Gov’t Report: Budget Deficit To Rise To $544B This Year

UNITED STATES - JUNE 03: CBO Director Keith Hall, center, prepares to testify before a House Budget Committee hearing in Cannon Building titled "The Congressional Budget Office: Oversight Hearing," June 3, 2015. (Pho... UNITED STATES - JUNE 03: CBO Director Keith Hall, center, prepares to testify before a House Budget Committee hearing in Cannon Building titled "The Congressional Budget Office: Oversight Hearing," June 3, 2015. (Photo By Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call) (CQ Roll Call via AP Images) MORE LESS

WASHINGTON (AP) –€” A new government report estimates that this year’s budget deficit will rise to $544 billion, an increase over prior estimates that can be attributed largely to tax cuts and spending increases passed by Congress last month.

The estimate from the Congressional Budget Office also sees the economy growing at a significantly slower pace this year than it predicted just a few months ago. It projects the economic growth will slow to 2.7 percent this year; it foresaw 3.0 percent growth in 2016 in last summer’s prediction.

Over the coming decade, CBO predicts deficits totaling $9.4 trillion. That’s up $1.5 trillion from its August estimate, with much of the increase mostly due to last month’s tax legislation, which permanently extended several tax cuts that Congress had typically renewed temporarily.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Obviously this means the first thing Congress must do is cut preschool for inner city youth, along with after school athletic activities for the same neighborhoods.

    P.S. All Americans should by a gun. Please, buy a gun. That recommendation will be a rider to the bill.

  2. Avatar for meta meta says:

    Everyone knows that the job creators are getting choked by all these librul taxes? The 'murikan sheeple gave them the Congress to stop all this damn progress. How are they expected to pay for their private jets??? I ask you.

  3. …rise to $544 billion, an increase over prior estimates that can be attributed largely to tax cuts and spending increases passed by Congress last month.

    Great. Nice going there Congress. Who you gonna blame this time? Oh, and go fuck yourself like you do everyone else while you’re at it.

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