s, when the U.S. government's deficit increased sharply. In the 1980s the dollar's appreciation led to a significant drop in net exports and to a substantial increase in borrowing from abroad. For the first time since the 19th century, the United States became a net debtor to the rest of the world (see Figure 5-3). Erasing the government's deficit would reverse some of those changes, thereby improving net exports and depreciating the dollar. How much of the reduction in government borrowing would go into increased private investment, and how much into reducing net capital flows from other countries? In a previous study, using an earlier generation of models, CBO estimated that between 32 percent and 47 percent of a deficit reduction would be devoted to reducing net capital inflows. 11 These results are roughly consistent with the experience of the 1980s. Taking into account the decline in private saving that was discussed earlier, private investment might increase by about 30 percent of the decline in government borrowing.
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
SOURCES:
must be convinced that the reduction in government borrowing will persist and also that it will not be offset by some other factor, such as an increase in inflation. Lower interest rates directly stimulate investment and help bring about another benefit of deficit reduction: lower net capital flows from other countries. Lower interest rates reduce the dollar return on investments in the United States. Such investments will be as attractive as investments abroad only if dollars are cheaper. Thus, if the deficit is reduced, the value of the dollar in relation to other currencies will depreciate for several years. The lower dollar will make U.S. exports cheaper in world markets and raise the price of imports, increasing exports and reducing imports. The dollar would not stay indefinitely at its lower level, however; eventually, as the United States reduces its net debt to the rest of the world, the demand for dollars would increase and the dollar would rise again. The temporary dollar depreciation that would most likely result from deficit reduction is the exact counterpart of the increase in the
CHAPTER FIVE
economy, thereby reducing production and GDP below levels that they might otherwise attain. The Federal Reserve is the obvious source of offsetting action. A temporary increase in money growth, by lowering interest and exchange rates, would encourage both investment spending and net exports, and given enough advance notice, it could largely offset any short-term weakening of the economy as the deficit is cut. The macroeconomic models that CBO examined concur in this general
result, though they differ considerably as to how much monetary stimulus would be necessary to avoid weakening the economy in the short run (see Box 5-2). Two of the models suggest that the stimulus required would be manageable, but the other two indicate that a very large increment to money growth would be necessary. This disagreement among the models mirrors the uncertainties that the Federal Reserve faces when deciding whether and how to undertake stimulative action.
January 1993
Consequently, the Federal Reserve may not be able to offset so neatly the fiscal restraint implicit in deficit reduction. Indeed, some analysts believe that monetary policy is such a blunt tool, and so hard to handle, that it can be used effectively only to control long-term inflation and the value of money.12
Although the first two factors played a large role in the recent recession, they would apply with somewhat less force to monetary actions taken to offset a planned, credible, and smooth program of deficit reduction. Obviously, the task of anticipating the effects of a planned, credible deficit reduction is easier than that of responding after the fact to all of the other factors that are already affecting the economy. And even if institutional changes in financial markets continue to confuse indicators of monetary policy, it should be easier to set the monetary lever if the fiscal policy lever moves predictably--that is, if deficit reduction occurs reasonably smoothly. The third factor-the risk of temporarily higher inflation-is not widely held to be of major concern, but does worry some analysts. Most would predict little or no increase in inflation as a result of combined fiscal restraint and monetary stimulus that kept total demand below potentialthat is, at roughly the same level as if neither policy change had happened. Inflation changes little because it is closely tied to the level of total demand-or, more precisely, to the difference between total demand and total supply. When, as in the recent recession, that difference is large, inflation will fall. Policies that, in combination, have little effect on the balance between total demand and supply would have correspondingly little effect on inflation. A possibility of a temporary increase in inflation arises, however, from the depreciation of the dollar that would accompany this combination of fiscal restraint and monetary stimulus. The lower dollar would raise import prices and give a small push to the general price level. Some models predict significant increases in prices (see Box 5-3). But these models employ unrealistic assumptions about how domestic prices adjust to higher import prices. In these models, import prices have an effect on domestic prices that is out of proportion to their approximately 10 percent weight in the economy. This view is not widely shared.
12. See Allan H. Meltzer, "The Attack on Central Banks," The Wall Street Journal, December 18,1992, p. A-10.
CHAPTER FIVE
What Would Happen If the Federal Reserve Did Not Adopt a More Stimulative Monetary Policy?
Closing out the deficit without an additional, offsetting monetary stimulus risks weakening total demand in the short run. The weakening would probably be moderate, provided that the actions taken to erase the deficit were not concentrated in a couple of years.
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80 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
deficit beyond what is already in the Budget Enforcement Act, calls for overall growth of a little below 3 percent for the next five years. Thus, even without monetary offset, erasing the deficit over a reasonable period of five to 10 years need not, on its own, tip the economy into recession. The consequences of slower growth for the labor market, however, are not so benign. Growth that is 0.5 percent lower than CBO's baseline projection would be barely sufficient to put the unemployment rate on a downward trend. Thus, embarking on a course that would eliminate the deficit, without cooperation from the Federal Reserve, would risk holding the unemployment rate above 6 percent for several more years.
Failure to achieve credibility in a deficit reduction plan could sharply increase the difficulties faced by the Federal Reserve in managing the economy. If each year's reduction in the deficit comes as a surprise to the financial markets rather than as a part of a well-anticipated multiyear program, long-term interest rates would fall much more slowly and investors would be less willing to commit themselves to long-term capital projects. As a result, the Federal Reserve might have to take much more vigorous action to avoid a shortterm dip in the economy. Such a jump in money growth could well raise fears of inflation so much that the Federal Reserve would be dissuaded from taking strong action. How can policymakers maximize the credibility of deficit reduction? That is a question for the art of politics rather than that of economics. But some factors are likely to be important: o Making decisions early, and enacting them into law, is likely to enhance credibility. This injunction is straightforward in the case of taxes and entitlements, each of which is driven by law. But for spending that is determined by annual appropriations, a series of legislated and enforceable caps such as those put in place in 1990 by the Budget Enforcement Act would probably be needed. o Starting the deficit reduction soon, and not delaying the toughest sacrifices until 1997 or 1998, would avoid concern that the decisions would never be taken.
Conclusion
Reducing the U.S. budget deficit could significantly brighten the nation's economic future, boost the productivity of its workers, and raise their real wages. Failing to act could leave the nation's children and grandchildren
CHAPTER FIVE
with a disappointing growth in the economic base and in their economic prospects. The source of these benefits is a switch from fiscal policies that emphasize consumption to policies that focus on investment. As this chapter has indicated, reducing the deficit is a direct way to stimulate private investment and reduce debt to other countries. Higher levels of public investment could, in principle, raise future living standards as well, although research shows that, in practice, these investments must be chosen wisely in order to be effective. Deficit reduction could bring some shortrun economic losses, but they probably would not be large. CBO finds that deficit reductionif carried out over a five-year period-is unlikely to push the economy back into recession. Furthermore, policymakers could mini-
mize these short-run costs by passing a multiyearand credibleplan to reduce the deficit. The Federal Reserve could offset all of the contractive effects of tighter fiscal policy with more stimulative monetary policy, although concerns about inflation could make the Federal Reserve hesitant about providing a complete offset. The most serious problem facing policymakers is not how to avoid short-term economic losses from deficit reduction. The real challenge is deciding what popular spending programs to cut and which unpopular taxes to raise. Moreover, the budget numbers suggest that this task will be extremely unpleasant (see Chapter 2). Ultimately, the decision to reduce the deficit involves a judgment about the allocation of resources between current and future generations-and the legacy that the current generation wishes to leave behind.
7HIT
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Chapter Six
ome people believe that the budget process is merely the stuff of budget insiders and not terribly important to deficit reduction. Others believe that an appropriate budget process is all that is needed to eliminate the deficit. A review of recent history suggests that although budget procedures are not substitutes for policy actions to address the deficit (nor are they sufficient to force such actions), they can stiffen the resolve of policymakers and provide a certain amount of political protection for those who must make difficult decisions. For this reason, the budget process has an important, though limited, role in any effort to reduce the deficit. Even though no one should expect any process to accomplish miracles, appropriately designed procedures can make compliance with deficit-limiting actions more likely.
ously agreed-to budgetary decisions. Such outcome-oriented rules and procedures have been put in place by the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 (popularly known as Gramm-Rudman-Hollings) and the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BE A). Although reforms such as the Budget and Accounting Act and the Budget Act have certainly improved the information available to decisionmakers and rationalized the decisionmaking process, they did not prevent the occurrence of unprecedented peacetime deficits in the 1980s and the early 1990s. These deficits led to experimenting with the category of outcome-oriented budget procedures and to a raft of proposals for additional procedures of this sort. This chapter focuses on whether and how such procedures are likely to aid in reducing the deficit. Recent history indicates that the best recipe for deficit reduction is to couple enacting longterm deficit reduction (as opposed to enacting promises of future actions) with a process to enforce that reduction. This formula was followed by the architects of the 1990 budget agreement, which led to deficit reduction legislation and the BEA. The best approach to additional deficit reduction is to build on this model by deciding on specific policies to reduce the deficit and providing a budget process to enforce this agreement. The Congressional Budget Office's volume Reducing the Deficit: Spending and Revenue Options, which will be published in February
The term budget process here refers broadly to all of the rules and procedures that affect the level of federal spending and taxes. The term encompasses two different categories of rules and procedures, although the categories have some overlap. One category might be considered the traditional category. It includes rules and procedures, such as those established by the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921 and the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (the Budget Act), that guide the formulation and consideration of the federal budget but do not impose any restrictions on budget outcomes. The second category includes rules and procedures that are intended to ensure some predetermined outcome~a balanced budget or a budget that complies with some previ-
I '11111?
84 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
1993, contains specific policy options that could be included in a multiyear deficit reduction package. This chapter discusses the issues that policymakers must address when devising an appropriate process to enforce deficit reduction. A review of budgetary decisionmaking and outcomes under both GrammRudman-Hollings and the BEA yields lessons to guide those who would revamp the budget process. CBO applies these lessons in concluding that extension, perhaps with some modification, of the current BEA procedures, coupled with enactment of a long-term deficit reduction package, offers the best chance of significantly reducing the deficit in the next few years.
was $100 billion. The actual deficit for that year was $221 billion. In 1990, the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings procedures were largely replaced by the BEA, which resulted from the budget agreement adopted that year. Enacted in conjunction with a legislative package that provided deficit reduction of almost $500 billion over five years, the BEA set up separate enforcement mechanisms for discretionary spending and for mandatory spending and revenue actions. These mechanismsa limitation on discretionary spending and a pay-as-you-go requirement for mandatory spending and revenuesreplaced the previous focus on fixed deficit targets with a concentration on limiting legislative actions that would increase the deficit. In general, the process the BEA established has been successful in preserving the deficit reductions enacted in 1990, even though other factors have caused a substantial increase in the projected deficits since then. The first BEA enforcement mechanism limits discretionary spending-spending that is provided in annual appropriation acts. For fiscal years 1991 through 1993, annual appropriation and outlay ceilings were established for each of three categories of discretionary spending-defense, international, and domestic. For the two years after 1993, budget authority and outlay caps exist only for the total of discretionary spending. Any violation of the spending caps is enforced through a sequestration of discretionary spending--in the category in which the violation occurs through 1993, and in total discretionary spending in 1994 and 1995. The BEA's second major enforcement mechanism is the pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) process that applies to mandatory spending and revenues, which are both controlled by permanent law (or at least laws that do not require annual renewal). Mandatory spending, such as that for Medicare and farm price support programs, is determined by laws establishing eligibility rules, benefit rates, or other provisions that require the federal government to make
CHAPTER SIX
Box 6-1. Changes in the Deficit Outlook Since the Budget Agreement
Shortly after enactment of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA-90), which put in place deficit reduction agreed to by the President and the Congress that year, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that budget deficits would be reduced by nearly $500 billion over the 1991-1995 period, with the deficit down to $29 billion in 1995. CBO currently estimates that the deficit in 1995 will be $284 billion (see table below). What has happened to cause such a dramatic reestimate in the deficit? Perhaps as important as what has happened is what has not happened. First, the reduction in the deficit resulting from OBRA-90 has not been dramatically less than was estimated two years ago. If the changes in spending and taxes agreed to in 1990 had never happened, the deficits in 1991 through 1995 would be close to $500 billion higher than current estimates. Second, legislation enacted since 1990 has not significantly increased deficits. In fact, legislated policy changes account for only $2 billion of the estimated $255 billion increase in the projected 1995 deficit. What has happened is that factors beyond the direct control of the President or the Congress have reduced revenues and increased spending for entitlements and other mandatory programs. Revenues are lower because real economic growth was slower than anticipated. Lower inflation has also pushed down revenues, but this effect on the deficit is approximately offset by lower automatic cost-of-living adjustments in benefit programs, which are tied to inflation. Other expenditures in major benefit programs are up, largely because of dramatic increases in Medicare and Medicaid spending caused by a number of technical factors. Although the estimated overall costs of closing ailing thrifts and banks has not increased since 1990, delays in funding thrift resolutions has increased the estimated 1995 cost. Finally, net interest costs in 1995 are higher because of increased deficits in 1991 through 1995, although lower interest rates partially offset this increase.
Changes in CBO Deficit Projections Since the 1990 Budget Summit (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1991
December 1990 Projection Policy Changes Revenues Outlays Desert Storm spending1" Desert Storm contributions Other Subtotal Deficit Economic Changes Revenues Outlays Deficit Technical Changes Revenues Outlays Deposit insurance1 Medicaid and Medicare Other major benefit programs Debt service Other Subtotal Deficit Total Current Projection
253
1992
1993
170
1994
56
1995
29
262
10 0 4 14 9
-78 -31 47 -42 -28 32 24 a J3 42 84 140 310
2 0 _2 4 4
-90 -38 52 -38
1 0 1 2 2
-102 -34 68
-31
1 32
-24 -28 7 8 -1 -7 -21 3
-36 37 60
25 18 _8 148 185
255 284
1
-71 -34
51 45 24 8 13 140 179
235 291
16 270
28
290
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office. NOTE: The December 1990 projections appeared in Congressional Budget Office, "The 1990 Budget Agreement: An Interim Assessment," CBO Paper (December 1990). a. Less than $500 million. b. Estimated; Desert Storm outlays are not segregated from other defense outlays. c. Excludes changes in estimated interest paid by two deposit insurance agencies (the Resolution Trust Corporation and the Bank Insurance Fund) to the Treasury. These payments are intrabudgetary and do not affect the deficit.
irw
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January 1993
expenditures. Revenues are determined by the tax rates and tax rules set forth in laws. The PAYGO rules require that the net effect of legislative actions taken since 1990 that affect mandatory spending and revenues in the 1991-1995 period must not increase the combined deficit of the current and next fiscal year. If this condition is not met, the PAYGO discipline is enforced through a separate sequestration of the resources available to mandatory programs other than those the BEA specifically exempts from sequestration. Deficit targets, though they still exist, play no role under the BEA through 1993. Through that year, the President must adjust them for changes in economic and technical assumptions and conceptual revisions. (The President has the option to make similar adjustments for 1994 and 1995.) As long as the targets are fully adjusted, the deficit estimate may increase substantially-because of a deteriorating economy, for example-and no action would be mandated to offset the bleaker deficit outlook. The BEA has been generally successful in its first two years in enforcing the deficit reduction actions that resulted from the 1990 budget agreement. The discretionary spending caps are holding; the appropriations committees and the Congress lived within their limits for 1991 and 1992 and actually reduced spending to a level below the caps in 1993. The pay-as-you-go process has discouraged major efforts to increase entitlement spending or cut taxes or both. Nonetheless, the deficit has not come down since the BEA was enacted. It is higher now than it was before the passage of that law, and CBO projects that the long-term deficit problem will worsen without further policy actions (see Chapter 2). But the deficit's failure to come down cannot be laid at the feet of the BEA. When enacting the BEA, policymakers believed that the budget summit agreement would lower the deficit substantially; the BEA included no
requirement for additional deficit reduction if this expectation was not met. The factors that have led to an increase in the projected deficit since 1990 have largely to do with the deterioration of the economy and technical reestimates of revenues and spending, especially for Medicare and Medicaid (see Box 6-1). That virtually none of the change in the deficit outlook results from policies enacted since the BEA is a testament to the act's success in enforcing the budget agreement.
Lessons Learned
The past seven years have provided an experiment in the efficacy of two very different approaches to using the budget process to reduce the deficit. Although neither GrammRudman-Hollings nor the Budget Enforcement Act has resulted in the hoped-for deficit reduction, several lessons emerge from the actual results under each regime. o First, budget procedures are much better at enforcing deficit reduction agreements than at forcing such agreements to be reached. Second, participants in the budget process should be held accountable for results that are under their direct control.
o Third, the enforcement process must be credible. o Fourth, the process must include a certain amount of flexibility to allow reasonable responses to unexpected events.
CHAPTER SIX
specter of sequestration would force the President and the Congress to negotiate and agree to meaningful deficit reduction measures. But agreement could not be reached on enough real, permanent deficit reduction to lower the deficit to the statutory level. Instead, the legal requirement to meet the targets was satisfied by using overly optimistic economic assumptions and outright budget gimmickry, such as shifting military pay dates between fiscal years and moving costly spending offbudget. The experience under Gramm-RudmanHollings demonstrated that if the President and the Congress are unwilling to agree on a painful deficit reduction package, it is unlikely that any budget procedure can force them to agree. Instead, budgetary legerdemain is likely to used to meet the letter of the law, and the hard decisions that would achieve real, permanent deficit reduction will still be avoided. Any budget procedure that establishes fixed deficit targets represents an attempt to force future agreements and is subject to this problem. A constitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget, a particularly prominent proposed means of establishing fixed deficit targets, would be no exception (see Box 6-2). A process that sets fixed amounts of deficit reduction to be achieved in coming years is also an attempt to force future actions and is likely to be less effective than a system that enforces reductions that have already been put in place. At least in the case of fixed reduction targets, however, the magnitude of the required future changes can be set at a reasonable level that is not subject to huge increases resulting from changes in the economy and technical factors. Conversely, if the President and the Congress agree on and enact a painful package of spending cuts and tax increases to reduce the deficit, budget procedures that highlight and penalize deviations from that agreement can be effective. The procedures succeed in part because the participants in the agreement have an incentive to stick to the original terms, but this success also reflects the fact that it is far easier to block legislation than to
enact it. The parliamentary impediments (such as filibusters in the Senate, the need to muster majorities in numerous committees and at various stages of the legislative process, or the two-thirds majority in each House required to override a Presidential veto)
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that make enacting deficit reduction, or any controversial legislation, so difficult also work against reversing deficit reduction legislation once it is in place. The durability of enacted deficit reductions was demonstrated by the defeat of several attempts in 1992 to tear down the walls between the defense and domestic discretionary spending categories and use defense savings to fund domestic programs at a level above the domestic cap. Given the demand for additional domestic spending and the political climate at the time, establishing de novo a domestic spending cap at the level of the BEA cap almost certainly would have been impossible in 1992. It was possible, however, to block efforts that would have revised the previously agreed-upon BEA cap to allow more domestic spending.
defend them from cuts without worrying about whether their actions would trigger a sequestration. The BEA makes it easy to identify those responsible for deviations from the budget agreement, and it applies the sequestration more precisely than Gramm-RudmanHollings. If discretionary spending exceeds the cap, legislation within the jurisdiction of the appropriations committees is clearly responsible, and any resulting sequestration applies only to the discretionary spending within the relevant category (or to all discretionary spending in 1994 and 1995). If the PAYGO scorecard shows a net deficit increase, those who supported legislation that increased mandatory spending or reduced revenues are clearly responsible; any sequestration that does occur applies only to mandatory spending. Because the two committees that write tax legislation-the House Ways and Means Committee and the Senate Committee on Finance-also have jurisdiction over programs that represent a very large share of mandatory spending, the responsibility for avoiding net PAYGO deficit increases is more concentrated than is at first apparent. As a result of the clear connection between legislation and a sequestration, PAYGO legislation that increases the deficit is the subject of intense scrutiny. The first question asked of anyone proposing an increase in mandatory spending or a cut in taxes since the BEA is almost always "How are you going to pay for it?" No PAYGO sequestration has yet been triggered, because any enacted deficit increases have been offset, at least according to OMB's estimates, by measures that reduce the deficit.
Promoting Accountability
One of the problems with Gramm-RudmanHollings was that the fixed deficit targets made it virtually impossible to identify any budget participants who were responsible if the deficit was estimated to exceed the target. Any excess was the result of numerous factors, including ones not directly under the control of any budget participant, such as slowerthan-expected economic growth. The inability to assign responsibility for the excess made it more difficult to reach agreement on how to eliminate it. In addition, if efforts to cut the deficit were only partially successful and a sequestration did occur, it would apply to all programs that were not specifically exempt from all sequestrations, whether or not those programs had already been cut in the effort to reach the target. Policymakers, therefore, were more hesitant than usual to volunteer cuts for a deficit reduction package. Furthermore, because many programs were exempt from sequestration, advocates of those programs were free to try to increase spending in those programs or
Maintaining Credibility
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings lacked credibility because it promised results that were virtually impossible to achieve, and it invited evasion through phony estimates and budgetary gimmicks.
CHAPTER SIX
Reaching the original deficit targets or the revised targets established in 1987 might have seemed possible, though ambitious, when the targets were established. As the performance of the economy fell below expectations and the costs of programs such as Medicaid and Medicare increased above projections, however, it became clear that there was virtually no way to reach the targets. For example, in October 1990, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) estimated that a sequestration of $83 billion would have been necessary to meet the Gramm-RudmanHollings target of $64 billion in fiscal year 1991. According to OMB, a sequestration of $83 billion would have cut spending for each nonpersonnel defense account by 35 percent and each nonexempt domestic account by 32 percent. The President and the Congress clearly could not allow a sequestration of that size to take effect; therefore, neither the deficit target nor the supposedly automatic enforcement was credible. The credibility of Gramm-Rudman-Hollings also suffered because of the overly optimistic economic and technical estimates and the budgetary gimmicks it encouraged. Rosy scenarios are almost inevitable in any system that focuses on meeting fixed deficit targets. The effects of changes in economic and technical assumptions on the deficit can easily dwarf the effects of proposed policy changes. Making the forecast of economic growth a little more optimistic is more palatable than including in the budget a deeper cut in a popular entitlement program or a tax increase. Also, any system that focuses enforcement on one year at a time, as Gramm-RudmanHollings did, invites schemes that produce apparent deficit savings in the target year while increasing deficits in other years. The BEA is more credible than GrammRudman-Hollings because it promises only to prevent legislative changes that would diminish the deficit reduction put in place as a result of the 1990 budget agreement. That is not a clearly unobtainable goal. In addition, the automatic sequestrations that enforce the
BEA are credible because they are likely to be relatively small. Unlike Gramm-RudmanHollings, these sequestrations apply only to deficit increases caused by legislative actions, and such actions are unlikely to increase the deficit in any year by the very large amounts that can result from changes in the economy or technical factors. The BEA also is less subject to rosy scenarios and budgetary gimmicks. Optimistic economic and technical assumptions have a great effect on estimates of the deficit, which are not relevant in BEA enforcement, but ordinarily have relatively little effect on estimates of the costs of new legislation, which are central to BEA enforcement. Timing shifts and other budgetary gimmicks are harder to use to evade BEA enforcement because the BEA has a multiyear focus. Unlike GrammRudman-Hollings, the BEA does not ignore any current-year deficit increases after initial estimates indicate compliance at the beginning of the year. It also does not allow the possibility that future estimates of lower deficits based on optimistic economic or technical assumptions will eliminate the need to offset increases in future deficits resulting from current legislation. Any estimate that current legislation will increase a future deficit will require lower spending or higher taxes in that future year-at least through 1995, when the BEA expires.
Providing Flexibility
Any budget process must be flexible enough to deal with unforeseen circumstances that require budgetary responses. For example, it is often appropriate for the federal government to engage in countercyclical fiscal policy when the economy is in recession. The federal government also responds to other emergencies, such as natural disasters or international crises, that cannot always be anticipated. The budget process must recognize these realities; indeed, its continued survival depends on providing policymakers with the flexibility to deal with these unanticipated
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January 1993
events. The BEA assisted in this goal by establishing an explicit exception for discretionary appropriations, mandatory spending increases, or tax cuts that the legislation and the President designate as emergency requirements. Despite some predictions to the contrary, the President and the Congress have resisted the urge to use this safety valve to evade the BEA's strictures on a large scale. Any process designed to enforce future deficit reduction agreements should maintain such exceptions.
If subsequent changes in the economy or the costs of mandatory programs lead to deficits that are significantly different than anticipated in the wake of the enacted deficit reduction, the President and the Congress should consider taking additional action at that time. The BEA requires actions in response to events that are under the direct control of policymakers, but does not require the situation to be revisited if the deficit outlook deteriorates for other reasons. Although no process should be put in place that is intended to force future actions, neither should the existence of a process enforcing a previous plan be used as an excuse to avoid taking responsible actions in response to changed circumstances.
Discretionary Spending
Because discretionary appropriations are enacted for one year at a time, it is not possible to enact discretionary savings for future years. However, as the BEA shows, it is possible to enact caps on discretionary spending so that cuts in discretionary spending below a baseline level can be part of a multiyear deficit reduction package. Some people believe that giving the President the authority to veto line items in appropriation bills would also help to achieve savings in discretionary spending, but an item veto seems more likely to affect the composition of discretionary spending than to contribute to deficit reduction (see Box 6-3). Setting caps that are supposed to ensure future discretionary savings may seem to run counter to the argument that the budget process is not good at forcing future agreements on specific cuts. But the very fact that discretionary spending is annually appropriated is what makes the caps work. Because mandatory spending and taxes are based on permanent law, the President and the Congress can avoid making promised future cuts simply by failing to take action. But appropriators must act every year in order to provide funding for
CHAPTER SIX
discretionary programs. They cannot evade the caps by simply failing to act. Instead of the caps being a device to force future actions, they are mechanisms that limit future actions. If an agreement is reached on a new deficit reduction package that extends beyond 1995, the BEA discretionary caps should be adjusted and extended in order to enforce the level of discretionary spending assumed in that package. Such enforcement is credible as long as the caps are not unreasonably low. One important issue is whether the caps cover only
total discretionary spending, as the BEA provides in 1994 and 1995, or whether there should be a return to the separate caps on discretionary categories that existed in 1991 through 1993. Caps on total spending provide decisionmakers with more flexibility in responding to changing needs, but still ensure that the promised discretionary savings are achieved. Having separate caps on categories reduces flexibility, but it leads to deficit reduction if actual funding in any category is below the cap: the deficit is reduced because those savings cannot be used to increase spending in
Box 6-3.
What Is the Likely Effect of the Item Veto? Many Presidents have sought the authority to reduce or eliminate specific items in appropriation bills, a power possessed by 43 of the 50 state governors. These Presidents have argued that an item veto would empower them, as a representative of the general interest, to reduce low-priority or locally oriented--so-called porkbarrel-projects, thus leading to a reduction in the deficit. Various statutory alternatives that are designed to have largely the same effect as the item veto have also been proposed. The most popular of these would expand the current powers of the President to propose rescinding appropriated funds under the Congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974. Expedited rescission proposals (such as H.R. 2164, which passed the House in the closing days of the 102nd Congress) are the most limited in their grant of authority to the President. They would require the Congress to vote on proposed rescissions, with a simple majority prevailing on the vote. At present, the Congress can kill the proposed rescissions simply by failing to act on the proposal. Giving the President item veto or similar power would certainly represent a shift in the constitutional balance of powers, but it is unlikely to have any significant effect on deficits. Because the item veto and its statutory substitutes would apply only to discretionary spending, which represents only about 40 percent of total outlays and is growing much more slowly than mandatory spending, the item veto's potential to reduce the deficit or control spending is necessarily limited. The item veto has limited potential to reduce even the discretionary portion of the budget. Because the Budget Enforcement Act's spending caps represent a statutory agreement between the President and the Congress on the level of discretionary spending, the item veto is unlikely to spur additional reductions. Any reductions in appropriations from line-item vetoes are likely to be replaced by other spending, so the only result would be a shift in the composition of spending. Even if discretionary spending limits were not in place, Presidents are likely to use the threat of vetoes to gain increases in spending they support rather than to reduce spending overall. Only Presidents who value reduced spending over pursuing their own spending priorities are likely to even try to use the item veto for deficit reduction. Because an item veto would shift the balance of power between the President and the Congress, it probably would affect the distribution of spending by substituting some Presidential budget priorities for Congressional ones. Evidence from studies of the states' use of the item veto supports this claim; state governors have used it to shift state spending priorities rather than to decrease spending. Some analysts would argue that shifting spending priorities is sufficient reason to adopt the item veto if the President is less likely to engage in porkbarrel spending. An item veto, they claim, would make the President more responsible for spending choices and would lessen the tendency for the two branches to blame each other for the proliferation of "wasteful" spending.
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another category. Separate caps also focus accountability by reducing the number of decisionmakers with primary responsibility for ensuring compliance with a cap.
The BEA's current sequestration process for discretionary programs should be used to enforce any limits on appropriations that are part of a new deficit reduction package. Any
CHAPTER SIX
sequestration that occurs is aimed only at programs under the jurisdiction of the appropriators--and only within the offending category if there are separate category caps. Also, the scope of the sequestration is comprehensive because almost no discretionary programs are exempt.
Mandatory Spending
In contrast to its annual funding of discretionary programs, the Congress can enact changes now in mandatory programs and taxes that will achieve the multiyear deficit reduction that has been agreed to. The enforcement mechanism then merely needs to prevent legislative actions that would undo the savings that have been achieved, rather than put a cap on future spending or a floor under taxes. In place of this approach, however, some people have proposed enacting a cap on future mandatory spending as a way to force future action to cut mandatory programs or, failing that, to achieve savings through future acrossthe-board sequestrations of mandatory programs. As with proposals to set fixed deficit or deficit reduction targets, the mandatory cap approach assumes that establishing a new procedure can force future agreements to take politically difficult steps (in this case, agreements to cut mandatory programs) that are currently not possible. And, as with fixed targets, a mandatory cap is likely to end up promising more than it can deliver-with gimmicks and phony estimates taking the place of real spending cuts and with promised automatic cuts lacking credibility (see Box 6-4). The most effective means of reducing mandatory spending or increasing revenues is to enact laws now that achieve multiyear deficit reduction and to enforce the new deficit reduction package by extending the BEA's PAYGO procedures for a number of years. The PAYGO mechanism is not as well focused or comprehensive as the discretionary procedures. A tax cut that is not offset by
mandatory spending cuts or tax increases would trigger a sequestration of mandatory spending rather than a tax increase. Further, the majority of mandatory spending is exempt from sequestration even though increases in exempt programs might be the cause of the sequestration. Although the current PAYGO system has worked well, expanding the application of sequestration would increase the fairness of the process and expand the number of policymakers with strong incentives to avoid sequestration. The President and the Congress should consider making an automatic increase in taxes a part of PAYGO sequestration and broadening the base of programs that are subject to sequestration to include the vast amount of spending on programs that primarily benefit the middle class. These actions would be likely to ensure that advocates of these benefit programs and advocates of low taxes would actively oppose any legislation that might lead to a PAYGO sequestration.
Conclusion
The past indicates that efforts to reduce the deficit are most likely to be successful if the President and the Congress first agree on policy actions and then set up processes to enforce them: deficit reduction does not work as well if the process changes precede the policy actions. For example, both Gramm-Rudman-Hollings and the proposed balanced budget amendment try to force agreement on specific deficit-reducing actions. Processes are not as good at forcing agreements, however, as they are at enforcing them. Procedures are important, but they should not be asked to do what they cannot. If agreement exists on policy actions, many of the major process changes (such as the balanced budget amendment, the lineitem veto, and mandatory caps) that have been advocated are superfluous. The Congress and the President should avoid any temptation to substitute process for policy, but should recognize the importance of process in ensuring that policy changes are realized.
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Appendixes
t HIM III
TF1T
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Appendix A
he Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA) requires the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to issue a sequestration preview report for the coming fiscal year five days before the President submits the budget and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) issues its sequestration preview report. For the past two years, CBO's sequestration preview report has appeared as Appendix A of this volume. This year, however, the Presidential transition has delayed the President's budget submission, the OMB sequestration report, and, therefore, the CBO sequestration report. No date for issuing the President's budget and the OMB sequestration report had been set when this volume was prepared. Although CBO's sequestration preview report will not be issued at this time, CBO did have to calculate the anticipated BEA limits on discretionary spending for 1994 and 1995 because the limits must be used to estimate baseline discretionary spending for this report. Discretionary spending for fiscal year 1993 is simply CBO's estimate of appropriations enacted for that year. In 1994 and 1995, however, the baseline assumes that discretionary spending will equal the estimated limits on total discretionary spending set by the BEA. In 1996 through 1998, discretionary spending in the baseline is the estimated 1995 spending limit adjusted for projected increases in the consumer price index for all urban consumers. This appendix describes how CBO calculated the spending limits used in these baseline estimates.
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future inflation rates that can only be estimated now, determining the exact level of the future adjustments is not possible. In this report, the baseline levels of discretionary spending in 1994 and 1995 equal CBO's estimates of the spending limits for those years after all adjustments required by the BEA have been made. Because the discretionary spending limits in OMB's sequestration reports are controlling, the starting point for these estimates is the limits specified in the OMB Final Sequestration Report to the President and Congress for Fiscal Year 1993, issued on October 23,1992. These limits have been modified by CBO's estimates of the future adjustments required by the BEA (see Table A-l). These adjustments include both those that will be made in the sequestration preview report that is to accompany the President's budget submission for 1994, and those
Table A-1. CBO Estimates of End-of-Session Discretionary Spending Limits for Fiscal Years 1994 and 1995 (In billions of dollars)
1994
Budget Authority Limits as of October 23,1992 Adjustments in the Sequestration Preview Report for Fiscal Year 1994 Emergency appropriations Category changes Change in 1992 inflation Credit subsidy reesti mates Other Future Adjustments Internal Revenue Service funding above the June 1990 baseline Change in 1993 inflation Special allowance for discretionary new budget authority Total Estimated End-of-Session Limits
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
1995
Outlays Budget Authority Outlays
515.3
539.9
522.1
542.3
0.2
n.a.
0.2 n.a.
0.2 -1.5
1 9
-2.6
1 4
-1.3
538.5
22
-2.8
539.5
-4.9
512.7
517.1
APPENDIX A
Emergency Appropriations
The BEA requires that the spending limits be adjusted to reflect the enactment of appropriations that are designated as emergency expenditures both by the legislation providing the appropriations and by the President. Although no emergency appropriations have been enacted since OMB's last sequestration report, some have become available for obligation. In a number of instances, the ability to spend appropriated funds was made contingent on the President's emergency designation. Some of these contingent appropriations were not designated as emergencies by the President when he signed the bills, were therefore not available for obligation at that time, and were not included in OMB's final sequestration report adjustments. Since the OMB final sequestration report, however, the President has designated a number of these appropriations as emergencies. The adjustments to the 1994 and 1995 outlay limits reflect the effects of the 1993 budget authority newly available as a result of these emergency designations.
any current- or budget-year costs or savings that result from provisions in an appropriation bill should be included in the estimate of discretionary spending for that year, even if the costs or savings are in a mandatory spending program. Similarly, any appropriation for a discretionary program provided in an authorizing bill is included in the PAYGO scorecard. Adjusting the discretionary spending limits for future years ensures that the appropriations committees are held responsible for any future-year effects of changes in mandatory programs included in their bills, but are not affected by appropriations for discretionary programs provided by other committees. For example, the fiscal year 1993 appropriation act for the Departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and related agencies (Public Law 102-394) mandated a delay in paying fiscal year 1993 Medicare claims made by electronic means. This delay reduced Medicare costs by $185 million in 1993, but 1994 costs will be increased by $185 million when the delayed payments are made. The 1993 savings were included in the estimate of the 1993 appropriation bill, but rather than attributing the 1994 cost to next year's appropriation bill, the 1994 discretionary spending limit is reduced by $185 million. Similarly, Public Law 102-334 (An Act to Partially Restore Authority Authorized in the Intermodal Surface Transportation Act of 1991), an authorizing bill included in the PAYGO scorecard, increases 1994 and 1995 outlays for discretionary highway programs. Because these outlays will be attributed to the appropriation bills in those years, the discretionary outlay limits must by increased by $82 million in 1994 and $17 million in 1995 to make sure the appropriations committees are not adversely affected by the action of the authorizing committees. Without compromising BEA enforcement, adjustments of this sort provide a simple alternative to keeping track for the duration of the BEA of any mandatory spending effects caused by appropriation actions and any discretionary spending provided by authorizing bills.
Category Changes
The BEA provides for adjustments that reflect changes in budgetary concepts and definitions. Adjustments for changes in budgetary categories are made under this authority. The category changes made in these calculations result from the practice of assigning legislated changes in spending to the discretionary or pay-as-you-go (PAYGO) category of the BEA based on the committee that initiated the legislation, rather than on the nature of the spending involved. (In general, the discretionary spending caps control spending for discretionary programs, and PAYGO procedures control revenues and mandatory spending. See Chapter 6 for a description of BEA enforcement.) The Office of Management and Budget and the budget committees have determined that
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vent a windfall if the subsidy estimates are reduced. It was feared that the subsidy estimates, first required in 1992 when the Credit Reform Act of 1990 was implemented, could be quite volatile because the information required to make the estimates was incomplete at best. The reductions shown in Table A-l reflect CBO subsidy rates that, on balance, are lower than the rates used by OMB in fiscal year 1993. The largest adjustments result from different estimates of the subsidies involved in mortgage-backed guarantees of the Government National Mortgage Association, general and special risk and mutual mortgage insurance guarantees of the Federal Housing Administration, and direct loans of the Rural Housing Insurance Fund.
APPENDIX A
1991 through 1993. The outlay limits for those categories would be increased by the outlays that would flow from the additional budget authority. The act also required that the same special budget authority allowance be provided in the final reports for 1994 and 1995 if the President chooses to exercise his option to adjust the BEA maximum deficit amounts (MDAs) for those years for all economic and technical changes. Because there are no separate limits on spending for the international or domestic categories in 1994 or 1995, the total discretionary limits for those years are adjusted. This report went to press before January 21, 1993, the date set by the BEA for the President to declare his intentions on the MDA adjustments for this year. The estimated spending limits are based on the assumption that the President will choose to adjust the MDAs this year and next. (The BEA gives the President the option to adjust the MDAs again next year if the adjustment is made this year. If the adjustment is not made this year, it cannot be made next year, either.) If the President does not adjust the MDAs, the spending limits assumed in this report would have to be revised to exclude the special budget authority allowance.
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Appendix B
n May 1991, the Congress adopted a budget resolution for fiscal year 1992 that anticipated a deficit of $279 billion. Seventeen months later, when fiscal year 1992 ended, the Treasury Department tallied the deficit at $290 billion-just $11 billion higher. This deceptively small overrun, however, conceals many factors that buffeted the budget numbers in the meantime. In this appendix, the Congressional Budget Office contrasts the actual totals in fiscal year 1992 with that year's budget resolution and then presents a 13-year retrospective. But first comes an explanation of how the differences are categorized.
actual performance of the economy. Every budget resolution is accompanied by assumptions about several key economic variables, chiefly gross domestic product, unemployment, inflation, and interest rates. Only the deferences that can be linked rigorously to thsse variables are labeled economic. Such deferences occur almost wholly in revenues, benefit programs, and net interest. Other differences that are arguably related to economic performance (for example, higher support payments to farmers in response to weak agricultural exports) are not lumped into this category because their relationship to the publislhed forecast is more tenuous. Technical differences are all other types of discrepancies. The portions of the budget that haVe contributed the biggest technical differerices in the past 13 years are noted at the end of this appendix. Large technical differences often prompt both CBO and the Administratid>n to review their methods of projection, but some such differences are inevitable given the size and volatility of the budget. Assigning differences to these three categories is not always simple. In the past few years, where to put the huge differences in deposit insurance outlays has posed a particularly thorny problem. In August 1989, the Congress passed the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (FIRREA) to reform deposit insurance, beef up regulation, and fund savings and loan resolutions. It soon became clear that FIRREA did not grant enough resources, and the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC), the agency in charge of the cleanup, has had to make several
Sources of Differences
CBO divides the differences between budget resolutions and actual outcomes into three categories: policy, economic, and technical. Policy differences reflect the passage of legislation that was not explicitly anticipated in the budget resolution or legislation that cost (or saved) more money than was assumed. An example is the Tax Reform Act of 1986, which was not explicitly included in the 1987 budget resolution and which brought in a first-year surge of extra revenues. Policy differences can also reflect a failure to enact legislation that was assumed in the resolution. Economic differences can be blamed on the budget resolution's failure to anticipate the
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104 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
return trips to the Congress for more funds. Because deposit insurance is a legal obligation of the government, CBO and the Administration have recently shown estimates of future outlays on the assumption that necessary funds will be provided. Buttressing this practice, the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA) states that funding that merely honors the government's existing commitment does not count as a deficit increase on the official pay-as-you-go scorecard, signifying that it does not require offsetting tax increases or spending cuts. Even so, there have been three droughts in funding for the RTC, including one that has lasted since April 1992. In theory, it might be possible to separate the huge differences in deposit insurance outlays into those stemming from legislative inaction and those from estimating errors. In practice, this is not only tricky but leads to perverse conclusions. Showing huge "savings" in the policy column from underfunding the savings and loan cleanup would imply that policymakers deserve praise for cutting the deficit. This is hardly the case; as CBO has consistently emphasized, delays in funding do not shrink the cleanup's total cost, but in fact tend to boost it. Thus, by convention, the differences in deposit insurance estimates, whether positive or negative, are now explicitly listed on the technical side of the tally sheet.
TabieB-1. Comparison of 1992 Budget Resolution with Actual Outcomes (In billions of dollars) Budget Resolution3 Revenues Outlays Deficit SOURCE: a. b. 1,169.2 1,448.0 278.8
Difference
Consolidated totals. As reported by the Department of the Treasury, Final Monthly Treasury Statement for Fiscal Year 1992 (October 28,1992).
stances (chiefly emergencies). Thus, the act reined in one set of factors-legislative actions--that could balloon the deficit. But the budget remained susceptible to changes in economic conditions or in hard-to-project technical factors, which lie outside the direct control oflegislators. Having just wrapped up a five-year budget agreement, policymakers simply complied with its terms in early 1991 as they crafted the next year's budget blueprint. The resolution thus contained no legislative departures. It directed the appropriations committees to comply with the spending caps spelled out in the BEA. And although it did not rule out changes in tax or entitlement policies, it assumed that any legislative initiatives would comply with the budget summit's strictures, which require any such changes to be, at worst, neutral in their deficit impact. Although the budget resolution passed the Congress soon after Operation Desert Storm, the resolution did not explicitly include spending for the costs of the conflict. But it did not need to. Under the BEA, Desert Storm was considered an emergency, and~once the Congress and the President agreed on funds-the discretionary caps would be adjusted to accommodate this spending. Thus, by omitting Desert Storm funding from the resolution, the
APPENDIX B
105
Congress deferred to its own appropriations committees, which were still considering legislation to cover the operation's costs. The budget resolution called for revenues of $1,169 billion, outlays of $1,448 billion, and a deficit of $279 billion (see Table B-l). Actual revenues and outlays were sharply lower than projected, and the deficit modestly larger, for reasons that are detailed below and in Table B-2.
Changes in Policies
Policy actions boosted the deficit by $12 billion from the figure in the resolution. As noted, the budget resolution did not specifically address funding for Operation Desert Storm.
CBO judges that Desert Storm-related costs totaled about $13 billion in 1992 as the military continued to replace weapons and materiel that were consumed in the conflict. Neither CBO nor other analysts can nail down these outlays precisely, because they are not segregated from other, ongoing defense outlays. Instead, analysts must sift a variety of clues, chiefly the bulges in particular categories of Defense Department outlays. Final contributions from allied nations arrived in 1992 to the tune of $5 billion. In sum, Desert Storm boosted the 1992 deficit by about $8 billion from the budget resolution's figure. Looking at a single year's numbers can be myopic, and Desert Storm-related spending is a prime example. Total cash contributions from allied nations were $48 billion and
Table B-2. Sources of Differences Between Actual Budget Totals and Budget Resolution Totals for Fiscal Year 1992 (In billions of dollars) Policy Revenues Outlays Defense Desert Storm spending Desert Storm contributions Other International discretionary Domestic discretionary Entitlements and other mandatory spending3 Deposit insurance3 Net interest3 Offsetting receipts Maximum deficit amount adjustment Total Deficit
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office.
Economic
Technical
Total
-77.5
3.0
-46.3
-34.1
0 0 0 0 0
-0.4 0 -18.6 0 -2.5 -21.4 24.9
13.4 -4.9 -5.4 -0.6 2.2 23.9 -88.9 -16.8 0.4 10.6 -66.1 11.4
15.2 12.2
NOTE: Differences are actual outcomes less budget resolution assumptions. a. The estimates are adjusted for differences in intrabudgetary payments (interest paid to the Treasury Department by the Resolution Trust Corporation, the Bank Insurance Fund, and the Federal Housing Administration). These payments do not affect total spending or the deficit. Less than $50 million.
b.
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106 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
almost entirely cover the costs of prosecuting the conflict. But most of the contributions arrived in fiscal year 1991, whereas the spending--much of it for replacement purposes-is estimated to occur over several years. So, on balance, Desert Storm reduced the deficit in 1991 but raised it slightly in later years. Legislative action also increased other outlays, though it is important to recognize that these actions did not violate the budget resolution or the BEA. International and domestic discretionary spending together were increased by $2 billion, chiefly to cover emergencies-natural disasters, the Los Angeles riots, and the Chicago flood. However, a rescission package adopted in the spring of 1992 cut that year's discretionary outlays by about $2.5 billion, mostly in defense. Entitlements and other mandatory spending were increased by $7 billion, primarily because of three separate extensions of unemployment insurance, which were partly financed by savings in the guaranteed student loan programs and by about $3 billion in revenue increases.
Deposit insurance spending fell short of expectations by $89 billion in 1992, almost wholly traceable to savings-and-loan-related outlays. Because of two interruptions in funding, the RTC was severely fettered in its operations for all of fiscal year 1992 except the January-March period; the second hiatus, which began last April, continues today. Although this legislative inaction clearly accounts for the bulk of the gap, CBO's practice is to label this particular difference as technical, for reasons that were explained earlier. Entitlements and other mandatory spending topped expectations by $17 billion. Twothirds of this overrun stemmed from the two soaring health care programs, Medicaid and Medicare, and the rest was scattered among Social Security, unemployment compensation, student loans, food stamps, the Postal Service, and other programs. Although the reasons for the surge in health costs are subject to debate, the most widely accepted explanations cite pressures from greater use of health services, from costly new technologies, and from the adoption of policies by many hard-pressed states to maximize their collections from the federal Medicaid program. Revenues fell short of expectations by about $34 billion for technical reasons. In CBO's judgment, about $7 billion stemmed from moves by the Administration last February to liberalize the withholding schedules for individual income taxpayers, thereby boosting workers' take-home pay, and to change required reserve ratios for banks. (These moves did not require legislation.) The remaining shortfall of $27 billion simply means that tax collections sagged even more than the economy's performance could readily explain; capital gains tax collections account for nearly all of this difference.
Economic Factors
The economy's failure to perform as projected caused the 1992 deficit to exceed the budget resolution's target by $25 billion. The recession that began in late 1990 was deeper and the recovery weaker than expected, dampening revenues by an estimated $46 billion. But economic factors also trimmed outlays by an estimated $21 billion, almost wholly because of savings in interest costs on the public debt as short-term interest rates plunged to their lowest levels in three decades.
Technical Factors
Technical factors reduced the 1992 deficit by more than $25 billion from the level contemplated in the budget resolution-the result of sharply lower spending for deposit insurance that was only partly offset by weak revenues and greater spending for entitlements.
APPENDIX B
though the Budget Enforcement Act essentially scrapped fixed deficit targets, at least through 1993, the Congressional budget committees were still sensitive to the resolution's bottom line. In early 1991, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) was forecasting a slightly lower deficit for 1992 than was CBO. The budget committees opted to include a downward estimating adjustment of $10.6 billion in the resolution, summarily bringing the resolution's on-budget deficit (that is, the deficit excluding Social Security and the Postal Service) down to OMB's figure. This item is displayed in Table B-2 and allocated almost wholly to technical factors, the chief area of disagreement between CBO and OMB. It is important to realize that this MDA adjustment, and similar entries in previous resolutions, merely made the resolution's totals look better; they did not take funds away from (or award money to) any particular program.
tions) has generally added to deficits. There were only three major exceptions: in fiscal year 1982, the first Reagan-era budget, when tax cuts fell shy of the resolution's assumption; in 1987, as the new Tax Reform Act temporarily swelled collections; and in 1991, when contributions from foreign nations for Operation Desert Storm poured into government coffers. Because the budget process for a fiscal year begins roughly nine months before the year starts, economic performance is a major source of uncertainty. With just one exception (in 1989), the budget resolution has nearly always used short-term economic assumptions that proved overly optimistic. The worst errors, not surprisingly, were in years marked by recession or early stages of recovery-namely, in 1982 and 1983 and again in the 19901992 period. The economic differences were most pronounced in revenues and, on the spending side of the budget, in net interest. The causes of large technical errors have varied over the years. On the revenue side, such errors were generally not very large through 1990 but soared in 1991 and 1992. On the outlay side, farm price supports, receipts from oil sales, and benefit programs generally dominated errors through the mid1980s. Underestimates of benefit outlays, es, pecially for health care, have continued to loom large. But since 1990, even they have paled next to huge and volatile errors in estimating outlays for deposit insurance.
IF"
108 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table B-3. Sources of Differences Between Actual Budget Totals and First Budget Resolution Estimates for Fiscal Years 1980-1992 (In billions of dollars)
Policy Revenues Economic Technical
January 1993
Total
6.2 -3.7 13.0 -4.6 -13.7 -0.2 -1.5 22.1 -10.9 0.7 7.0 -0.7 3.0 0.2 6.7
8.4 5.0 -51.9 -58.0 4.5 -20.0 -23.0 -27.0 3.6 33.5 -36.5 -31.4 -46.3
-3.5 -12.6 -1.1 -2.7 -3.9 3.3 -2.1 6.7 -16.5 -7.8 9.4 -23.6 -34.2 -6.8 9.8
11.1 -11.2 -40.0 -65.3 -13.1 -16.8 -26.6 1.7 -23.8 26.4 -34.0 -55.7 -77.5 -25.0 31.0
-18.4 26.9
Outlays
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991^ 1992 19.6 24.5 1.2 17.6 1.5 22.8 14.2 6.8 -2.0 17.5 13.0 -19.5 15.2 10.2 13.5 12.4 6.4 24.1 0.5 7.1 -5.2 -12.1 -11.9 11.7 13.9 13.0 0.8 -21.4
3.0 10.8
15.6 16.0 7.7 8.1 -18.0 -12.9 20.1 13.0 12.0 11.8 59.0 -21.7 -59.9
3.9 21.2
47.6 46.9 32.9 26.2 -9.4 4.8 22.2 7.9 21.7 43.2 85.0 -40.4 -66.1 17.1 34.9
Deficit
1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 13.4 28.2 -11.8 22.2 15.2 23.0 15.7 -15.3 8.9 16.8 20.0 -18.7 12.2 10.0 17.0
4.0 1.4 76.0 58.5 2.7 14.8 10.9 15.1 8.1 -19.7 49.5 32.3 24.9
19.1 28.6 8.8 10.8 -14.1 -16.2 22.2 6.3 28.5 19.6 49.6 1.8 -25.7 10.7 19.3
36.6 58.1 72.9 91.5 3.7 21.6 48.8 6.2 45.5 16.8 119.1 15.3 11.4 42.1 42.1
21.4 24.5
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Office. NOTE: Differences are actual outcomes less budget resolution assumptions, a. Based on the fiscal year 1991 budget summit agreement, as assessed by CBOin December 1990.
Appendix C
he federal budget is highly sensitive to the economy. Revenues largely move with gross domestic product or, more accurately, with taxable incomes-wages and salaries, interest and other nonwage income, and corporate profits. Many benefit programs are pegged directly (like Social Security) or indirectly (like Medicare) to the inflation rate; others (chiefly unemployment compensation) are closely linked to the unemployment rate. And the Treasury is constantly borrowing and refinancing the government's debt at market interest rates.
Real Growth
Strong economic growth narrows the federal deficit, and weak economic growth worsens it. In its baseline, CBO assumes that real economic growth (as measured by GDP) will approach 3 percent in 1993 through 1995, as the gap between potential and actual GDP that widened during the recession continues to narrow, and then gradually settle down to 2 percent. The first rule of thumb shows the estimated budgetary effects of drastically slower economic growth. Subtracting 1 percentage point from real growth beginning in January 1993 implies pallid growth of less than 2 percent annually through 1995 and even poorer performance thereafter. By 1998, the fifth year, total GDP lies more than 5 percent below CBO's baseline assumption. Sluggish growth, in this scenario, is assumed primarily to reflect a weakness in demand-as opposed to, say, sharply lower gains in labor productivity. Thus, weak growth delivers a blow to the labor market as well, as businesses employ fewer workers; the unemployment rate inches up to 7.8 percent in 1998, more than 2 percentage points above the baseline. This scenario severely retards the growth in taxable incomes, leading to revenue losses estimated at $7 billion in 1993 and $97 billion by 1998 (see Table C-l). In 1998, the revenue loss is about 6.5 percent of baseline revenues, slightly greater than the loss in GDP. Outlays
Erroneous economic assumptions have been a chronic source of error in past budget estimates. Appendix B presented 13 years' worth of Congressional budget resolutions and noted, soberingly, that in every year but one policymakers chose economic assumptions that proved to be overly optimistic. On average, these errors caused the next year's deficit to be underestimated by more than $20 billion. The Congressional Budget Office has distilled the links between economic assumptions and budget projections into rules of thumb for four key economic variables: real growth, unemployment, inflation, and interest rates. Table C-l shows the estimated changes in budget totals if any of these variables were to differ from CBO's baseline assumptions by 1 percentage point in each year, starting in January 1993. As noted below, such rules of thumb are highly simplified and should be used with caution.
TIT
mill
110 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table C-1. Effects on CBO Budget Projections of Selected Changes in Economic Assumptions (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997
January 1993
1998
Real Growth: Effect of One-Percentage-Point Lower Annual Rate Beginning January 1993 Change in Revenues Change in Outlays Net interest (Debt service) Other Total Change in Deficit
-7 a 1 1 8
-22 -40 -58
-77 -97
1 2 3 25
3 4 7 47
7 6 13 70
12 9 20
98
18 11 29
126
Unemployment: Effect of One-Percentage-Point Higher Annual Rate Beginning January 1993 Change in Revenues Change in Outlays Net interest (Debt service) Other Total Change in Deficit
-29 -43 -43 -43
-43 -44
1 3 4
3 5 8
6 5 11
10 5 15
13 5 18
17 5 22
33
50
54
58
61
66
Inflation: Effect of One-Percentage-Point Higher Annual Rate Beginning January 1993 Change in Revenues Change in Outlays Net interest Higher rates Debt service Other Total Change in Deficit 6 18 32 46 60 76
5 a 1 5 -1
15 a 5 20 2
21 a 13 34 3
26 1 26 53 7
31 1 41 73 13
36 2 57 95 19
Interest Rates: Effect of One-Percentage-Point Higher Annual Rates Beginning January 1993 Change i n Revenues 0 0 0 0 0 0
Change in Outlays Net interest Higher rates Debt service Other Total Change in Deficit
SOURCE: a. Congressional Budget Office,
5 a a 5 5
15 1 a 16 16
21 2
a 24 24
26 4 1 31 31
31 6 1 38 38
36 9 1 46 46
APPENDIX C
for benefit programs, mainly Unemployment Insurance, are boosted by a modest $1 billion in 1993 but by larger amounts thereafter, culminating in $11 billion in extra spending in 1998. But over time, an even bigger impact on spending occurs in net interest. As revenues falter, the government borrows more and incurs greater debt-service costs. In sum, the deficit in 1998 would be an estimated $126 billion greater-about one-third bigger-than in CBO's baseline projection if real growth were 1 percentage point lower than projected.
Inflation
Inflation has mixed effects on the federal budget. If inflation is higher than CBO assumes-but other economic variables, chiefly real growth, are unaffected-taxable incomes and, hence, revenues will be greater. But higher inflation also boosts spending. Nearly all benefit programs would pay more; so would discretionary programs, albeit with a lag, unless policymakers were content to ignore the steady erosion of real resources. And interest rates would almost surely rise with inflation, fueling higher debt-service costs. Greater inflation would narrow the deficit marginally in the first year or two, because revenues would respond more or less instantly but outlays would react with a lag. These lags occur because many spending programs (for example, those with cost-of-living adjustments that take place every January) would not respond at all in the first year, and because, as noted below, the refinancing of the federal debt at prevailing interest rates takes place only gradually. But this short-term bonus fades with time, and after a few years, the deficit is bigger. If inflation is 1 percentage point higher than CBO assumes-that is, if the consumer price index grows by about 4 percent annually in 1993 through 1998 and other measures of inflation rise in tandem--the extra spending would eventually exceed the additional revenues, as shown in Table C-l. By 1998, the deficit is up by $19 billion. Of course, nominal incomes and GDP are commensurately larger; relative to GDP, the deficit is 4.5 percent, the same as in the baseline. The effects of inflation on the budget are subtle, and different conclusions are possible if one or two key assumptions are varied. The assumption that interest rates rise in tandem with inflation is crucial; $5 billion of the extra spending in 1993 and $36 billion in 1998 hinge on it (see Table C-l). And the policy regarding discretionary programs is also critical. CBO explicitly assumes in its rule of thumb that policymakers would appropriate
Unemployment
The second rule of thumb shows the simplified effects of higher unemployment on the budget. Obviously, economic growth and unemployment are related. A handy rule that expresses this relationship is named after economist Arthur Okun. Okun's law generalizes that an extra percentage point of unemployment is accompanied by a 2 percent loss in GDP. In CBO's baseline, the unemployment rate gradually drops from 7.1 percent in 1993 to 5.7 percent in 1998. This second rule of thumb assumes instead that unemployment shoots up to 8.1 percent in 1993 and averages 6.7 percent in 1998. In keeping with Okun's law, GDP is 2 percent below its baseline levels in all six years. As expected, revenues drop, benefits rise, and interest costs grow relative to the baseline. Together, these effects push the deficit up by $33 billion in 1993 and $66 billion in 1998. It is illuminating to compare this example with the first rule of thumb, which depicted the effects of prolonged feeble growth. Under Okun's law, it takes about 2 years of lower growth, as posited in the first rule, to generate an extra percentage point of unemployment. GDP and taxable incomes in the first scenario thus lie above their counterparts in the second rule of thumb through mid-1995, but farther and farther below them thereafter. The budgetary impacts closely follow this pattern.
II"
~ I ill:! 11
.-Ml
January 1993
more dollars in response to a jump in inflation, preserving the real resources of the programs they are funding. The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 pushes discretionary spending, in the aggregate, on a downward path through 1995, but still provides explicitly that the dollar caps must be adjusted for higher (or lower) inflation. In 1995 and 1998, the extra discretionary spending that CBO incorporates in this rule of thumb amounts to $1 billion and $18 billion, respectively-about equal to the deficit increase. Relaxing this assumption would imply that higher inflation trims the deficit, but at a hidden sacrifice: a continuing erosion in the real resources of discretionary programs. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) typically presents its own rules of thumb in its budget reports. In this year's version, OMB's rules of thumb strongly resemble CBO's, with one conspicuous exception. 1 OMB shows that higher inflation has a beneficial effect on the deficit, boosting revenues by more than outlays. This apparent disagreement is almost wholly traceable to the absence of any adjustment to discretionary spending in OMB's version-highlighting yet again the vital importance of this assumption.
billion worth of Treasury bills are now outstanding, and none have a maturity of more than a year. The bulk of the marketable debt actually consists of medium- and long-term securities, chiefly those with initial maturities of two to 10 years, rather than short-term bills. Many of these come due for refinancing gradually but inexorably over the next few years. And the Treasury continuously adds new debt to finance the deficit. Thus, the budgetary effects mount as more and more debt is hit by the higher rates. By 1998, almost all of the debt is affected. Of the marketable debt outstanding in that final year, CBO estimates that nearly 40 percent was initially borrowed during the 1993-1998 period and was therefore affected by the higher rates; about 45 percent was already outstanding in early 1993 but was refinanced during the 1993-1998 period; and only 15 percent was unaffected. The resulting increase in the 1998 deficit is $46 billion. This final rule of thumb incorporates small changes in other interest-sensitive spending programs, chiefly student loans. It does not, however, include any changes in revenues or in deposit insurance spending, since the impact of higher interest rates on these areas is not obvious.
Interest Rates
The final rule of thumb illustrates the budget's sensitivity to interest rates. The Treasury finances the government's large and growing debt at market interest rates. Assuming that interest rates are 1 percentage point higher than in the baseline for all maturities in each year would drive up interest costs by an estimated $5 billion in 1993. The initial effects are dominated by the extra costs of refinancing the government's short-term Treasury bills, which make up about onefourth of the marketable debt; more than $600
1. Office of Management and Budget, Budget Baselines, Historical Data, and Alternatives for the Future (January 1993), pp. 158-161.
APPENDIX C
to match these smooth paths. Some variables, such as interest rates, are notoriously harder to predict than others; a sustained error of 1 percentage point in interest rates is much likelier than a similar error in the projection of real growth. In addition, economic variables are related to one another, so that
changes do not occur in isolation. Finally, many revisions to budget projections are technical in nature and are not directly related to economic forecasting; there is no similarly easy way, however, to capsulize the variability of budget outcomes that can stem from technical uncertainty.
inr
Appendix D
he economic influence of the federal government can be measured through the national income and product accounts (NIPAs), an alternative to the usual budget presentation. The NIPAs provide a picture of government activity in terms of its production, distribution, and use of output. This approach recasts the government's transactions into categories that affect gross domestic product, income, and other macroeconomic aggregates, thereby helping to trace the relationship between the federal sector and other areas of the economy.
Foremost among netting and grossing adjustments are intrabudgetary receipts for retirement contributions on behalf of federal workers ($53 billion in 1993) and voluntary premiums for Medicare coverage ($15 billion in 1993). In recent years, another growing item has been deposit insurance premiums. Deposit insurance outlays are financed in part by premiums levied on banks and thrift institutions; these premiums have correspondingly boosted the netting and grossing adjustment. Another difference between the federal budget and the NIPAs, the treatment of lending and financial transactions, does affect the deficit. The NIPA totals exclude transactions that involve the transfer of existing assets and liabilities and that therefore do not contribute to current income and production. In recent years, huge outlays for deposit insurance have dominated this category. Other, relatively small factors driving a wedge between budget and NIPA accounting include timing adjustments and geographical differences (the exclusion of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and a few other areas from the national economic statistics). Sometimes the gap between the budget totals and their NIPA counterparts is wider than can be readily explained. A conspicuous example is federal receipts in fiscal year 1992. Even after the familiar adjustments-chiefly for netting and grossing and geographic exclusions-are made, NIPA receipts appear surprisingly low in 1992 (as evidenced by the negative $18 billion in "other adjustments" in Table D-l, an entry that is normally close to
Tiiimr
JUL
January 1993
Table D-1. Relationship of the Budget to the Federal Sector of the National Income and Product Accounts (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars)
Estimate 1992"
1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998
1,092
1,143
1,215
1,291
1,356
1,414
1,482
Differences Netting and grossing Government contributions for employee retirement Medicare premiums Deposit insurance premiums Other Geographic exclusions Other Total Receipts (NIPA basis)
52 13 7 1 -2 -18 53
53 15 8 1 -2 6 81
56 17 8 c 3 3 82
59 20 9 c -3 1 86
62 21 9 -1 -3 2 90
66 22 9 2 -3 7 99
69 23 10 2 -3 3 99
1,145
1,223
1,297
1,377
1,446
1,513
1,581
1,382
1,453
1,507
1,575
1,643
1,733
1,839
Differences Netting and grossing Government contributions for employee retirement Medicare premiums Deposit insurance premiums Other Lending and financial transactions Deposit insurance Other Defense timing adjustment Geographic exclusions Other Total Expenditures (NIPA basis)
52 13 7 1 -5 -11 4 -8 -2 51
53 15 8 1 -7 -10 4 -8 -6 50
56 17 8 c
-15 -6 3 -8 -9
59 20 9 c
-15 -3 3 -9 -6
62 21 9 -1 -4 4 3 -9 3 81
66 22 9 -2 8 c 2 -10 -6 89
69 23 10 -2 2 1 2 -10 -6 88
47
57
1,433
1,503
1,554
1,632
1,724
1,822
1,927
Deficits Deficit (Budget basis)t> Differences Lending and financial transactions Defense timing adjustment Geographic exclusions Other Total Deficit (NIPA basis)
SOURCE: a. b. c. Congressional Budget Office.
290 -16 4 -6 17 310 -17 4 -6 -12 -31 279 291 -21 3 -6 -12 -35 257 284 -18 3 -6 -7 -29 255 287 319 357
c 3 -6 -5 -9
278
8 2 -7 -13
-10 309
3 2 -7 -9
-11 346
-1
289
Differences estimated by CBO. Includes Social Security and the Postal Service. Less than $500 million.
APPENDIX D
THE FEDERAL SECTOR OF THE NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS 117
zero). Such a large gap suggests that NIPA receipts are ripe for upward revision. Under the Bureau of Economic Analysis's usual schedule, the likeliest opportunity for such a revision will come next July. In its 1993-1998 projections, CBO does not assume that this large, unexplained difference will persist.
fers (such as Medicaid) or purchases (such as highway construction). Although both the budget and the NIPAs contain a category labeled net interest, the two measures differ slightly. Two major areas of difference are the treatment of the Federal Financing Bank's (FFB's) receipts from deposit insurance agencies and interest on late tax payments. The budget records interest paid by deposit insurance agencies to the FFB (an arm of the Treasury Department) as a deposit insurance outlay and a net interest receipt, which simultaneously dampens net interest in the budget totals and swells deposit insurance. The NIPAs, by contrast, reflect this particular cost of deposit insurance agencies in net interest. In 1993, interest paid to the FFB by the deposit insurance funds is estimated to be about $4 billion. An opposing difference pushes estimates of NIPA net interest below those in the unified budget. The NIPAs consider interest received on late payments of personal and business taxes to be offsets to federal interest payments, thereby lowering net interest payments by $10 billion to $13 billion each year through 1998. Finally, recent data on federal net interest expenditures from the Bureau of Economic Analysis contain a fairly large downward adjustment (about $5 billion) without obvious explanation. The category labeled "subsidies less current surplus of government enterprises" contains two components, as its name suggests. The first-subsidies-is defined as monetary grants paid by government to businesses, including state and local government enterprises such as local public housing authorities. Subsidies are dominated by housing assistance, which accounts for approximately two-thirds of 1993 subsidy outlays. The second portion of the category is the current surplus of government enterprises. Government enterprises are certain businesstype operations of the governmentfor example, the Postal Service. The operating costs
TIT
m mill
Jll.
January 1993
118 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table D-2. Projections of Baseline Receipts and Expenditures Measured by the National Income and Product Accounts (By fiscal year, in billions of dollars) Estimate 1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
Receipts Personal Tax and Nontax Receipts Corporate Profits Tax Accruals Indirect Business Tax and Nontax Accruals Contributions for Social Insurance Total
470 111 509 122 539 132
576 609 638 672
140
148
156
161
80
484
84
509
86
540
89
87
89
92
572
602
629
655
1,145
1,223
1,297
1,377
1,446
1,513
1,581
Expenditures Purchases of Goods and Services Defense Nondefense Subtotal Transfer Payments Domestic Foreign Subtotal Grants-in-Aid to State and Local Governments Net Interest Subsidies Less Current Surplus of Government Enterprises Required Reductions in Discretionary Spending Total
667 14 680
712 14 726
758 14 772
805 15 820
855 15 870
207 199
222 218
238 237
255 255
274 275
25
n.a.
32
n.a.
28
28
27
29
31
-13
-25
-24
-23
-23
1,433
1,503
1 ,554
1,632
1,724
1,822
1,927
Deficit Deficit
SOURCE: Congressional Budget Off ice. NOTE: n. a. = not applicable.
289
279
257
255
278
309
346
APPENDIX D
THE FEDERAL SECTOR OF THE NATIONAL INCOME AND PRODUCT ACCOUNTS 119
of government enterprises are mostly covered by the sale of goods and services to the public rather than by tax receipts. The difference between sales and current operating expenses is the enterprise's surplus or deficit. In 1993, the current surplus of government enterprises will be approximately $2 billion. Government enterprises should not be confused with government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs), private entities established and chartered by the federal government to perform specific financial functions, usually under the supervision of a government agency. GSEs include the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae) and the Student Loan Marketing Association (Sallie Mae). As privately owned organizations, GSEs are not included in the budget or in the federal sector of the NIPAs. As emphasized in Chapter 3, policymakers must comply with discretionary spending caps in future years, but may do so in any number of ways. The final category in Table D-2 depicts these unspecified savings in 1994 and beyond. The savings cannot be assigned to particular NIPA categories, but are most likely to come from defense and nondefense purchases and from grants.
Figure D-1. A Comparison of NIPA and Budget Deficits, Fiscal Years 1980-1998
Billions of Dollars
400 350 300 250 200 150 100 50
Actual I Projected
I I I I I I I I I III I I I I I
1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998
SOURCES:
NIPA Deficits
In the early and mid-1980s, the NIPA deficit and the unified budget deficit generally paralleled each other, with the NIPA deficit several billion dollars lower than its budget counterpart (see Figure D-l). Since then, variations in the relationship between the two have fluctuated more widely because of large swings in
lending and financial exclusions. For example, sizable deposit insurance outlays in 1989 through 1991 widened the gap between the NIPA and unified budget deficit significantly. In 1992, when deposit insurance spending was minimal, the gap between the NIPA and unified measures narrowed. In the Congressional Budget Office's current baseline projections, the NIPA deficit runs approximately $30 billion below the budget deficit through 1995, after which the gap shrinks to around $10 billion. As Table D-l shows, lending and financial transactions in general, and deposit insurance in particular, are primarily responsible for this pattern.
"IT"
Appendix E
his appendix provides historical data for revenues, outlays, and the deficit. Estimates of the standardized-employment deficit and its revenue and outlay components for fiscal years 1956 through 1992 are reported in Table E-l, along with estimates of potential gross domestic product, actual GDP, and the nonaccelerating inflation rate of unemployment (NAIRU). Data consistent with the budget projections in the report are available for fiscal years 1962 through 1992 and are reported in Tables E-2 through E-ll. The data are shown both in nominal dollars and as a percentage of gross domestic product. The change in the standardized-employment deficit, as shown in Table E-l, is a commonly used measure of the short-term impact of discretionary fiscal policy on aggregate demand. The standardized-employment deficit excludes the revenue and outlay effects of cyclical fluctuations in output and unemployment. More specifically, standardized-employment revenues are the federal revenues that would be collected if the economy were operating at its potential level of GDP. These revenues are greater than actual revenues when actual GDP is below its potential level, because the actual tax bases are then cyclically depressed. Standardized-employment outlays are the federal outlays that would be recorded if the economy were at an unemployment rate consistent with stable inflation-the NAIRU, which is also the benchmark used to compute potential GDP. These
outlays are less than actual outlays when the actual rate of unemployment is higher than the NAIRU, because actual transfer payments for Unemployment Insurance and other programs are then cyclically inflated. Federal revenues, outlays, deficit or surplus, and debt held by the public are shown in Tables E-2 and E-3. Revenues, outlays, and the deficit have both on-budget and off-budget components. Social Security receipts and outlays were placed off-budget by the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985; the Postal Service was moved off-budget beginning in 1989 by the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989. Both Social Security and the Postal Service are excluded from the calculation of the maximum deficit amount under the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990. The major sources of federal revenues (including off-budget revenues) are presented in Tables E-4 and E-5. Social insurance taxes and contributions include employer and employee payments for Social Security, Medicare, Railroad Retirement, and Unemployment Insurance, and pension contributions by federal workers. Excise taxes are levied on certain products and services, such as gasoline, alcoholic beverages, and air travel. The wind-fall profits tax on domestic oil producers, enacted in 1980 and classified as an excise tax, was repealed in 1988. Miscellaneous receipts consist of deposits of earnings by the Federal Reserve System and numerous fees and charges.
FIT
January 1993
Total on- and off-budget outlays for major spending categories are shown in Tables E-6 and E-7. In order to compare historical outlays with the projections discussed in Chapter 3, the historical data have been divided into the same categories of spending as the projections. Spending controlled by the appropriation process is classified as discretionary. Tables E-8 and E-9 divide discretionary spending into its defense, international, and domestic components. Entitlements and other mandatory spending include programs for which
spending is governed by laws making those who meet certain requirements eligible to receive payments. Additional detail on entitlement programs is shown in Tables E-10 and E-ll. Net interest is identical to the budget function with the same name (function 900). Offsetting receipts include the federal government's contribution toward employee retirement, fees and charges such as Medicare premiums, and receipts from the use of federally controlled land and offshore territory.
APPENDIX E
Table E-1. Standardized-Employment Deficit and Related Series, Fiscal Years 1956-1 992 (In billions of dollars) Standardized-Emplovment Revenues Outlays Deficit(-)
1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1961 1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989b 1990b 73.1 79.5 84.3 82.4 95.2 71.2 77.3 82.0 91.2 92.1 96.8 106.5 111.4 118.9 119.3
1.9 2.2 2.3
Gross Domestic Product Potential Actual 416.2 439.1 448.0 477.9 505.9 516.9 554.4 585.0 626.5 671.4 738.6 791.3 849.8 925.6 985.8 1,051.8 1,146.0 1,278.3 1,403.7 1,511.3 1,685.5 1,919.8 2,156.4 2,431.9 2,644.5 2,964.8 3,124.9 3,317.0 3,696.8 3,970.9 4,219.6 4,453.3 4,810.0 5,175.8 5,468.0 5,814.2 6,140.3 416.3 438.3 448.1 480.2 504.6 517.0 555.2 584.5 625.3 671.0 735.4 793.3 847.2 925.7 985.4 1,050.9 1,147.8 1,274.0 1,403.6 1,509.8 1,684.2 1,917.2 2,155.0 2,429.5 2,644.1 2,964.4 3,122.2 3,316.5 3,695.0 3,967.7 4,219.0 4,452.4 4,808.4 5,173.3 5,467.1 5,632.6 5,868.6
NAIRUa (Percent)
5.1 5.1 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.2 5.2 5.4 5.4 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.7 5.8 5.8 5.8 6.0 5.9 6.0 5.9 5.9 5.9 6.0 5.9 5.9 5.8 5.8 5.7 5.7 5.7 5.6 5.6 5.6 5.5
-8.8
3.1 3.7
100.5 103.4 109.8 112.6 114.7 124.1 142.6 146.5 178.6 190.8 191.2 210.6 224.6 260.6 296.7 317.5 367.4 402.4 462.7 538.9 633.0 683.5 677.8 704.9 760.5 794.2 875.6 902.7 979.5 1,035.1 1,111.8 1,163.9
Congressional Budget Office.
136.7 160.1 181.1 187.6 199.0 210.9 231.2 247.8 272.3 327.7 363.7 405.7 457.7 505.3 586.7 670.4 730.3 783.1 837.9 938.0 978.9 994.5 1,053.9 1,125.2 1,196.0 1,291.6 1,365.4
-12.7 -17.5 -34.7 -9.1 -8.1 -19.6 -20.6 -23.2 -11.7 -30.9 -46.3 -38.4 -55.3 -42.7 -47.7 -37.4 -46.7 -105.2 -133.1 -177.4 -184.7 -118.9 -151.2 -145.7 -161.0 -179.8 -201.5
1991b 1992b
SOURCE: a. b.
The NAIRU is the nonaccelerating inflation rate of unemployment. It is the benchmark for computing potential GDP. Excludes deposit insurance.
I'TT
nil
124 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table E-2. Revenues, Outlays, Deficits, and Debt Held by the Public, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) Deficit(-) or Surplus Social Postal Security Service
-1.3 -0.8
January 1993
On-
Revenues
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE: a.
Outlays
106.8 111.3 118.5 118.2 134.5 157.5 178.1 183.6 195.6 210.2 230.7 245.7 269.4 332.3 371.8 409.2 458.7 503.5 590.9
Budget
-5.9 -4.0 -6.5 -1.6 -3.1 -12.6 -27.7 -0.5 -8.7
Total
-7.1 -4.8 -5.9 -1.4 -3.7 -8.6 -25.2
3.2
Debt Held by the Public3 248.0 254.0 256.8 260.8 263.7 266.6 289.5 278.1 283.2 303.0 322.4 340.9 343.7 394.7 477.4 549.1 607.1 639.8 709.3 784.8 919.2 1,131.0 1,300.0 1,499.4 1,736.2 1,888.1 2,050.3 2,189.3 2,410.4 2,687.9 2,998.6
0.6
0.2
0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.3
130.8 148.8 153.0 186.9 192.8 187.1 207.3 230.8 263.2 279.1 298.1 355.6 399.6 463.3 517.1
-0.6
4.0 2.6 3.7 5.9 3.0 3.1 0.5 1.8 2.0
-2.8
-26.1 -26.4 -15.4 -8.0 -55.3 -70.5 -49.8 -54.9 -38,2 -72.7 -74.0 -120.1 -208.0 -185.7 -221.7
-23.0 -23.4 -14.9 -6.1 -53.2 -73.7 -53.7 -59.2 -40.2 -73.8 -79.0 -128.0 -207.8 -185.4 -212.3
678.2 745.8 808.4 851.8 946.4 990.3 1,003.9 1,064.1 1,143.2 1,252.7 1,323.8 1,381.8
1,054.3 1,091.6
End of year.
APPENDIX E Table E-3. Revenues, Outlays, Deficits, and Debt Held by the Public, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP)
Revenues
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE: a. b.
Outlays
19.3 19.0 18.9 17.6 18.2 19.9 21.0 19.8 19.9 20.0 20.1 19.2 19.2 22.0 22.1 21.3 21.3 20.7 22.3 22.9 23.9 24.4 23.0 23.8 23.5 22.5 22.1 22.1 22.9 23.5 23.5
OnBudget
Total
-1.3 -0.8 -0.9 -0.2 -0.5 -1.1 -3.0 0.4 -0.3 -2.2 -2.0 -1.2 -0.4 -3.5 -4.4 -2.8 -2.7 -1.7 -2.8 -2.7 -4.1 -6.3 -5.0 -5.3 -5.2 -3.4 -3.2 -3.0 -4.0 -4.8 -4.9
18.0 18.2 18.0 17.4 17.7 18.8 18.0 20.2 19.6 17.8 18.1 18.1 18.8 18.5 17.7 18.5 18.5 19.1 19.6 20.2 19.8 18.1 18.0 18.5 18.2 19.2 18.9 19.2 18.9 18.7 18.6
-1.1 -0.7 -1.0 -0.2 -0.4 -1.6 -3.3 -0.1 -0.9 -2.5 -2.3 -1.2 -0.6 -3.7 -4.2 -2.6 -2.5 -1.6 -2,7 -2.5 -3.8 -6.3 -5.0 -5.6 -5.6 -3.8 -4.0 -4.0 -5.1 -5.7 -5.8
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 b b b b
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126 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table E-4. Revenues by Major Source, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) Individual Income Taxes Corporate Income Taxes Social Insurance Taxes Estate and Gift Taxes Miscellaneous Receipts
January 1993
Excise Taxes
Customs Duties
Total Revenues
99.7 106.6 112.6 116.8 130.8 148.8 153.0 186.9 192.8 187.1 207.3 230.8 263.2 279.1 298.1 355.6 399.6 463.3 517.1
1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.3 2.4 2.6
3.3 3.2 3.3 3.7 4.1 5.2 6.6 7.4 7.2 8.1 8.9 8.7
12.7 13.8 16.2 15.6 17.0 18.5 19.9 19.3 19.9 22.8 27.3 22.8 27.1
285.9 297.7 288.9 298.4 334.5 349.0 392.6 401.2 445.7 466.9 467.8 476.5
11.1 11.1
1,054.3 1,091.6
APPENDIX E
Table E-5. Revenues by Major Source, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP) Individual Income Taxes
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE:
Excise Taxes
2.3 2.3 2.2
2.2 1.8 1.7 1.7 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.9 0.8 0.9 1.4 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.7 0.7 0.6 0.8 0.8
Customs Duties
0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2
0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3
Miscellaneous Receipts
0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3
0.3 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.5
Total Revenues
18.0 18.2 18.0 17.4 17.7 18.8 18.0 20.2 19.6 17.8 18.1 18.1 18.8 18.5 17.7 18.5 18.5 19.1 19.6 20.2 19.8 18.1 18.0 18.5 18.2 19.2 18.9 19.2 18.9 18.7 18.6
8.2 8.1 7.8 7.3 7.5 7.8 8.1 9.4 9.2 8.2 8.3 8.1 8.5 8.1 7.8 8.2 8.4 9.0 9.2 9.6 9.5 8.7 8.1 8.4 8.3 8.8 8.3 8.6 8.6 8.3 8.1
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128 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table E-6. Outlays for Major Spending Categories, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars) Entitlements and Other Mandatory Spending
32.3 33.6 35.7 36.1 39.9 47.4 56.1 61.2 68.7 82.7 96.8 112.2 127.1 164.4
January 1993
Discretionary Spending
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE:
Deposit Insurance
Net Interest 6.9 7.7 8.2 8.6 9.4 10.3 11.1 12.7 14.4
14.8 15.5 17.3 21.4 23.2 26.7 29.9 35.5 42.6 52.5 68.8 85.0 89.8 111.1 129.5
Offsetting Receipts
Total Outlays
106.8 111.3 118.5 118.2 134.5 157.5 178.1 183.6 195.6 210.2 230.7 245.7 269.4 332.3 371.8 409.2 458.7 503.5 590.9
127.1 133.1 135.0 142.5 162.5 175.6 197.1 218.7 240.0 276.5
-0.6 -2.8 -1.0 -1.7 -0.4 -1.4 -2.2 -1.2 -0.9 -2.2
1.5
308.2 326.2 353.4 379.6 416.2 439.0 444.9 465.1 489.7 501.7 534.8 537.4
Congressional Budget Office
340.6 372.7 411.6 406.3 450.0 459.7 470.2 494.2 526.2 567.4 634.2 711.2
678.2 745.8 808.4 851.8 946.4 990.3 1,003.9 1,064.1 1,143.2 1,252.7 1,323.8 1,381.8
66.3 2.6
-106.0 -68.8
APPENDIX E
Table E-7. Outlays for Major Spending Categories, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP) Entitlements and Other Mandatory Spending
5.8 5.7
Discretionary Spending
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE: a.
Deposit Insurance
Net Interest 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.4 1.4 1.4 1.5 1.5 1.6 1.6 1.6 1.8 2.0 2.3 2.7 2.7 3.0 3.3 3.2 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.4
Offsetting Receipts
-1.2 -1.3 -1.2 -1.2 -1.1 -1.3 -1.2 -1.2 -1.2 -1.3 -1.2 -1.4 -1.5 -1.2 -1.2 -1.1 -1.1 -1.1 -1.1 -1.3 -1.2 -1.4 -1.2 -1.2 -1.1 -1.2 -1.2 -1.2 -1.1 -1.9 -1.2
Total Outlays
19.3 19.0 18.9 17.6 18.2 19.9 21.0 19.8 19.9 20.0 20.1 19.2 19.2 22.0 22.1 21.3 21.3 20.7 22.3 22.9 23.9 24.4 23.0 23.8 23.5 22.5 22.1 22.1 22.9 23.5 23.5
13.5 13.4 13.2 12.2 12.7 14.0 14.4 13.1 12.6 12.1 11.6 10.6 10.2 10.8 10.4 10.3 10.1 9.9 10.5 10.4 10.4 10.7 10.3 10.5 10.4 10.0 9.7 9.5 9.2
9.5 9.2
Congressional Budget Office.
5.7 5.4 5.4 6.0 6.6 6.6 7.0 7.9 8.4 8.8 9.1 10.9
11.3 10.8 10.6 10.2 11.0 11.5 11.9 12.4 11.0 11.3 10.9 10.6 10.3 10.2 10.4 11.3 12.1
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130 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table E-8. Discretionary Outlays, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (Ir lillions of dollars) Defense
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE:
January 1993
lm rnational
5.5 5.2 4.6 4.7 5.1 5.3 4.9 4.1 4.0 3.8 4.6 4.8 6.2 8.2 7.5 8.0 8.5 9.1
Domestic
16.8 19.3 23.1 26.1 30.0 33.1 35.1 34.6 38.7 44.3 49.2 53.0 55.6 66.7 78.2 91.5 105.5 114.1 129.1
Total
74.9 78.3 82.8 81.8 94.1 110.4 122.1 121.4 124.6
52.6 53.7 55.0 51.0 59.0 72.0 82.2 82.7 81.9 79.0 79.3 77.1 80.7 87.6 89.9 97.5 104.6 116.8 134.6
127.1 133.1 135.0 142.5 162.5 175.5 197.0 218.7 240.0 276.5 308.1 326.2 353.5 379.6 416.2 439.0 444.9 465.0 489.6 501.7 534.8 537.4
12.8 13.6 12.9 13.6 16.3 17.4 17.7 15.2 15.7 16.6 19.1 19.7 19.2
158.0 185.9 209.9 228.0 253.1 273.8 282.5 290.9 304.0 300.1 319.7 304.3
Congressional Budget Off ice.
136.5 127.4 130.0 135.3 145.7 147.5 147.2 158.4 169.0 182.5 195.4 213.9
APPENDIX E Table E-9. Discretionary Outlays, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP) Defense International
Domestic
Total
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
SOURCE:
9.5
9.2 8.8 7.6 8.0 9.1 9.7 8.9 8.3 7.5 6.9 6.1 5.8 5.8 5.3 5.1 4.9 4.8 5.1 5.3 6.0 6.3 6.2 6.4 6.5 6.3 6.1 5.9 5.5 5.7 5.2
Congressional Budget Office.
13.5 13.4 13.2 12.2 12.7 14.0 14.4 13.1 12.6 12.1 11.6 10.6 10.2 10.8 10.4 10.3 10.1
9.9
132 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK Table E- 10. Outlays for Entitlements and Other Mandatory Spending, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (In billions of dollars)
Non-Means-Tested Programs MeansTested Programs Total MeansMedicaid Other Tested
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
January 1993
Social Security
Other Unem ployRetirement Farm ment and CompenPrice Medicare Disability sation Supports
0 0 0 0 a 3.2 5.1 6.3 6.8
7.5 8.4 9.0 10.7 14.1 16.9 20.8 24.3 28.2 34.0 41.3 49.2 55.5 61.0 69.7 74.2 79.9 85.7 94.3 107.4 2.7 2.9 3.3 3.6 4.1 4.8 5.7 5.2 6.6 8.3 9.6 11.7 13.8 18.3 18.9 21.6 23.7 27.9 32.1 37.4 40.7 43.2 44.7 45.5 47.5 50.8 54.2 57.2 59.9 64.4 66.6
Other
4.2 4.6 4.8 5.0 5.0 5.0 5.7 6.4 7.4 10.1 11.7 11.4 13.7 18.5 21.7 23.5 24.8 26.5 32.0 37.1 37.4 40.3 41.2 43.3 44.9 45.5 50.0 54.2 58.8 69.7 78.7
5.3 3.5
4.4 4.7 6.1 7.4 9.2 7.8 8.6 9.8 12.4 18.8 21.6 29.7 31.2 29.0 36.0 37.3 42.8 47.8 40.3 36.6 38.9 48.8 29.5 23.6 31.3 31.0 29.8 31.4 37.5
137.9 153.9 168.5 176.1 186.4 196.5 205.1 216.8 230.4 246.5
286.7 318.0 352.4 345.0 384.0 389.8 397.3 413.8 437.4 467.5
512.0 564.7
340.6 372.7 411.6 406.3 450.0 459.7 470.2 494.2 526.2 567.4 634.2 711.2
122.2 146.5
266.8 285.1
114.2 129.4
SOURCE:
a.
APPENDIX E
Table E-11. Outlays for Entitlements and Other Mandatory Spending, Fiscal Years 1962-1992 (As a percentage of GDP)
Non-Means-Tested Programs MeansTested Programs Total MeansMedicaid Other Tested
1962 1963 1964 1965 1966 1967 1968 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992
Social Security
2.5 2.6 2.6 2.5 2.7 2.7 2.7 2.9 3.0 3.3 3.4 3.8 3.9 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.3 4.2 4.4 4.7 4.9 5.1 4.8 4.7 4.7 4.6 4.5 4.5 4.5 4.7 4.9
Other UnemployRetirement Farm ment and CompenPrice Medicare Disability sation Supports
Other
1.0 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.1 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.1 1.5 1.5 2.0 1.9 1.5 1.7 1.5 1.6 1.6 1.3 1.1 1.1 1.2 0.7 0.5 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.6
a a a a
0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0.4 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.2
0.8 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.7 0.6 0.7 0.7 0.7 1.0 1.0 0.9 1.0 1.2 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.2 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3
0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.0 1.3 1.4 1.3 1.4 1.7 1.8 1.7 1.6 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.8 1.8 1.7 1.7 1.7 1.6 1.7 1.7 1.8 2.2 2.5
0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.8 0.9 1.0 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.1
0.6 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.3 0.5 0.6 0.4 0.4 0.8 1.1 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.9 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.6
0.4 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.4 0.3 0.1 a 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.4 0.6 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.5 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2
SOURCE:
a.
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Appendix F
he following analysts prepared the revenue and spending projections in this report:
Revenue Projections Mark Booth Maureen Griffin Matthew Melillo Linda Radey John Stell David Weiner Spending Projections Defense, International Affairs, and Eugene Bryton Kent Christensen Victoria Fraider Raymond Hall Barbara Hollinshead William Myers Mary Helen Petrus Amy Plapp Kathleen Shepherd Lisa Siegel Joseph Whitehill Human Resources Wayne Boyington Paul Cullinan Alan Fairbank Scott Harrison Jean Hearne Lori Housman Julia Isaacs Deborah Kalcevic Civil Service Retirement, Railroad Retirement Social Security Hospital Insurance Medicare Medicaid Medicare Food stamps, foster care, child care Education Veterans'Affairs Corporate income taxes, Federal Reserve System earnings Social insurance contributions, excise taxes, estate and gift taxes Excise taxes, national income and product account receipts Excise taxes Customs duties, miscellaneous receipts Individual income taxes, social insurance contributions
Defense International affairs Veterans' benefits, defense Defense Defense Defense Veterans' compensation and pensions Defense Veterans' benefits Defense International affairs
i n : mi i
136 THE ECONOMIC AND BUDGET OUTLOOK January 1993
Ml.
Lisa Layman Josh Leichter Jeffrey Lemieux Cory Oltman Pat Purcell Connie Takata John Tapogna Natural and Physical Resources Philip Bartholomew Michael Buhl Kim Cawley Patricia Conroy Peter Fontaine Mark Grabowicz Theresa Gullo James Hearn David Hull Thomas Lutton Mary Maginniss Eileen Manfredi Ian McCormick Marjorie Miller Deborah Reis Brent Shipp John Webb Aaron Zeisler Other Janet Airis Edward Blau Michael Campbell Karin Carr Betty Embrey Kenneth Farris Glen Goodnow Alice Grant Leslie Griffin Vernon Hammett Ellen Hays Sandra Hoffman Jeffrey Holland Terri Linger Fritz Maier Kathy Ruffing Robert Sempsey
Medicare Social service programs, Head Start Federal employee health benefits Unemployment Insurance, training programs Supplemental Security Income, Medicaid Public Health Service Aid to Families with Dependent Children, child support enforcement
Deposit insurance General government, Postal Service Energy, pollution control and abatement Community and regional development, natural resources, general government Energy, Outer Continental Shelf receipts Science and space, justice Water resources, conservation, land management General government, Agricultural Credit Insurance Fund, deposit insurance Agriculture Deposit insurance Deposit insurance Agriculture Agriculture Transportation, Federal Housing Administration Recreation, water transportation Housing and mortgage credit Commerce, disaster relief Deposit insurance
Appropriation bills Appropriation bills Computer support Budget projections, historical data Appropriation bills Computer support Authorization bills Appropriation bills Budget projections, civilian agency pay Computer support Other interest, credit programs Computer support Net interest on the public debt, national income and product accounts Computer support Computer support Treasury borrowing, interest, and debt Appropriation bills
Glossary
he definitions of terms in this glossary reflect their usage in this report. Some entries sacrifice precision for brevity and clarity to the lay reader. Where appropriate, sources of data for economic variables are indicated as follows: BLS denotes Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of Labor; CBO denotes Congressional Budget Office; FRB denotes Federal Reserve Board; and NBER denotes National Bureau of Economic Research.
adjustable-rate mortgage: Mortgage whose interest rate is not fixed for the life of the mortgage, but varies in a predetermined way with movements in a specified market interest rate. aggregate demand: Total purchases of a country's output of goods and services by consumers, businesses, government, and foreigners during a given period. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) appropriation act: A statute under the jurisdiction of the House and Senate Committees on Appropriations that provides budget authority. Enactment generally follows adoption of authorizing legislation unless the authorization itself provides the budget authority. Currently, 13 regular appropriations acts are enacted annually. When necessary, the Congress may enact supplemental or continuing appropriations. authorization: A substantive law that sets up or continues a federal program or agency. Authorizing legislation is normally a prerequisite for appropriations. For some programs, the authorizing legislation itself provides the authority to incur obligations and make payments. Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985: Also known as GrammRudman-Hollings or the Balanced Budget Act, the act sets forth specific deficit targets and a sequestration procedure to reduce spending if the targets are exceeded. The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 established new budget procedures as well as revised targets through fiscal year 1995, which exclude the Social Security trust funds. The President has the option of adjusting the deficit targets for revised economic and technical assumptions when submitting the budget for fiscal years 1994 and 1995. baseline: A benchmark for measuring the budgetary effects of proposed changes in federal revenues or spending, with the assumption that current budgetary policies are continued without
JL1
January 1993
change. As specified in the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA), the baseline for revenues and entitlement spending generally assumes that laws now on the statute books will continue. The discretionary spending projections are based on the discretionary spending caps set by the BEA in 1994 and 1995 and are adjusted for inflation in 1996 through 1998. Blue Chip consensus forecast: The average of about 50 forecasts surveyed by Eggert Economic Enterprises, Inc. budget authority: Legal authority to incur financial obligations that will result in spending of federal government funds. Budget authority may be provided in an authorization or in an appropriation act. Offsetting collections, including offsetting receipts, constitute negative budget authority. budget deficit: Amount by which budget expenditures exceed budget revenues during a given period. Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA): Title XIII of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990. This act amended both the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985. The BEA provides for new budget targets, sequestration procedures, pay-as-you-go procedures, credit reform, and various other changes. budget function: One of 20 areas into which federal spending and credit activity are divided. National needs are grouped into 17 broad budget functions, including national defense, international affairs, energy, agriculture, health, income security, and general government. Three functions-net interest, allowances, and undistributed offsetting receipts-do not address national needs but are included to complete the budget. budget resolution: A resolution, passed by both Houses of the Congress, that sets forth a Congressional budget plan for the next five years. The plan must be carried out through subsequent legislation, including appropriations and changes in tax and entitlement laws. The resolution sets guidelines for Congressional action, but it is not signed by the President and does not become law. The Congressional Budget Act of 1974 established a number of mechanisms that are designed to hold spending and revenues to the targets established in the budget resolution. budgetary resources: All sources of budget authority that are subject to sequestration. Budgetary resources include new budget authority, unobligated balances, direct spending authority, and obligation limitations. See sequestration. business cycle: Fluctuations in overall business activity accompanied by swings in the unemployment rate, interest rates, and profits. Over a business cycle, real activity rises to a peak (its highest level during the cycle), then falls until it reaches its trough (its lowest level following the peak), whereupon it starts to rise again, defining a new cycle. Business cycles are irregular, varying in frequency, amplitude, and duration. (NBER) capital: Physical capital is the output that has been set aside to be used in production rather than consumed. According to the national income and product accounts, private capital goods are composed of residential and nonresidential structures, producers' durable equipment, and business inventories. Financial capital is the funds raised by an individual, business, or government by issuing securities, such as a mortgage, stock certificate, or bond. Human capital is a term for education, training, health, and other attributes of the work force that increase its ability to produce goods and services.
GLOSSARY
139
central bank: A government-established agency responsible for conducting monetary policy and overseeing credit conditions. The Federal Reserve System fulfills these functions in the United States. civilian unemployment rate: Unemployment as a percentage of the civilian labor force-that is, the labor force excluding armed forces personnel. (BLS) commercial paper: Short-term, unsecured debt obligations that are issued by large corporations with good credit ratings and that are actively traded in financial markets. By selling such obligations, issuers of commercial paper borrow directly from the public rather than indirectly through financial intermediaries such as commercial banks. compensation: All income due to employees for their work during a given period. Compensation includes wages and salaries as well as fringe benefits and employers' share of social insurance taxes. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) constant dollar: Measured in terms of prices of a base period, currently 1987 for most purposes, to remove the influence of inflation. Compare with current dollar. consumer confidence: A measure of consumer attitudes and buying plans indicated by an index of consumer sentiment. One such index is constructed by the University of Michigan Survey Research Center based on surveys of consumers' views of the state of the economy and their personal finances, both current and prospective. consumer durable goods: Goods bought by households for their personal use that, on average, last more than three years-for example, automobiles, furniture, or appliances. consumption: Total purchases of goods and services during a given period by households for their own use. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) cost of capital: Total expected rate of return an investment must generate in order to provide investors with the prevailing market yield consistent with risk after accounting for corporate taxes (if applicable) and depreciation. countercyclical: Acting to moderate the ups and downs of the business cycle. CPI-U: An index of consumer prices based on the typical market basket of goods and services consumed by all urban consumers during a base period-currently 1982 through 1984. (BLS) credit crunch: A significant, temporary decline in the normal supply of credit, usually caused by tight monetary policy or a regulatory restriction on lending institutions. credit reform: A revised system of budgeting for federal credit activities that focuses on the cost of subsidies conveyed in federal credit assistance. This process was authorized by the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990, which was part of the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990. credit subsidies: The estimated long-term costs to the federal government of direct loans or loan guarantees calculated on the basis of net present value, excluding administrative costs and any incidental effects on governmental receipts or outlays. For direct loans, the subsidy cost is the net present value of loan disbursements less repayments of interest and principal, adjusted for estimated defaults, prepayments, fees, penalties, and other recoveries. For loan guarantees, the subsidy cost is
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the net present value of the estimated payments by the government to cover defaults and delinquencies, interest subsidies, or other payments, offset by any payments to the government, including origination and other fees, penalties, and recoveries. See present value. currency value: See exchange rate. current-account balance: The net revenues that arise from a country's international sales and purchases of goods and services, net international transfers (public or private gifts or donations), and net factor income (primarily capital income from foreign-located property owned by residents less capital income from domestic property owned by nonresidents). The current-account balance differs from net exports in that the former includes international transfers and net factor income. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) current dollar: Measured in the dollar value-reflecting then-prevailing prices-of the period under consideration. Compare with constant dollar. cyclical deficit: The part of the budget deficit that results from cyclical factors rather than from underlying fiscal policy. The cyclical deficit reflects the fact that, when GDP falls, revenues automatically fall and outlays automatically rise. By definition, the cyclical deficit is zero when the economy is operating at potential GDP. Compare with standardized-employment deficit. (CBO) debt held by the public: Debt issued by the federal government and held by nonfederal investors (including the Federal Reserve System). debt restructuring: Changing the characteristics of an entity's outstanding debt, such as maturity or interest rate. Such changes can be effected by issuing long-term debt and retiring short-term debt (or vice versa), or by negotiating with creditors. debt service: Payment of scheduled interest obligations on outstanding debt. defense spending: See discretionary spending, deflator: See implicit deflator. deposit insurance: The guarantee by a federal agency that an individual depositor at a participating depository institution will receive the full amount of the deposit (up to $100,000) if the institution becomes insolvent. depository institutions: Financial intermediaries that make loans to borrowers and obtain funds from savers by accepting deposits. Depository institutions are commercial banks, savings and loan institutions, mutual savings banks, and credit unions. depreciation: Decline in the value of a currency, financial asset, or capital good. When applied to a capital good, the term usually refers to loss of value because of obsolescence or wear. direct spending: The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 defines this term as (a) budget authority provided by an authorization, (b) entitlement authority (including mandatory spending contained in appropriation acts), and (c) the Food Stamp program. A synonym is mandatory spending. Compare with discretionary spending.
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discount rate: The interest rate the Federal Reserve System charges on a loan that it makes to a hank. Such loans, when allowed, enable a bank to meet its reserve requirements without reducing its loans. discouraged workers: Jobless people who are available for work, but who are not actively seeking jobs because they think they have poor prospects of finding jobs. Because they are not actively seeking jobs, discouraged workers are not counted as part of the labor force or as being unemployed. (BLS) discretionary spending: Spending for programs whose funding levels are determined through the appropriation process. Congress has the discretion each year to determine how many dollars will be devoted to continuing current programs and funding new ones. Discretionary spending is divided among three categories: defense, international, and domestic. Compare with direct spending. Defense discretionary spending consists primarily of the military activities of the Department of Defense, which are funded in the defense and military construction appropriation bills. It also includes the defense-related functions of other agencies, such as the Department of Energy's nuclear weapons programs. International discretionary spending encompasses spending for foreign economic and military aid, the activities of the Department of State and the U.S. Information Agency, and international financial programs, such as the Export-Import Bank of the United States. Domestic discretionary spending includes most government activities in science and space, transportation, medical research, environmental protection, and law enforcement, among other spending programs. Funding for these programs is provided in 10 of the annual appropriation bills. discretionary spending caps: Annual ceilings on budget authority and outlays for discretionary programs as defined by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990. For fiscal years 1991 through 1993, the caps are divided among the three categories of discretionary spending-defense, international, and domestic. For fiscal years 1994 and 1995, there is one cap for all discretionary spending. Discretionary spending caps are enforced through Congressional rules and sequestration procedures. disposable (personal) income: Income received by individuals, including transfer payments, less personal taxes and fees paid to government. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) domestic demand: Total purchases of goods and services, regardless of origin, by U.S. consumers, businesses, and governments during a given period. Domestic demand equals gross domestic product minus net exports. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) domestic discretionary spending: See discretionary spending. entitlements: Programs that make payments to any person, business, or unit of government that seeks the payments and meets the criteria set in law. The Congress controls these programs indirectly by defining eligibility and setting the benefit or payment rules. Although the level of spending for these programs is controlled by the authorizing legislation, funding may be provided either in an authorization or in an appropriation act. The best-known entitlements are the major benefit programs, such as Social Security and Medicare; other entitlements include farm price supports and interest on the federal debt. See direct spending. equity price: The market value of a stock certificate share.
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excess reserves: Total monetary reserves in excess of required reserves. See monetary reserves and reserve requirements. exchange rate: The number of units of a foreign currency that can be bought with one unit of the domestic currency. (FRB) excise tax: A tax levied on the purchase of a specific type of good or service, such as tobacco products or telephone services. expansion: A phase of the business cycle that extends from the trough to the next peak. See business cycle. (NBER) federal funds: See trust funds. federal funds rate: Overnight interest rate at which financial institutions borrow and lend monetary reserves. A rise in the federal funds rate (compared with other short-term rates) suggests a tightening of monetary policy, whereas a fall suggests an easing. (FRB) Federal Reserve System: As the central bank of the United States, the Federal Reserve is responsible for conducting the nation's monetary policy and overseeing credit conditions. final sales to domestic purchasers: Gross domestic product minus both net exports and the change in business inventories during a given period. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) financial intermediary: An institution that indirectly matches borrowers with lenders. For example, depository institutions, such as commercial banks or savings and loan institutions, lend funds that they have accepted from depositors. Nondepository institutions, such as life insurance companies or pension funds, lend or invest funds that they hold in reserve against future claims by policyholders or participating retirees. financing account: Any account established under credit reform to finance the portion of federal direct loans and loan guarantees not subsidized by federal funds. Since these accounts are used only to finance the nonsubsidized portion of federal credit activities, they are excluded from the federal budget and included as a means of financing the deficit. fiscal policy: The government's choice of tax and spending programs, which influences the amount and maturity of government debt as well as the level, composition, and distribution of output and income. An "easy" fiscal policy stimulates the short-term growth of output and income, whereas a "tight" fiscal policy restrains their growth. Movements in the standardized-employment deficit constitute one overall indicator of the tightness or ease of federal fiscal policy; an increase relative to potential GDP suggests fiscal ease, whereas a decrease suggests fiscal restriction. The President and the Congress jointly determine federal fiscal policy. fiscal year: A yearly accounting period. The federal government's fiscal year begins October 1 and ends September 30. Fiscal years are designated by the calendar years in which they endfor example, fiscal year 1992 began October 1,1991, and ended September 30,1992. fixed-weighted price index: An index that measures overall price (compared with a base period) without being influenced by changes in the composition of output or purchases. Compare with implicit deflator.
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143
GDP: See gross domestic product. GNP: See gross national product. government purchases of goods and services: Purchases from the private sector (including compensation of government employees) made by government during a given period. Government purchases constitute a component of GDP, but they encompass only a portion of all government expenditures because they exclude transfer payments (which include grants to state and local governments and net interest paid). (Bureau of Economic Analysis) government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs): Enterprises established and chartered by the federal government to perform specific financial functions, usually under the supervision of a government agency, but in all cases wholly owned by stockholders rather than the government. Major examples are the Federal National Mortgage Association, the Student Loan Marketing Association, and the Federal Home Loan Banks. grants: Transfer payments from the federal government to state and local governments or other recipients to help fund projects or activities that do not involve substantial federal participation. grants-in-aid: Grants from the federal government to state and local governments to help provide for programs of assistance or service to the public. gross domestic product (GDP): The total market value of all goods and services produced domestically during a given period. The components of GDP are consumption, gross domestic investment, government purchases of goods and services, and net exports. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) gross investment: Includes additions to the capital stock, but does not include depreciation of existing capital as a subtraction from the capital stock. gross national product (GNP): The total market value of all goods and services produced in a given period by labor and property supplied by residents of a country, regardless of where the labor and property are located. GNP differs from GDP primarily by including the excess of capital income that residents earn from investments abroad less capital income that nonresidents earn from domestic investment. implicit deflator: An overall measure of price (compared with a base period) given by the ratio of current dollar purchases to constant dollar purchases. Changes in an implicit deflator, unlike those in a fixed-weighted price index, reflect changes in the composition of purchases as well as in the prices of goods and services purchased. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) index: An indicator or summary measure that defines the overall level (compared with a base) of some aggregate, such as the general price level or total quantity, in terms of the levels of its components. inflation: Growth in a measure of the general price level, usually expressed as an annual rate of change. infrastructure: Government-owned capital goods that provide services to the public, usually with benefits to the community at large as well as to the direct user. Examples include schools, roads, bridges, dams, harbors, and public buildings.
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inventories: Stocks of goods held by businesses either for further processing or for sale. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) investment: Physical investment is the current product set aside during a given period to be used for future production; in other words, an addition to the stock of capital goods. According to the national income and product accounts, private domestic investment consists of investment in residential and nonresidential structures, producers' durable equipment, and the change in business inventories. Financial investment is the purchase of a financial security. Investment in human capital is spending on education, training, health services, and other activities that increase the productivity of the work force. Investment in human capital is not treated as investment in the national income and product accounts. junk bond: A bond considered by credit rating services to be a speculative financial investment because of its relatively high risk of default or delay in meeting scheduled obligations. Junk bonds offer relatively high yields to compensate investors for their exposure to risk. labor force: The number of people who have jobs or are available for work and are actively seeking jobs. Labor force participation rate is the labor force as a percentage of the noninstitutional population aged 16 years or older. (BLS) liquidating account: Any budgetary account established under credit reform to finance direct loan and loan guarantee activities that were obligated or committed before October 1,1992 (the effective date of credit reform). liquidity: Characteristic of an asset that permits it to be sold at short notice with little or no loss in value. Ordinarily, a shorter term to maturity or a lower risk of default will enhance an asset's liquidity. long-term interest rate: Interest rate earned by a note or bond that matures in 10 or more years. mandatory spending: Another term for direct spending. M2: A measure of the U.S. money supply that consists of the nonbank public's holdings of currency, traveler's checks, and checking accounts (collectively known as Ml), plus small (less than $100,000) time and savings accounts, money market deposit accounts held at depository institutions, most money market mutual funds, overnight repurchase agreements, and overnight Eurodollar accounts held by U.S. residents. (FRB) marginal tax rate: Tax rate that applies to an additional dollar of taxable income. means of financing: Sources of financing federal deficits or uses of federal surpluses. The largest means of financing is normally federal borrowing from the public, but other means of financing include any transaction that causes a difference between the federal (including off-budget) surplus or deficit and changes in debt held by the public. The means of financing include changes in checks outstanding and Treasury cash balances, seigniorage, and the transactions of the financing accounts established under credit reform. means-tested programs: Programs that provide cash or services to people who meet a test of need based on income and assets. Most means-tested programs are entitlements--for example, Medicaid, the Food Stamp program, Supplemental Security Income, family support, and veterans' pensions--
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but a few, such as subsidized housing and various social services, are funded through discretionary appropriations. merchandise trade balance: Net exports of goods. The merchandise trade balance differs from net exports by excluding exports and imports of services. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) monetary policy: The strategy of influencing movements of the money supply and interest rates to affect output and inflation. An "easy" monetary policy suggests faster money growth and initially lower short-term interest rates in an attempt to increase aggregate demand, but it may lead to a higher rate of inflation. A "tight" monetary policy suggests slower money growth and higher interest rates in the near term in an attempt to reduce inflationary pressure by reducing aggregate demand. The Federal Reserve System conducts monetary policy in the United States. monetary reserves: The amount of funds that banks and other depository institutions hold as cash or as deposits with the Federal Reserve System. See also reserve requirements. money supply: Private assets that can readily be used to make transactions or are easily convertible into those that can. See M2. NAIRU (nonaccelerating inflation rate of unemployment): The unemployment rate consistent with a constant inflation rate. An unemployment rate greater than the NAIRU indicates downward pressure on inflation, whereas a lower unemployment rate indicates upward pressure on inflation. Estimates of the NAIRU are based on the historical relationship between inflation and the aggregate unemployment rate. national income and product accounts (NIPAs): Official U.S. accounts that detail the composition of GDP and how the costs of production are distributed as income. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) national saving: Total saving by all sectors of the economy: personal saving, business saving (corporate after-tax profits not paid as dividends), and government saving (budget surplus or deficit-indicating dissaving-of all government entities). National saving represents all income not consumed, publicly or privately, during a given period. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) net exports: Exports of goods and services produced in a country less its imports of goods and services produced elsewhere. net interest: In the federal budget, net interest includes federal interest payments to the public as recorded in budget function 900. Net interest also includes, as an offset, interest income received by the government on loans and cash balances. In the national income and product accounts, net interest is the income component of GDP paid as interest-primarily interest that domestic businesses pay, less interest they receive. The NIPAs treat government interest payments as transfers, so they are not part of GDP. net national saving: National saving less depreciation of physical capital. NIPAs: See national income and product accounts. nominal: Measured in the dollar value (as in nominal output, income, or wage rate) or market terms (as in nominal exchange or interest rate) of the period under consideration. Compare with real.
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nonresidential structures: Primarily business buildings (such as industrial, office, and other commercial buildings) and structures (such as mining and well shafts). (Bureau of Economic Analysis) off-budget: Spending or revenues excluded from the budget totals by law. The revenues and outlays of the two Social Security trust funds and the net surplus or deficit of the Postal Service are currently off-budget and (except for discretionary Social Security administrative costs) are not included in any Budget Enforcement Act (BEA) calculations. Medicare Hospital Insurance revenues and outlays are also designated as off-budget, but the BEA treats them as on-budget. offsetting receipts: Funds collected by the federal government that are recorded as negative budget authority and outlays and credited to separate receipt accounts. More than half of offsetting receipts are intragovernmental receipts that reflect agencies' payments to retirement and other funds on their employees' behalf; these receipts simply balance payments elsewhere in the budget. The remaining offsetting receipts (proprietary receipts) come from the public and generally represent voluntary, business-type transactions. The largest items are the flat premiums for Supplementary Medical Insurance (Part B of Medicare), timber and oil lease receipts, and proceeds from the sale of electric power. Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC): The group of oil-rich countries that tries to determine the price of crude oil (given demand) by agreeing to production quotas among its members. outlays: The liquidation of a federal obligation, generally by issuing a check or disbursing cash. Sometimes obligations are liquidated (and outlays occur) by issuing agency promissory notes, such as those of the former Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation. Unlike outlays for other categories of spending, outlays for interest on the public debt are counted when the interest is earned, not when it is paid. Outlays may be for payment of obligations incurred in previous fiscal years or in the same year. Outlays, therefore, flow in part from unexpended balances of prior-year budget authority and, in part, from budget authority provided for the current year. pay-as-you-go: A procedure required in the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 to ensure that, for fiscal years 1991 through 1995, legislation affecting direct spending and receipts does not increase the deficit. Pay-as-you-go is enforced through Congressional rules and sequestration procedures. peak: See business cycle. personal saving: Disposable personal income that households do not use for consumption or interest payments during a given period. Personal saving rate is personal saving as a percentage of disposable personal income. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) point-year of unemployment: An unemployment rate that is 1 percentage point above the NAIRU for one year. For example, if the unemployment rate averaged 2 percentage points above the NAIRU for one and one-half years, that would be three point-years of unemployment. potential real GDP: The highest level of real GDP that could persist for a substantial period without raising the rate of inflation. CBO's calculation relates potential GDP to the NAIRU. See NAIRU. (CBO) present value: A single number that expresses a flow of current and future income (or payments) in terms of an equivalent lump sum received (or paid) today. The calculation of present value de-
GLOSSARY
147
pends on the rate of interest. For example, given an interest rate of, say, 5 percent, today's 95 cents will grow to $1 next year. Hence, the present value of $1 payable a year from today is only 95 cents. private saving: Saving by households and businesses. Private saving is equal to personal saving plus after-tax corporate profits less dividends paid. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) producers' durable equipment: Primarily nonresidential capital equipment-such as computers, machines, and transportation equipment-owned by businesses. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) productivity: Average real output per unit of input. Labor productivity is average real output per hour of labor. The growth of labor productivity is defined as growth of real output that is not explained by growth of labor input alone. Total factor productivity is average real output per unit of combined labor and capital inputs. The growth of total factor productivity is defined as the growth of real output that is not explained by growth of labor and capital. Labor productivity and total factor productivity differ in that increases in capital per worker would raise labor productivity but not total factor productivity. (BLS) program account: Any budgetary account that finances credit subsidies and the costs of administering credit programs. real: Adjusted to remove the effect of inflation. Real (constant dollar) output represents volume, rather than dollar value, of goods and services. Real income represents power to purchase real output. Real data are usually constructed by dividing the corresponding nominal data, such as output or a wage rate, by a price index or deflator. Real interest rate is a nominal interest rate minus the expected inflation rate. Compare with nominal. receipt account: Any budget or off-budget account that is established exclusively to record the collection of income, including negative subsidies. In general, receipt accounts that collect money arising from the exercise of the government's sovereign powers are included as revenues, whereas the proceeds of intragovernmental transactions or collections from the public arising from businesstype transactions (such as interest income, proceeds from the sale of property or products, or profits from federal credit activities) are included as offsetting receipts-thai is, credited as offsets to outlays rather than included in receipts. recession: A phase of the business cycle extending from a peak to the next trough-usually lasting six months to a year-and characterized by widespread declines in output, income, employment, and trade in many sectors of the economy. Real GDP usually falls throughout the recession. See business cycle. (NBER) reconciliation: A process the Congress uses to make its tax and spending legislation conform with the targets established in the budget resolution. The budget resolution may contain reconciliation instructions directing certain Congressional committees to achieve savings in tax or spending programs under their jurisdiction. Legislation to implement the reconciliation instructions is usually combined in one comprehensive bill. The reconciliation process primarily affects taxes, entitlement spending, and offsetting receipts. As a general rule, decisions on defense and nondefense discretionary programs are determined separately through the appropriation process, which is also governed by allocations in the budget resolution. recovery: A phase of the business cycle that lasts from a trough until overall economic activity returns to the level it had reached at the previous peak. See business cycle. (NBER)
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reserve requirements: The amount of funds that banks and other depository institutions must hold as cash or as deposits with the Federal Reserve System. The Federal Reserve System specifies reserve requirements depending on the level of deposits. Such requirements reduce the risk of bank failure and allow the Federal Reserve System to influence the money supply. (FRB) reserves: See monetary reserves. residential investment: Investment in housing, primarily for construction of new single-family and multifamily housing and alterations plus additions to existing housing. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC): An agency created by the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA) to close, merge, or otherwise resolve insolvent savings and loan institutions whose deposits are insured by the federal government. retained earnings: Corporate profits after tax that are used for investment rather than paid out as dividends to stockholders. (Bureau of Economic Analysis) RTC: See Resolution Trust Corporation. sequestration: The cancellation of budgetary resources to enforce the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990. Sequestration is triggered if the Office of Management and Budget determines that discretionary appropriations breach the discretionary spending caps, that legislation affecting direct spending and receipts increases the deficit, or that the deficit exceeds, by more than a specified margin, the maximum deficit amount set by law. Failure to meet the maximum deficit amount would trigger across-the-board spending reductions. Changes in direct spending and receipt legislation that increase the deficit would result in reductions in funding from entitlements not otherwise exempted by law. Discretionary spending in excess of the caps would cause the cancellation of budgetary resources within the appropriate discretionary spending category. short-term interest rate: Interest rate earned by a debt instrument that will mature within one year. standardized-employment deficit: The level of the federal government budget deficit that would occur under current law if the economy were operating at potential GDP. It provides a measure of underlying fiscal policy by removing the influence of cyclical factors from the budget deficit. Compare with cyclical deficit. (CBO) structural deficit: Same as standardized-employment deficit. ten-year Treasury note: Interest-bearing note, issued by the U.S. Treasury, that is redeemed in 10 years. three-month Treasury bill: Security, issued by the U.S. Treasury, that is redeemed in 91 days. thrift institutions: Savings and loan institutions and mutual savings banks. transfer payments: Payments in return for which no good or service is currently received-for example, welfare or Social Security payments or money sent to relatives abroad. (Bureau of Economic Analysis)
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trough: See business cycle. trust fund: A fund, designated as a trust fund by statute, that is credited with income from earmarked collections and charged with certain outlays. Collections may come from the public (for example, taxes or user charges) or from intrabudgetary transfers. More than 150 federal government trust funds exist, of which the largest and best known finance several major benefit programs (including Social Security and Medicare) and certain infrastructure spending (the Highway and the Airport and Airway trust funds). The term "federal funds" refers to all programs that are not trust funds. underlying rate of inflation: Rate of inflation of a modified CPI-U that excludes from the market basket the components most volatile in price- food, energy, and used cars. unemployment: The number of jobless people who are available for work and are actively seeking jobs. The unemployment rate is unemployment as a percentage of the labor force. (BLS) yield: The average annual rate of return on a security, including interest payments and repayment of principal, if held to maturity. yield curve: The relationship formed by plotting the yields of otherwise comparable fixed-income securities against their terms of maturity. Typically, yields increase as maturities lengthen. The rate of this increase determines the "steepness" or "flatness" of the yield curve. Ordinarily a steepening (or flattening) of the yield curve is taken to suggest that relatively short-term interest rates are expected to be higher (or lower) in the future than they are currently.
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