Fiscal Space for Future Generations
The greatest gift today’s leaders can give to future generations is the fiscal room to solve their own problems.
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The greatest gift today’s leaders can give to future generations is the fiscal room to solve their own problems.
An analysis by the Peter G. Peterson Foundation that looks at all spending — and not just non-exempt spending — has found that the scale of reductions next year resulting from the sequestration will be more heavily weighted towards defense cuts.
https://www.pgpf.org/analysis/the-office-of-management-and-budgets-sequestration-reportan-analysis
The Peter G. Peterson releases a new analysis and infographic to help illustrate and define the nation's ongoing long-term fiscal challenges.
CBO projects that the federal budget deficit will increase as a share of GDP for the first year since 2009.
https://www.pgpf.org/analysis/2016/08/CBO-deficits-are-back-on-the-rise
This past weekend's edition of PBS TV's "The Open Mind" welcomed PGPF President and CEO Michael A. Peterson for a half-hour interview.
https://www.pgpf.org/blog/michael-peterson-interview-on-pbs-the-open-mind
The pandemic exposed major U.S. healthcare issues, but key lessons can help improve the system going forward, according to two leading experts.
"This report confirms that tax cuts don’t pay for themselves," said Michael A. Peterson, President and CEO of the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.
The end of the supercommittee doesn’t mean the end of the fiscal policy debate in Washington.
Every month the U.S. Treasury releases data on the federal budget, including the current deficit. Here is the data for February 2022.
https://www.pgpf.org/the-current-federal-budget-deficit/budget-deficit-february-2022
The bill as written would move up the date we return to trillion dollar deficits by two years, to 2020.