Two years ago, Barack Obama unveiled his first
budget as president, ambitiously titled “A New Era of Fiscal
Responsibility.” The budget projected that by the time we reached
2019, the national debt would increase 62 percent, to a whopping
$15.4 trillion. Today, Obama released his 2012 budget,
having
declared over the weekend that, “It’s time Washington acted as
responsibly as our families do.” Interestingly, the budget proposal
now projects that after all of this responsibility, the national
debt will stand at $17.3 trillion in 2019 — or $1.9 trillion
higher than the administration’s own projections from
February 2009. Also, in it’s old budget, the Obama administration
projected that this year’s deficit would be $912 billion — now it
projects more than $1.6 trillion.
Below, I’ve created a chart to compare where the debt was
supposed to be headed in the Obama administration’s initial budget
with the one it released today.

A further breakdown of the 2010 to 2019 budget window finds that
the new budget runs higher deficits than the old budget in every
year up until 2017 — and only then saves $9 billion relative to
the old budget during that year. Overall, the new budget runs up
nearly $1.7 trillion in higher deficits in that 10 year period than
in Obama’s original budget. Note that we now have actual data for
the 2010 fiscal year, in which the deficit was $122 billion higher
than the Obama administration initially predicted it would be.

Here’s a chart I generated based on the above data. As you can
see, deficits start out siginificantly higher under the new
proposal, and catch up in the later years. But even then, the
relative deficit savings are marginal. In 2019, the new deficit
estimate is $31 billiion lower than the old one. But that year’s
budget is now projected to be $5.7 trillion — so we’re talking
about a half of a percentage point.

Clint| 2.14.11 @ 4:36PM
Rand Paul’s Budget
"Sen. Rand Paul (R.-Ky.) has a proposal to slash $500 billion from the budget this year. His legislation, (S.162), would terminate federal funding for education and housing, not constitutional functions of the federal government. Paul eliminates the Government Printing Office, cuts the food stamp program’s “erroneous and fraudulent” payments, eliminates Amtrak subsidies, eliminates the National Endowment for the Arts, shutters the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and ends the National Endowment for the Humanities."