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By PAUL KRUGMAN
March 10, 2013
Dwindling Deficit Disorder
For three years and more, policy debate in Washington has been dominated by warnings
about the dangers of budget deficits. A few lonely economists have tried from the
beginning to point out that this fixation is all wrong, that deficit spending is actually
appropriate in a depressed economy. But even though the deficit scolds have been
wrong about everything so far — where are the soaring interest rates we were promised?
— protests that we are having the wrong conversation have consistently fallen on deaf
ears.
What's really remarkable at this point, however, is the persistence of the deficit fixation
in the face of rapidly changing facts. People still talk as if the deficit were exploding, as if
the United States budget were on an unsustainable path; in fact, the deficit is falling
more rapidly than it has for generations, it is already down to sustainable levels, and it is
too small given the state of the economy.
Start with the raw numbers. America's budget deficit soared after the 2008 financial
crisis and the recession that went with it, as revenue plunged and spending on
unemployment benefits and other safety-net programs rose. And this rise in the deficit
was a good thing! Federal spending helped sustain the economy at a time when the
private sector was in panicked retreat; arguably, the stabilizing role of a large
government was the main reason the Great Recession didn't turn into a full replay of the
Great Depression.
But after peaking in 2009 at $1.4 trillion, the deficit began coming down. The
Congressional Budget Office expects the deficit for fiscal 2013 (which began in October
and is almost half over) to be $845 billion. That may still sound like a big number, but
given the state of the economy it really isn't.
Bear in mind that the budget doesn't have to be balanced to put us on a fiscally
sustainable path; all we need is a deficit small enough that debt grows more slowly than
the economy. To take the classic example, America never did pay off the debt from
World War II — in fact, our debt doubled in the 3o years that followed the war. But debt
as a percentage of G.D.P. fell by three-quarters over the same period.
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Right now, a sustainable deficit would be around $460 billion. The actual deficit is
bigger than that. But according to new estimates by the budget office, half of our current
deficit reflects the effects of a still-depressed economy. The "cyclically adjusted" deficit
— what the deficit would be if we were near full employment — is only about $423
billion, which puts it in the sustainable range; next year the budget office expects that
number to fall to just $172 billion. And that's why budget office projections show the
nation's debt position more or less stable over the next decade.
So we do not, repeat do not, face any kind of deficit crisis either now or for years to
come.
There are, of course, longer-term fiscal issues: rising health costs and an aging
population will put the budget under growing pressure over the course of the 2020s. But
I have yet to see any coherent explanation of why these longer-run concerns should
determine budget policy right now. And as I said, given the needs of the economy, the
deficit is currently too small.
Put it this way: Smart fiscal policy involves having the government spend when the
private sector won't, supporting the economy when it is weak and reducing debt only
when it is strong. Yet the cyclically adjusted deficit as a share of G.D.P. is currently
about what it was in 2006, at the height of the housing boom — and it is headed down.
Yes, we'll want to reduce deficits once the economy recovers, and there are gratifying
signs that a solid recovery is finally under way. But unemployment, especially long-term
unemployment, is still unacceptably high. "The boom, not the slump, is the time for
austerity," John Maynard Keynes declared many years ago. He was right — all you have
to do is look at Europe to see the disastrous effects of austerity on weak economies. And
this is still nothing like a boom.
Now, I'm aware that the facts about our dwindling deficit are unwelcome in many
quarters. Fiscal fearmongering is a major industry inside the Beltway, especially among
those looking for excuses to do what they really want, namely dismantle Medicare,
Medicaid and Social Security. People whose careers are heavily invested in the deficit-
scold industry don't want to let evidence undermine their scare tactics; as the deficit
dwindles, we're sure to encounter a blizzard of bogus numbers purporting to show that
we're still in some kind of fiscal crisis.
But we aren't. The deficit is indeed dwindling, and the case for making the deficit a
central policy concern, which was never very strong given low borrowing costs and high
unemployment, has now completely vanished.
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| Filename | EFTA00591140.pdf |
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