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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: Does Anyone Care About a Trillion Dollar Deficit?. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

Does Anyone Care About a Trillion Dollar Deficit?
by w1ld at 8:21 pm EDT, Oct 26, 2008

When out-of-control federal spending runs smack into sluggish tax revenues, red ink splashes all over Washington. In September, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the deficit this year would be $407 billion, a sum that reflected the $168 billion economic stimulus package approved by President Bush in February and the estimated $188billion spent for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through 2008. Add to that the $700 billion financial bailout package passed in October, plus another economic stimulus package likely to take shape in the coming months that could cost as much as $175 billion, and you're talking about an all-inclusive fiscal 2008 deficit exceeding $1 trillion.

You won't likely see such huge numbers leading the networks' evening newscasts because deficit talk is akin to Washington wonk speak.

A far bigger concern is the national debt — the total of what we've cumulatively borrowed to finance those yearly deficits. Sometime around 2020, according to projections offered by Walker's foundation, the U.S. debt will be equal to or greater than annual gross domestic product.


 
RE: Does Anyone Care About a Trillion Dollar Deficit?
by Decius at 10:23 pm EDT, Oct 26, 2008

w1ld wrote:
When out-of-control federal spending runs smack into sluggish tax revenues, red ink splashes all over Washington. In September, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the deficit this year would be $407 billion, a sum that reflected the $168 billion economic stimulus package approved by President Bush in February and the estimated $188billion spent for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan through 2008. Add to that the $700 billion financial bailout package passed in October, plus another economic stimulus package likely to take shape in the coming months that could cost as much as $175 billion, and you're talking about an all-inclusive fiscal 2008 deficit exceeding $1 trillion.

You won't likely see such huge numbers leading the networks' evening newscasts because deficit talk is akin to Washington wonk speak.

A far bigger concern is the national debt — the total of what we've cumulatively borrowed to finance those yearly deficits. Sometime around 2020, according to projections offered by Walker's foundation, the U.S. debt will be equal to or greater than annual gross domestic product.

My mortgage is far greater than my annual income. This is actually not as bad as I thought.


 
 
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