Published:  May 11, 2009
The  changes, reported on Monday by the Office of Management  and Budget, brings the deficit for this fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30,  to $1.84 trillion from a February projection of $1.75 trillion. For fiscal  2010, the new estimate is $1.26 trillion, up from $1.17 trillion.
As  measured against the size of the economy, this year’s shortfall would be 12.9  percent of the overall economy, or gross domestic  product. Next year’s deficit would be 8.5 percent of G.D.P. Even before the  latest revisions those levels are the highest in more than 60 years, since the  end of World War II.
Economists  generally consider that a country’s annual deficits should not exceed 3 percent  of economic output. President Obama, in his 10-year  budget outline, projects that the nation will fall just below that level in his  last months in office, in fiscal year 2013, though many analysts consider his  economic assumptions to be too rosy.
Mr. Obama’s budget director, Peter R. Orszag, disclosed the  deficit revisions in his blog on the OMB Web site on Monday. He said they were  “driven in large part by the economic crisis inherited by this administration.”
Explaining  what has changed since the administration’s first estimates in February, Mr.  Orszag wrote, “Treasury now  estimates that overall federal revenue will be less than was projected in  February by between $30 billion and $50 billion in each of this year and next.  We also have more information about the severity of the financial crisis facing  the nation, and this is reflected in new, higher estimates for the cost of  financial stabilization efforts.”
Congressional  Democrats echoed the administration’s reference to the inheritance from  President George W. Bush. “The higher  deficit figures released today provide further evidence of the economic and  fiscal mess that has been handed to President Obama,” Senator Kent Conrad of North Dakota,  chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, said in a statement. “It took eight  years for the previous administration to dig this hole. It is going to take  time to climb our way out.”
Mr.  Conrad reiterated his call for a bipartisan task force to address the long-term  budget problems, particularly in the rising costs for Medicare and Medicaid. The White  House is resisting the idea of an outside panel and argues that Mr. Obama’s  initiative to overhaul health care will bring down costs.
In the  office of the House Republican leader, Antonia Ferrier, a spokeswoman for  Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio,  seized on the new deficit forecast to tweak the Democratic administration for  its boast last week that its “line-by-line scrub” of the federal budget had  produced proposals to save $17 billion in fiscal year 2010.
The $90  billion increase in the year’s deficit estimate, she noted, is “more than five  times the amount of savings proposed last week.”
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/05/12/business/economy/12budget.html?_r=1&partner=rss&emc=rss
 
 

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