Wednesday, 18 September 2013

U.S. must cut $2 trillion over 10 yrs to stabilize debt

U.S. lawmakers are far from finished with the job of deficit-cutting, the Congressional Budget Office warned on Tuesday, saying that $2 trillion in additional savings is needed over the next 10 years just to stabilize long-term U.S. debt.
In new long-term forecasts that will intensify the fiscal debate in Washington as critical deadlines loom, the CBO said U.S. public debt will balloon to 100 percent of the nation's economic output in 25 years if no action is taken, increasing the risk of another financial crisis.

That's up from about 73 percent this year and a 40-year historical average of about 38 percent. And the picture looks worse if Congress does away with the "sequester" across-the-board spending cuts now in place, the non-partisan CBO said.
Revenue growth from a recovering U.S. economy and a January tax increase on the wealthy are helping to shrink near-term deficits, but this is not enough to overcome the rising pension and health care costs associated with the aging Baby Boom generation, CBO director Doug Elmendorf said.
In order to cut U.S. debt levels significantly, CBO said it would take an additional $4 trillion worth of cuts over the next decade. That would shrink U.S. public debt in 2038 to 31 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), below the 40-year average.
Source: Reuters

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