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Thursday November 26, 2009

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Past Event

A Brookings/Tax Policy Center Press Briefing

New Brookings Study: The Economic Effects of Long-Term Fiscal Discipline

Federal Budget, U.S. Economy, Monetary Policy


Event Summary

The last two years have seen a sizable reversal in the federal budget, from solid surpluses to budget deficits. Some have expressed concern that the deficits will reduce national saving and future national income and put pressure on long-term interest rates. The Bush administration, however, has rejected these concerns. Glenn Hubbard, chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, has stated that there is "no evidence" that deficits affect interest rates.

Event Information

When

Tuesday, December 17, 2002
10:00 AM to 11:30 AM

Where

The Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Office of Communications

E-mail: communications@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105

A new Brookings study re-examines these issues. The study finds widespread support for the view that lack of fiscal discipline hurts prospects for future national income and raises current interest rates. The study shows that a careful review of recent evidence, previous research, several major macro-econometric models, and the views of leading economists and policymakers lead to the same conclusion.

The study, written by Brookings senior fellows William Gale and Peter Orszag, is titled "The Economic Effects of Long-Term Fiscal Discipline" and will be distributed and discussed at this forum.

This press briefing at Brookings is being hosted in conjunction with the Urban Institute-Brookings Institution Tax Policy Center.

Transcript

MR. WILLIAM G. GALE: The purpose of today's meeting is to present a paper that Peter Orszag and I have just completed on The Economic Effects of Long-Term Fiscal Discipline.

I'll present the first half the paper, probably talk 15-20 minutes. Peter will present the second half of the paper. Then we'll open it up to questions and we'll go presumably until the questions are done unless you have an enormous number of questions.

The last two years have seen a marked deterioration in the long-term federal budget outlook. The projected ratio of net debt to GDP for 2011 has gone up by one-third of GDP since January 2001, since President Bush took office. That's roughly a $5 trillion increase in net debt projected for 2011 in the last two years.

Some people have raised concerns that this change in fiscal status is irresponsible, that it reduces future income, that it raises current interest rates. The Bush Administration is notably not among those people, and in particular the Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers, Glenn Hubbard, recently stated, "I don't buy that there's a link between swings in the budget deficit of the size that we see in the United States and interest rates. There's just no evidence."

This is not an isolated comment on Hubbard's part. In a series of speeches, articles and interviews he's ridiculed the notion that deficits matter. He's called it Rubenomics, called it nonsense, and so on. So this is part of what appears to be a pretty concerted Administration effort to downplay the cost of budget deficits, and in particular to try to justify a new round of tax cuts, and looking backwards, to justify the previous round of tax cuts as well as arguing that the change in fiscal status is not a concern.

The complete transcript is available in PDF form (PDF—86KB)

Participants

Panelists

Peter R. Orszag

Joseph A. Pechman Senior Fellow, Economic Studies, Brookings

William G. Gale

Vice President and Director, Economic Studies


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