Trump demands action to reduce deficit, pushes new deficit spending

President Trump told Cabinet members they must cut budgets by 5 percent, saying, “One penny, every year, after four or five years, country’s in good shape.” (The Washington Post)

President Trump is demanding top advisers craft a plan to reduce the country’s ballooning budget deficits, but the president has flummoxed his own aides by repeatedly seeking new spending while ruling out measures needed to address the country’s unbalanced budget.

Trump’s deficit-reduction directive came last month, after the White House reported a large increase in the deficit for the previous 12 months. The announcement unnerved Republicans and investors, helping fuel a big sell-off in the stock market. Two days after the deficit report, Trump floated a surprise demand to his Cabinet secretaries, asking them to identify steep cuts in their agencies.

This account of Trump’s deficit stance is based on conversations with 10 current and former officials in the White House and Congress. They spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe internal deliberations or private conversations. The White House has not responded to repeated requests for comment.

View the complete November 25 article by Josh Dawsey and Damian Paletta on The Washington Post website here.

Deficit to top $1 trillion per year by 2020, CBO says

The following article by Jeff Stein was posted on the Washington Post website April 9, 2018:

House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) returns to his office. (Astrid Riecken/For The Washington Post)

America’s deficit is rising sharply and will surpass $1 trillion per year by 2020, a gap that has grown since Congress cut taxes and increased spending, the Congressional Budget Office reported Monday.

The federal deficit — the gap between how much the government takes in and how much it spends — will hit $804 billion in fiscal 2018, up 21 percent from 2017, the CBO said. Continue reading “Deficit to top $1 trillion per year by 2020, CBO says”