Deficit crisis?  - One Chart Explains the Big Lie


CHART OF THE DAY: 
If Congress Does Nothing, The Deficit Will Disappear


"The Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
projects that deficits will disappear
entirely by the end of President Obama's
second term (if he gets a second term)
if Congress were to just sit on its
hands and do nothing." 


-- On Wednesday, the Congressional Budget Office released its
updated long-term budget forecast, which looked surprisingly like
the previous version of its long-term budget forecast.

It showed, as one might expect, that if the Bush tax-cuts remain
in effect and Medicare and Medicaid spending isn't constrained in
some way, the country will topple into a genuine fiscal crisis --
not the fake one the Congress is pretending the country's in right
now.

Republicans, of course, seized on that particular projection,
and claimed (a bit ridiculously) that it proved the government
must adopt their precise policy views: major spending
cuts, particularly to entitlement programs.

While all this -- from the findings to the politicization of them --
is perfectly expected, the forecast also presents another
opportunity to remind people that the medium-term budget outlook
is perfectly fine if Congress adheres to the law as it's
currently written.

That means no repealing the health care law, for one, but
more significantly it means allowing the Bush tax cuts to expire,
and (unfathomably) allowing Medicare reimbursement rates for doctors
to fall to the levels prescribed by the formula Congress wrote
almost 15 years ago. In other words, no more "doc fixes."

Helpfully, CBO juxtaposed these two alternative futures in a pair
of graphs and, just as last time, it projects that deficits
will disappear entirely by the end of President Obama's second term
(if he gets a second term) if Congress were to just sit on its
hands and do nothing.

Take a look at the CHART: 
http://talkingpointsmemo.com/images/CBOextendedalternative1.jpg

via: 
http://tpmdc.talkingpointsmemo.com/2011/06/chart-of-the-day-if-congress-does-nothing-the-deficit-will-disappear.php?ref=fpb








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