Budget Policy and Fiscal Risk: Implications for Defense

Abstract

Over the past decade, the federal government's fiscal outlook has been transformed. During the early 1990s, budget deficits were widely viewed as not just a chronic problem but a growing one. From 1990 to 1994, annual deficits averaged almost $250 billion, or nearly 4 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), but by FY 2000, the budget was in surplus by more than $235 billion, and total surpluses of more than $5.6 trillion for FY 2002-2011 have recently been projected. Many other advanced democracies have improved their fiscal balances in recent years, but the shift toward budget balance and public debt reduction has been especially pronounced in the United States. Multiyear deficit-reduction agreements enacted in 1990, 1993, and 1997 have reduced discretionary spending to historic lows and raised revenue levels to peacetime highs. As a result of these policy changes and unusually favorable economic conditions, the United States has ushered in a new era of surplus budgeting. The budget policy debates of George W. Bush's administration will therefore take place in a fiscal environment very different from that of his predecessors. Rather than struggling to balance current budgets, the administration and Congress must decide how to minimize long-term fiscal risks-in effect, how to allocate surpluses among debt reduction, tax cuts, and spending increases without exacerbating the formidable entitlement financing problems that loom on the horizon. These problems represent the critical backdrop for today's budgetary deliberations.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 01, 2001
Accession Number
ADA393928

Entities

People

  • Dennis S. Ippolito

Organizations

  • United States Army War College

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical
  • Materials and Manufacturing Processes
  • Weapons Technologies

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Agreements
  • Budgets
  • Congress
  • Discretionary Spending
  • Federal Budgets
  • Governments
  • Income
  • Law
  • Military Budgets
  • National Governments
  • National Politics
  • Political Science
  • Social Security
  • Social Welfare
  • United States
  • United States Government
  • War Colleges

Fields of Study

  • Economics

Readers

  • East Asian Political and Security Studies within the Soviet Union
  • Educational Psychology
  • Public Financial Management and Budgeting