The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Spectacle Blog

On Rosy Projections

On the occasion of Fed chairman Ben Bernanke’s testimony to the House Committee on Financial Services today, Calculated Risk took a look back at what Alan Greenspan was saying at the same hearing in 2001: 

The most recent projections from OMB and CBO indicate that, if current policies remain in place, the total unified surplus will reach about $800 billion in fiscal year 2010, including an on-budget surplus of almost $500 billion. Moreover, the admittedly quite uncertain long-term budget exercises released by the CBO last October maintain an impliciton-budget surplus under baseline assumptions well past 2030 despite the budgetary pressures from the aging of the baby-boom generation, especially on the major health programs. 

These most recent projections, granted their tentativeness, nonetheless make clear that the highly desirable goal of paying off the federal debt is in reach and, indeed, would occur well before the end of the decade under baseline assumptions. 

Always worth keeping in mind: the uncertainty in government estimates is real, and there’s good reason to assume that the rosy scenario won’t come to pass. 

View all comments (5) |

Ken (Old Texican)| 3.2.11 @ 12:53PM

Mr. Lawler,
In the link, I did note that the guestimate was made prior to 9-11. OOPS!

Paul McGrath| 3.2.11 @ 1:02PM

This is from the man who just printed 800 billion dollars because he was worried about "deflation." So, skyrocketing food, commodity and energy prices are better? The guy is a fool and I don't trust a word he says.

Handy| 3.3.11 @ 3:55AM

The only cure to inflation is deflation. We could use more of it. Let's get back to when gold was worth $20.00 per ounce.

PhilTheCapitalistPig| 3.2.11 @ 2:46PM

I never did trust the Not-so-federal Federal Reserve Bank.

Why does noone attack the Central Banking System?

The founders pontificated very much against a Central Banking System. Interest Bearing Currency will always be a backdoor tax on the people.

Clint| 3.2.11 @ 3:42PM

"Under inflationary monetary policy, the dollar becomes worth less and less. So its value relative to that basket of goods is constantly changing. Its definition is a moving target."

More Blog Posts by Joseph Lawler

http://spectator.org/blog/2011/03/02/on-rosy-projections

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

FLASHBACK TO: 1995

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

The IRS Immigration Fraud Scandal

Jeffrey Lord | 6.18.13

Foreign Policy as Farce

Jed Babbin | 6.17.13

The Biggest Fool of All

Doug Bandow | 6.17.13

Can Liturgical Music Be Saved?

Patrick O'Hannigan | 6.17.13

Revenge of the Fruitcakes

Peter Hitchens | 6.17.13

Obama's Climate of Intimidation

Matthew Sheffield | 6.18.13

Whither Suburbia?

Steven Greenhut | 6.18.13

The Mole in Don Draper

James Bowman | 6.17.13

ADVERTISEMENT