AP/ February 5, 2013, 1:30 PM

Report: Budget deficit $845 billion this year

A new government report is predicting the budget deficit will drop below $1 trillion for the first time in President Barack Obama's tenure in office.

The Congressional Budget Office analysis released Tuesday says the government will run a $845 billion deficit this year, a modest improvement compared to last year's $1.1 trillion shortfall but still enough red ink to require the government to borrow 24 cents of every dollar it spends.

The agency also projects that the economy will grow just 1.4 percent this year if $85 billion in across-the-board spending cuts take effect as scheduled March 1. Unemployment would average 8 percent. Obama wants to ease the cuts by replacing them with new tax revenue and alternative cuts, but a clash is looming with Republicans who insist that last month's tax increase on wealthier earners will be the last tax hike they permit.

The report predicts the deficit would dip to $430 billion by 2015, the lowest since the government posted a $459 billion deficit is former President George W. Bush's last year in office. That would be a relatively low 2.4 percent when measured against the size of the economy. But deficits would move higher after that and again reach near $1 trillion in the latter portion of the 10-year window - despite the recently enacted tax increase on family income exceeding $450,000 and automatic spending cuts of about $100 billion a year. The package of spending cuts and tax increases are punishment for Washington's failure to strike a long-term budget pact.

Over the coming decade, the deficit would total $7 trillion.

The economy will grow slowly in 2013 and more rapidly next year, with unemployment projected to stay high, according to the report.

This year's growth is being hampered by a tax increase enacted in January and by automatic spending cuts scheduled to take effect this spring. CBO projects the economy will grow by just 1.4 percent this year but recover to 3.4 percent next year.

Unemployment is projected to stay above 7.5 percent through next year. That would be the sixth straight year above that level, the longest period of such high unemployment in 70 years, the report said.

Without the government's fiscal tightening, which includes the expiration of Obama's two-year, 2 percentage point cut in payroll taxes and the imposition of the automatic spending cuts, economic growth would be about 1.5 percentage points higher this year, the report said. However, CBO warns that future growth would be constrained if the government doesn't reduce future deficits.

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6 Comments Add a Comment
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knsn_for_cmn_sense says:
I cant think of a better argument for a sequester.
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nearl451 says:
Gee. More like $745B if the sequester is NOT averted.

If the tax cuts had expired,the deficit would be around $350B.

What was the bigrush to ruin any effect of the sequester at the end of the year?
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TimeToEvolve says:
Finally starting to roll back the Bush Cheney Crime Family disaster. It took them 8 years to FUBAR this to this level.
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knsn_for_cmn_sense replies:
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you mean 12..... Right.
dhouston121 replies:
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you are both idiots
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tsigili says:
Only because the Republicans are trying to keep Obama's excesses in check.
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