CBO looks at the president's budget
The CBO reports:
CBO estimates that the President’s budgetary proposals would boost overall
output initially but reduce it in later years. For the 2013–2017 period, under
most of the estimates CBO produced using alternative models and assumptions, the
President’s proposals would increase real (inflation-adjusted) output (relative
to that under current law) primarily because taxes would be lower than those
under current law, and, therefore, people’s disposable income and their demand
for goods and services would be greater. Over time, however, the proposals would
reduce real output (relative to that under current law) because the deficits
would exceed those projected under current law, and the effects of increasing
government debt would more than offset the favorable effects of lower marginal
tax rates on labor income. When the net impact of those two types of effects
would shift from an increase in real output to a decrease would depend on
various factors, including the impact of increased aggregate demand on output
and the effect of deficits on investment.
By CBO’s estimate, under the President’s proposals, the nation’s real output
during the 2013–2017 period would be, on average, between 0.2 percent lower than
the amount under current law and 1.4 percent higher than under current law. For
the 2018–2022 period, CBO estimates that the President’s proposals would reduce
real output, on average, by between 0.5 percent and 2.2 percent compared with
what would occur under current law.