The deficit will
grow simply because the economy is growing. If the deficit were stable as a
percentage of GDP, it would grow about $100 billion during Trump’s four-year
term.
Using the average spending and tax levels since 1979, the deficit under Trump would grow from about $600 to $700 billion.
But given his tax cut this year and spending increases in the next few, it will instead hit $1,017 billion (a trillion) in 2020, or
about $300 billion higher than what it would be if the Republican budget just
met average standards for fiscal responsibility. (Since 1979, spending has
averaged 20.6% of GDP and taxes 17.4%.) And this during a projected boom time;
if you aren’t going to lower the deficit when unemployment is under 4% and the
stock market is at an all-time high, you aren’t going to lower the deficit.
Here’s a table showing
how much the deficit swung during a president’s time in office. Reagan’s first
year in office, he had a deficit equal to 2.5% of GDP. In George H. Bush’s first he
had a deficit of 2.7% of GDP. So, during Reagan’s time the deficit swung
negative by 0.2 percentage points of GDP, which you can see in the "Swing" column.
Deficit (-) or Surplus (+) Swing
|
||||
Inherited
|
Passed on
|
Swing
|
||
Ronald Reagan
|
-2.5
|
-2.7
|
-0.2
|
|
George H. Bush
|
-2.7
|
-3.8
|
-1.1
|
|
Bill Clinton
|
-3.8
|
+1.2
|
+5.0
|
|
George W. Bush
|
+1.2
|
-9.8
|
-11.0
|
|
Barack Obama
|
-9.8
|
-3.5
|
+5.3
|
|
Donald Trump
|
-3.5
|
-4.9
|
-1.4
|
|
Trump's first year in office he inherited a deficit equal to
3.5% of GDP.
According to CBO projections, whoever is president in 2021 will
inherit a deficit of 4.9% of GDP. And that assumes no recession, which could
raise the deficit by hundreds of billions.
Since 1981, the deficit has worsened every time a Republican president
was signing and vetoing bills and has improved every time a Democrat was. You know what they say: you campaign like a fiscal conservative and govern like you're trying to make friends with everyone at the bar. "Tax cuts on me! For everyone!"
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