Obama's phony debt plan

Rosy growth projections contrast with grim reality

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By  <http://www.washingtontimes.com/staff/the-washington-times/> THE
WASHINGTON TIMES

-

The Washington Times

Monday, September 19, 2011 

Without any trace of irony, the White House's new 10-year deficit-reduction
plan is titled "Living Within Our Means and Investing in the Future." It
achieves neither of these objectives, but you would never know that by
looking at the deceptively rosy future it promises.

President Obama's agenda continues the conceit of long-term Washington
budget projections that bear no relation to reality. It overstates the
administration's ability to predict and influence events. The use of smoke
and mirrors is a necessary political trick because highlighting massive
purported "savings," particularly in the out years, enables Mr. Obama to
claim credit for trillions in deficit reduction that are supposed to appear
long after he is off th e political stage. He reckons to "cut" deficits by
$3 trillion in 10 years - but so long as we're pulling numbers out of a hat,
why not $6 trillion in 20 years or $30 trillion in 100 years? Ten-year
economic scenarios are the height of egotism; even Soviet dictator Josef
Stalin was content with overseeing five-year plans.

The base-line economic assumptions in Mr. Obama's plan are as fantastic as
any that have emerged from this White House. As with past projections,
unemployment levels are too low, growth projections are too high, and
deficit numbers are astronomically more optimistic than realistic. The
fiscal 2010 budget projected the deficit would be $581 billion in 2012. The
fiscal 2012 budget projected a federal deficit of almost double that. The
proposal introduced Monday bumps that figure up to more than $1.3 trillion.
The a ctual deficit will be even higher.

The projections are always off because the Obama team clings to highly
unrealistic economic-growth assumptions. The latest deficit proposal says
that "during the previous six quarters, real gross domestic product (GDP)
had grown at an average rate of 3 percent," implying that this is a robust
trend that is likely to continue. Mr. Obama's first budget projected that
this year's economic growth would be more than 5 percent, but second-quarter
GDP growth in 2011 was only 1 percent, and growth almost ground to a halt in
the first quarter at 0.4 percent. Rather than a push for greater spending,
these facts should prompt renewed soberness and caution for economic
crystal-ball gazers at 1600 Pennsylvania Ave.

The assumptions in Mr. Obama's plan double down on already-bankrupt hopes.
For Mr. Obama's deficit numbers to make sense (using the plan as applied to
the Office of Management and Budget midsession review base line) the economy
is expected to grow at a rate of almost 5 percent in 2012, almost 8 percent
in 2014 and 8.5 percent in 2016. If Mr. Obama could deliver that kind of
growth, he wouldn't now be trying to explain away 9 percent unemployment and
approval ratings in the low 40s. These baloney growth assumptions illustrate
why politicians love to talk about the wonderful, magical, faraway out
years. Too bad we live in the troubling times delivered by the "fierce
urgency of now."

C Copyright 2011 The Washington Times, LLC

 





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