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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH

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To: Neocon who wrote (479228)10/21/2003 11:32:32 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) of 769667
 
Bush is the SNOW job of all time....continuing to ruin the nation with his tax cuts for the RICH ONLY
Federal Shortfall Hits Record $374 Billion for Year;
Critics Blame Tax Cuts
By Warren Vieth, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON — The federal government posted a $374.2-billion deficit
in the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, more than double the previous year's
shortfall but less than anticipated, the Treasury Department reported Monday.

The 2003 deficit came in lower than the $455-billion figure projected by the
Bush administration a few months ago.

Treasury officials said
that tax collections
turned out to be better
than expected and
spending was less than anticipated in the final months of the year.

"The improvement in our budget picture since our forecast last July is an
encouraging sign that the economic recovery is gaining momentum," said
Joshua B. Bolten, director of the White House Office of Management and
Budget, in a statement accompanying the final tally.

The deficit is still expected to top $500 billion in 2004 — even with an
improving economy; Bolten said that the shortfall will decline by half over five
years if Congress hews to President Bush's tax and spending prescriptions.

In dollars, the 2003 deficit dwarfed the previous record of $290.4 billion set in 1992, when Bush's
father was president, and the $157.8-billion shortfall recorded in 2002, when the government ended a
four-year streak of budget surpluses.

As a share of the nation's economy, however, it remained well below the records set during the Reagan
administration. The 2003 deficit was equal to 3.5% of gross domestic product, compared with the
peak of 6% in 1983.

The return to deficit spending reflects a combination of forces: the 2001 recession and the slow-paced
recovery that followed, three successive tax cut packages pushed by Bush, and the cost of financing the
war on terrorism and the military campaign in Iraq.

Administration officials said that the flow of red ink remained manageable and would begin to diminish
when the recovery picked up speed and war-related spending subsided.

"As the economy grows, government revenues will go up, which will help keep the deficit under
control," said Treasury Secretary John W. Snow.

Independent analysts were less sanguine. According to Robert L. Bixby, executive director of the
Concord Coalition, an Arlington, Va.-based budget watchdog group, it appears unlikely that the deficit
would decline much below present levels if current economic trends continue and Congress extends
expiring tax cuts and enacts a Medicare prescription drug benefit, as Bush has requested.

"The policies that are in place now and that Congress may enact shortly continue to pose a serious
long-term budget challenge," said Bixby, whose group advocates balanced budgets and fiscal restraint.
"This level of deficit, about 3.5% of GDP, looks like it may be locked in for the foreseeable future."

Analyst Isaac Shapiro of the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington research
organization that opposes cuts in social programs, said the final figures for 2003 confirmed that the
Bush tax cuts had contributed to a severe fiscal squeeze that would continue for several years.

He said that $179 billion of the deficit announced Monday resulted from tax cuts. For fiscal year 2004,
the tax cuts would cause $304 billion of the deficit, he said.

"The most striking fact when you really look at these numbers in historical perspective is how much
revenues have dried up," said Shapiro. "Last year, individual income-tax receipts as a share of the
economy dropped to their lowest level since 1942."

Congressional Democrats were quick to assail the president's priorities and fiscal proposals. "The
administration's tax cuts and budget policies have not created the promised new jobs over the last three
years, but they have created huge deficits that will stifle future growth and burden our grandchildren
with debt," said Rep. John M. Spratt Jr. of South Carolina, ranking Democrat on the House Budget
Committee.

Tax collections and other receipts totaled $1.78 billion last year, the Treasury Department reported.
Total government outlays were $2.15 billion. If Social Security and Medicare surpluses were excluded
from the deficit calculation, last year's shortfall would have been $535.1 billion.

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