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	<title>Hey, Mister, Can You Spare A Dime? &#187; Constitutional Issues</title>
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	<description>What Are You Prepared To Do?</description>
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		<title>Congressional Budget Office tells it like it is.</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 17 Nov 2009 22:57:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Congressional Hearings]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Constitutional Issues]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[Financial Crisis]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[congressional budget office]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[obamacare]]></category>

		<category><![CDATA[unsustainable American debt]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://actlightning.com/financialmeltdown/?p=489</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CBOâ€™s long-term budget projections raise fundamental questions about economic sustainability. If outlays grew as projected and revenues did not rise at a corresponding rate, annual deficits would climb and federal debt would grow significantly. Large budget deficits would reduce national saving, leading to more borrowing from abroad and less domestic investment, which in turn would depress income growth in the United States. Over time, the accumulation of debt would seriously harm the economy. Alternatively, if spending grew as projected and taxes were raised in tandem, tax rates would have to reach levels never seen in the United States.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Long-Term Budget Outlook</p>
<p><strong>Under current law, th&#101&#32&#102ederal budget is on an uns<input id="counter" type="hidden" />ustainable path</strong>â€”meanin&#103&#32&#116hat federal debt will continue to grow much faster&#32&#116&#104<input type="hidden" />an the economy over the long run. Although great u&#110&#99&#101rtainty surrounds longterm <input id="tracker" type="hidden" />fiscal projections, ris&#105&#110&#103 costs for health care and the aging of the U.S. p&#111&#112&#117l<input id="apps" type="hidden" />ation will cause federal spending to increase rap&#105&#100&#108y under any plausible scenar<input id="counter" type="hidden" />io for current law. Un&#108&#101&#115s revenues increase just as rapidly, the rise in s&#112&#101&#110di<s></s>ng will produce growing budget deficits and accu&#109&#117&#108ating debt. Keeping deficits <input id="stats" type="hidden" />and debt from reachin&#103&#32&#108evels that would cause substantial harm to the eco&#110&#111&#109y w<input type="hidden" />ould require increasing revenues significantly &#97&#115&#32a percentage of gross domestic<input id="phpint" type="hidden" /> product (GDP), decr&#101&#97&#115ing projected spending sharply, or some combinatio&#110&#32&#111f th<s></s>e two.</p>
<p>For decades, <strong>spending on the federal go&#118&#101&#114nmentâ€™s major health care pro<s></s>grams, Medicare and&#32&#77&#101dicaid, has been growing faster than the economy</strong> (&#97&#115&#32has h<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />ealth care spending in the private sector).</p>
<p>T&#104&#101&#32Congressional Budget Office (CBO<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />) projects that if&#32&#99&#117rrent laws do not change, federal spending on Medi&#99&#97&#114e and <input id="phpint" type="hidden" />Medicaid combined will grow from roughly 5 p&#101&#114&#99ent of GDP today to almost 10 per<input id="counter" type="hidden" />cent by 2035 (wha&#116&#32&#116his report describes as the intermediate term) and&#32&#116&#111 more t<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />han 17 percent by 2080 (what this report co&#110&#115&#105ders to be the long term).</p>
<p><strong>That pr<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />ojection means t&#104&#97&#116 in 2080, without changes in policy, the federal g&#111&#118&#101rnment w<input id="counter" type="hidden" />ould be spending almost as much, as a shar&#101&#32&#111f the economy, on just its two majo<input id="apps" type="hidden" />r health care p&#114&#111&#103rams as it has spent on all of its programs and se&#114&#118&#105ces in re<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />cent years.</strong> (For a description of CBOâ€™s&#32&#112&#114ojection methodology, see the June 2<input id="counter" type="hidden" />009 background&#32&#112&#97per CBOâ€™s Long-Term Model: An Overview.)</p>
<p>Under c&#117&#114&#114ent law, s<input id="stats" type="hidden" />pending on Social Security is also proje&#99&#116&#101d to rise over time as a share of GDP<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />, albeit much&#32&#108&#101ss dramatically. CBO projects that Social Security&#32&#115&#112ending will<input id="tracker" type="hidden" /> increase from less than 5 percent of G&#68&#80&#32today to about 6 percent in 2035 and t<input id="stats" type="hidden" />hen roughly &#115&#116&#97bilize at that level through 2080. Under the assum&#112&#116&#105ons used for<input id="counter" type="hidden" /> CBOâ€™s long-term projections, govern&#109&#101&#110t spending on activities other than Med<input id="stats" type="hidden" />icare, Medi&#99&#97&#105d, Social Security, and interest on federal debtâ€&#148&#97&#99tivities such<input id="counter" type="hidden" /> as national defense and a wide varie&#116&#121&#32of domestic programsâ€”is projected to d<input id="apps" type="hidden" />ecline or &#115&#116&#97y roughly stable as a share of GDP in future decad&#101&#115&#46 Almost all of<input id="tracker" type="hidden" /> the projected growth in federal spe&#110&#100&#105ng other than interest payments on the de<input id="counter" type="hidden" />bt comes &#102&#114&#111m growth in spending on the three largest entitlem&#101&#110&#116 programsâ€”Med<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />icare, Medicaid, and Social Securit&#121&#46</p>&#10<p>By CBOâ€™s estimates, the increase in spen<input id="apps" type="hidden" />ding for&#32&#77&#101dicare and Medicaid as a share of GDP will account&#32&#102&#111r 80 percent of <s></s>spending increases for the three e&#110&#116&#105tlement programs between now and 2035 and 9<input id="apps" type="hidden" />0 perce&#110&#116&#32of spending growth between now and 2080. Thus, red&#117&#99&#105ng overall govern<input id="stats" type="hidden" />ment spending relative to what wo&#117&#108&#100 occur under current fiscal policy would req<input id="counter" type="hidden" />uire f&#117&#110&#100amental changes in the trajectory of federal healt&#104&#32&#115pending. Slowing t<input id="stats" type="hidden" />he growth rate of outlays for Me&#100&#105&#99are and Medicaid is the central long-term cha<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />lleng&#101&#32&#102or federal fiscal policy.</p>
<p>Federal spending on Medi&#99&#97&#114e, Medicaid, and So<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />cial Security will grow relativ&#101&#32&#116o the economy both because health care spendin<s></s>g pe&#114&#32&#98eneficiary is projected to increase and because th&#101&#32&#112opulation is aging. <input id="counter" type="hidden" />Spending on Medicare and Medic&#97&#105&#100 will be driven by both factors, while Social S<input type="hidden" />ecu&#114&#105&#116y spending will rise because of the populationâ€™s&#32&#97&#103ing. Between now and <input id="tracker" type="hidden" />2035, aging is projected to m&#97&#107&#101 the larger contribution to the growth of spendi<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />ng&#32&#102&#111r those three programs as a share of GDP. After 20&#51&#53&#44 continued increases i<input id="apps" type="hidden" />n health care spending per b&#101&#110&#101ficiary are projected to dominate the growth in s<input type="hidden" />p&#101&#110&#100ing for the three programs.</p>
<p>The current recession &#104&#97&#115 little effect on long-<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />term projections of noninte&#114&#101&#115t spending and revenues. But CBO estimates that in<s></s>&#32&#102&#105scal years 2009 and 2010, the federal government w&#105&#108&#108 record its largest budg<input type="hidden" />et deficits as a share of &#71&#68&#80 since shortly after World War II.</p>
<p>As a result of &#116<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />&#104&#111se deficits, federal debt held by the public will &#115&#111&#97r from 41 percent of GDP <input id="apps" type="hidden" />at the end of fiscal year&#32&#50&#4808 to 60 percent at the end of fiscal year 2010. H&#105&#103<s></s>&#104er debt results in permanently higher spending to &#112&#97&#121 interest on that debt (un<s></s>less the debt is later p&#97&#105&#100 off ). Federal interest payments already amount t&#111&#32&#109<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />ore than 1 percent of GDP; unless current law changes, that &#115&#104&#97re would rise to 2.5 percen<input id="stats" type="hidden" />t by 2020.</p>
<p>CBOâ€™s long&#45&#116&#101rm budget projections raise fundamental questions &#97&#98&#111u<input id="stats" type="hidden" />t economic sustainability. If outlays grew as pro&#106&#101&#99ted and revenues did not ris<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />e at a corresponding r&#97&#116&#101, annual deficits would climb and federal debt wou&#108&#100&#32gr<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />ow significantly. Large budget deficits would re&#100&#117&#99e national saving, leading to<input type="hidden" /> more borrowing from &#97&#98&#114oad and less domestic investment, which in turn wo&#117&#108&#100 de<input id="apps" type="hidden" />press income growth in the United States. Over &#116&#105&#109e, the accumulation of debt wo<input id="phpint" type="hidden" />uld seriously harm t&#104&#101&#32economy. Alternatively, if spending grew as projec&#116&#101&#100 and<input id="counter" type="hidden" /> taxes were raised in tandem, <strong>tax rates would &#104&#97&#118e to reach levels never seen in<input id="phpint" type="hidden" /> the United States.</strong></p>&#10<p>&#72&#105gh tax rates would slow the growth of the economy,&#32&#109&#97king <input id="tracker" type="hidden" />the spending burden harder to bear. Policymak&#101&#114&#115 could mitigate the economic dam<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />age from rapidly r&#105&#115&#105ng debt by putting the nation on a sustainable fis&#99&#97&#108 cours<input id="apps" type="hidden" />e, which would require some combination of l&#111&#119&#101r spending and higher revenues th<s></s>an the amounts no&#119&#32&#112rojected. Making such changes sooner rather than l&#97&#116&#101r would<input id="stats" type="hidden" /> lessen the risks that current fiscal polic&#121&#32&#112oses to the economy.</p>
<p>Source: http:<s></s>//cbo.gov/ftpdoc&#115&#47&#4902xx/doc10297/SummaryforWeb_LTBO.pdf</p>
<p>The Congressi&#111&#110&#97l Budget<input type="hidden" /> Office shouts out the same critical warni&#110&#103&#115 that so-called &#8220;radicals&#8221; like Glenn Beck repeat. Americans, i<input id="tracker" type="hidden" />t&#8217;s time for you to dust off &#121&#111&#117r ancestors&#8217; backbones and take your country back before it is t&#111&#111&#32late.</p>

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