Last September, I wrote about some very disturbing 10-year projections that showed a rising burden of government spending.
Those numbers were rather depressing, but a recently released long-term forecast from the Congressional Budget Office make the 10-year numbers look benign by comparison.
The new report is overly focused on the symptom of deficits and debt rather than the underlying disease of excessive government. But if you dig into the details, you can find the numbers that really matter. Here’s some of what CBO reported about government spending in its forecast.
The long-term outlook for the federal budget has worsened dramatically over the past several years, in the wake of the 2007–2009 recession and slow recovery. …If current law remained generally unchanged…, federal spending rises from 20.5 percent of GDP this year to 25.3 percent of GDP by 2040.
And why is the burden of spending going up?
Well, here’s a chart from CBO’s slideshow presentation. I’ve added some red arrows to draw attention to the most worrisome numbers.
As you can see, entitlement programs are the big problem, especially Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, and Obamacare.
Even CBO agrees.
…spending for Social Security and the government’s major health care programs—Medicare, Medicaid, the Children’s Health Insurance Program, and subsidies for health insurance purchased through the exchanges created by the Affordable Care Act—would rise sharply, to 14.2 percent of GDP by 2040, if current law remained generally unchanged. That percentage would be more than twice the 6.5 percent average seen over the past 50 years.
By the way, while it’s bad news that the overall burden of federal spending is expected to rise to more than 25 percent of GDP by 2040, I worry that the real number will be worse.
After all, the forecast assumes that other spending will drop by 2.2 percent of GDP between 2015 and 2040. Yet is it really realistic to think that politicians won’t increase – much less hold steady – the amount that’s being spent on non-health welfare programs and discretionary programs?
Another key takeaway from the report is that it is preposterous to argue (like Obama’s former economic adviser) that our long-run fiscal problems are caused by inadequate tax revenue.
Indeed, tax revenues are projected to rise significantly over the next 25 years.
Federal revenues would also increase relative to GDP under current law… Revenues would equal 19.4 percent of GDP by 2040, CBO projects, which would be higher than the 50-year average of 17.4 percent.
Here’s another slide from the CBO. I’ve added a red arrow to show that the increase in taxation is due to a climbing income tax burden.
These CBO numbers are grim, but they could be considered the “rosy scenario.”
The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) produced their own analysis of the long-run fiscal outlook.
Like the CBO, CRFB is too fixated on deficits and debt, but their report does have some additional projections of government spending.
Here’s the key table from the CRFB report. Not only do they show the CBO numbers for 2065 and 2090 under the baseline scenario, they also pull out CBO’s “alternative fiscal scenario” projections, which are based on more pessimistic (some would say more realistic) assumptions.
As you can see from my red arrows, federal spending will consume one-third of our economy’s output based on the “extended baseline scenario” as we get close to the end of the century. So if you add state and local spending to the mix, the overall burden of spending will be higher than it is in Greece today.
But if you really want to get depressed, look at the “alternative fiscal scenario.” The burden of federal spending soars to more than 50 percent of output. So when you add state and local government spending, the overall burden would be higher than what currently exists in any of Europe’s welfare states.
In other words, America is destined to become Greece.
Unless, of course, politicians can be convinced to follow my Golden Rule and exercise some much-needed spending restraint.
This would require genuine entitlement reform and discipline in other parts of the budget, steps that would not be popular from the perspective of Washington insiders.
Which is why we need some sort of external tool that mandates spending restraint, such as an American version of Switzerland’s Debt Brake (which you can learn more about by watching a presentation from a representative of the Swiss Embassy).
Heck, even the IMF agrees that spending caps are the only feasible solution.
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
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[…] the United States also be hit by a debt crisis? Will we reach a “tipping point” that leads to the aforementioned […]
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[…] – and probably should – list entitlements every single year. Simply stated, the country is in deep long-run trouble because of an aging population and poorly designed tax-and-transfer programs. Years ago, I was […]
[…] and probably should – list entitlements every single year. Simply stated, the country is in deep long-run trouble because of an aging population and poorly designed tax-and-transfer programs. Years ago, I was […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] was true in developed nations (the U.S., Europe, Japan), but also in developing […]
[…] if you want to feel even sadder, check out the projections showing that America will become Greece in the absence of genuine entitlement […]
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[…] of this suggests that policy in America is ideal (it isn’t) or that European nations are failures (they still rank among the wealthiest places on the […]
[…] Hello Greece. […]
[…] (which is not a small government-oriented bureaucracy, to put it mildly) unambiguously shows that rising levels of so-called mandatory spending are driving our long-run fiscal […]
[…] I explained to them that the United States was doomed, largely because of demographics, to suffer a Greek-style fiscal future if we left policy on […]
[…] For more on America’s built-in entitlement crisis, click here, here, here, and […]
[…] they should know better. Most Democrats actually believe it’s a good idea to make America more like Greece. Republicans, by contrast, make us more like Greece because they put short-term politics ahead of […]
[…] the same thing in my talk with Neil. We will need congressional action to reform entitlements and save the country. And if that means bribing a few members to get votes, so be […]
[…] Not a very succinct title, I realize, but I wanted to warn students that they are the ones who will suffer if today’s politicians fail to enact genuine entitlement reform. And since I told them I wasn’t expecting reform with Trump in the White House, my message was rather gloomy. […]
[…] he’s wrong: It’s certainly true that America faces very worrisome long-run fiscal problems, but those challenges are entirely due to a rising burden of government spending. And since the GOP […]
[…] is a recipe for becoming another Greece. Not today. Not next year. Or even 10 years from now. The United States probably has the ability to […]
[…] is a recipe for becoming another Greece. Not today. Not next year. Or even 10 years from now. The United States probably has the ability to […]
[…] happening in the United States. It’s happening in Europe. It’s happening in Asia. Heck, this is a worldwide […]
[…] Unfortunately, I expect this is just posturing. When the dust settles, I expect the desire for more spending (from both parties) will produce a deal that is bad news. At least for those of us who don’t want America to become Greece (any faster than already scheduled). […]
[…] Unfortunately, I expect this is just posturing. When the dust settles, I expect the desire for more spending (from both parties) will produce a deal that is bad news. At least for those of us who don’t want America to become Greece (any faster than already scheduled). […]
[…] not in any danger of complete economic breakdown because of government intervention (our long-run danger is instead the result of a metastasizing welfare […]
[…] I write about poorly designed entitlement programs, I will warn about America’s Greek future. Simply stated, we will suffer the same chaos and disarray now plaguing Greece if we don’t […]
[…] record about entitlement programs. How many times, after all, can I point out that America is on a path to become a decrepit European-style welfare state because of a combination of demographic changes […]
[…] record about entitlement programs. How many times, after all, can I point out that America is on a path to become a decrepit European-style welfare state because of a combination of demographic changes […]
[…] record about entitlement programs. How many times, after all, can I point out that America is on a path to become a decrepit European-style welfare state because of a combination of demographic changes […]
[…] the sake of the nation, let’s hope most lawmakers think this […]
[…] poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] America’s poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] America’s poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] America’s poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] Unidos va a convertirse en otra Grecia , y es en gran parte debido a los programas de ayuda social mal diseñados . Como dice el viejo […]
[…] if we don’t fix the entitlements, the United States faces a very grim fiscal future regardless of new revenue because the burden of government spending will be expanding faster than […]
[…] United States is going to become another Greece, and it’s largely because of poorly designed entitlement programs. As the old saying […]
[…] poorly designed entitlement programs (as well as the impact of demographic changes), I regularly suggest that the United States is on a path to become […]
[…] United States is going to become another Greece, and it’s largely because of poorly designed entitlement programs. As the old saying […]
[…] hike. Based on Trump’s recent address to Congress, I’m also not holding my breath for much-needed spending cuts and entitlement reform. And it’s unclear whether we’ll see much progress cutting back […]
[…] United States is going to become another Greece, and it’s largely because of poorly designed entitlement programs. As the old saying goes, […]
[…] And that’s not going to solve our very big problem. […]
[…] expect. The biggest wild card, at least for fiscal policy, is whether he’ll be serious about the problem of government spending. Especially […]
[…] The biggest wild card, at least for fiscal policy, is whether he’ll be serious about the problem of government spending. Especially […]
[…] Punting on entitlement Reform – As noted above, the wild card for any sort of genuine entitlement reform is Donald Trump. If he decides to to be President Santa Claus by appeasing various interest groups (like the previous GOPer in the White House), then reform will be dead. Simply stated, House and Senate Republicans will not push good changes without support from the White House. But that’s only a partial worst-case scenario. Trump may choose to be like the previous Republican President and actually expand entitlements (perhaps by borrowing a page from Elizabeth Warren’s playbook and expanding Social Security). If Trump decides to punt (or, gulp, make things worse), that has very grim implications. Reform will be dead for at least eight years (either because Trump gets reelected or because he’s replaced by a Democrat who also opposes reform) and the longer we wait to address the problem, the harder it will be to save America from a Greek fiscal future. […]
[…] stated, the United States will become a failed welfare state if we don’t make changes in the near […]
[…] America’s fiscal future is very grim, so hopefully some of you will be interested in some relevant new research on spending […]
[…] But this is why I like federalism. States can innovate and experiment, constrained by the fact that really crazy policies will eventually lead to California-style decline. And I’d rather have a couple of states in a death spiral rather than the entire nation. […]
[…] that being said, Australia is still my top choice for where to go if (when?) America suffers a Greek-style fiscal and economic […]
[…] that being said, Australia is still my top choice for where to go if (when?) America suffers a Greek-style fiscal and economic […]
[…] that being said, Australia is still my top choice for where to go if (when?) America suffers a Greek-style fiscal and economic […]
[…] that being said, Australia is still my top choice for where to go if (when?) America suffers a Greek-style fiscal and economic […]
[…] since neither candidate intends to address America’s looming fiscal crisis, it will probably be just a matter of time before America drops in the […]
[…] since neither candidate intends to address America’s looming fiscal crisis, it will probably be just a matter of time before America drops in the […]
[…] I’m depressed about the election and America’s economic future, the news isn’t completely grim. Advocates of personal freedom are winning on the issue of […]
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[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because ofchanging demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] bottom line is that we’re becoming more like Greece at a faster […]
[…] But reform also is desperately needed because of changing demographics. Simply stated, leaving all the entitlement programs on autopilot is a recipe for a Greek-style fiscal crisis. […]
[…] spending today, by contrast, amounts to more than 20 percent of GDP. And I hate to even think about the long-run projections since I become […]
[…] spending today, by contrast, amounts to more than 20 percent of GDP. And I hate to even think about the long-run projections since I become […]
[…] perhaps now you can understand why Australia is my choice if (when?) the welfare state collapses in the United States (though I’m still of the opinion that the […]
[…] perhaps now you can understand why Australia is my choice if (when?) the welfare state collapses in the United States (though I’m still of the opinion that the […]
[…] of this suggests that policy in America is ideal (it isn’t) or that European nations are failures (they still rank among the wealthiest places on the […]
[…] when you look at projections for ever-rising spending (and therefore big increases in red ink) in America, it’s easy to see why I’m such a strong […]
[…] when you look at projections for ever-rising spending (and therefore big increases in red ink) in America, it’s easy to see why I’m such a […]
[…] is because of a giant fiscal burden on lower-income and middle-income taxpayers. And that’s what will happen in the United States if entitlements aren’t […]
[…] of this suggests that policy in America is ideal (it isn’t) or that European nations are failures (they still rank among the wealthiest places on the […]
[…] Indeed, this is one of the reasons why I picked Australia when asked which nation to choose if (when?) America suffers a Greek-style fiscal and economic collapse. […]
[…] of this suggests that policy in America is ideal (it isn’t), or that European nations are failures (they still rank among the wealthiest places on the […]
[…] think Pethokoukis shared some worthwhile charts, I would have augmented his list with charts on the rising burden of government spending, the tax code’s discrimination against income that is saved and invested, declining labor-force […]
[…] think Pethokoukis shared some worthwhile charts, I would have augmented his list with charts on the rising burden of government spending, the tax code’s discrimination against income that is saved and invested, declining […]
[…] all this spending is disturbing (should we really step on the accelerator as we approach the Greek fiscal cliff?), the part of this budget that’s really galling is the enormous tax increase on […]
[…] all this spending is disturbing (should we really step on the accelerator as we approach the Greek fiscal cliff?), the part of this budget that’s really galling is the enormous tax increase on […]
[…] as a share of economic output, the tax burden already is above historical levels. Moreover, taxes are projected to rise even further, so there is zero plausible evidence for the […]
[…] If pessimism was an Olympic event, I used to think I might be favored to win a medal. After all, growing levels of dependency outside of Washington and rampant corruption inside of Washington sometimes lead me to conclude that America is doomed to a Greek fiscal future. […]
[…] In other words, the progress that was achieved between 2010 and 2014 is evaporating and America is on the path to becoming a Greek-style welfare state. […]
[…] In other words, the progress that was achieved between 2010 and 2014 is evaporating and America is on the path to becoming a Greek-style welfare state. […]
[…] in that pattern long enough and you eventually become Greece (which is why I emphasized in the interview the need to reverse this trend with big systemic […]
[…] Of course, you don’t need to favor that outcome to predict (of fear) that it will happen. My opposition to tax hikes, for instance, is precisely because I don’t want America to have a Greek-style fiscal future. […]
[…] Of course, you don’t need to favor that outcome to predict (of fear) that it will happen. My opposition to tax hikes, for instance, is precisely because I don’t want America to have a Greek-style fiscal future. […]
[…] bottom line is that demographics and entitlements will mean a Greek fiscal future for America and other […]
[…] And you’ll see that I also explained that fighting for good policy today is necessary if we want to avoid huge fiscal problems in the future. […]
[…] good information, but keep in mind that the burden of government spending already is projected to climb substantially even without all of the new boondoggles being proposed by Sen. […]
[…] good information, but keep in mind that the burden of government spending already is projected to climb substantially even without all of the new boondoggles being proposed by Sen. […]
[…] good information, but keep in mind that the burden of government spending already is projected to climb substantially even without all of the new boondoggles being proposed by Sen. […]
[…] if you want to feel even sadder, check out the projections showing that America will become Greece in the absence of genuine entitlement […]
[…] programs are a big part of the answer, with the United States being an unfortunate example of how fiscal systems become unstable when politicians buy votes by putting burdens on future […]
[…] aussi une leçon que certains politiques américains ont besoin […]
[…] But that analysis misses the point. A BBA focuses on red ink, whereas the real problem is that government is too big and growing too fast. State balanced-budget requirement haven’t stopped states like California and Illinois from […]
[…] celebration. That’s because the program, as one of the three big entitlement programs, will turn American into Greece without substantial structural […]
[…] also a lesson that some American politicians need to […]
[…] also a lesson that some American politicians need to […]
[…] while I sometimes sound like a Cassandra about what’s been happening and where we’re heading, the good news is that we still have time to reverse […]
[…] celebration. That’s because the program, as one of the three big entitlement programs, will turn American into Greece without substantial structural […]
[…] we want to address the long-run spending crisis, we’ll need genuine entitlement […]
[…] on a new report from the Congressional Budget Office, I wrote two weeks agoabout America’s dismal long-run fiscal outlook. Simply stated, we face a Greek-style fiscal […]
[…] on a new report from the Congressional Budget Office, I wrote two weeks ago about America’s dismal long-run fiscal outlook. Simply stated, we face a Greek-style fiscal […]
[…] on a new report from the Congressional Budget Office, I wrote two weeks ago about America’s dismal long-run fiscal outlook. Simply stated, we face a Greek-style fiscal […]
[…] certainly not a permanent victory, particularly since our long-run fiscal crisis will still be enormous in the absence of genuine entitlement […]
[…] To give you an idea of how crazy that number is, Social Security outlays in the United States consume “only” 4.9 percent of GDP. […]
Reblogged this on a political idealist. and commented:
We’re investing too much money in all the wrong places instead of entitlements (like Social Security), infrastructure, schools, research (science), etc. The national debt can be paid off if all the corporations were taxed at a fair rate like everyone else. The problem is that funding and resources are being abused, which can potentially cause a future economic collapse.
I hope you will check out the current copy of the Economist paper on the reduced ‘wiggle room’ available to the US and other countries to deal with the next recession and prevent it from turning into another Great Depression – – the US is not well prepared to implement the combination of central bank and fiscal policies and NOW is the time to get our fiscal and monetary act together not when the next inevitable recession occurs – anyone one wanting a cc of the Economist articles let me know at johnknubel@gmail.com – they are too long to attache to this