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Class Three -- Friday, January 5th, 2018
Note: This Class was originally scheduled for Thursday, January 4th, but was moved as a result of the snow day. Dean Elmendorf's luncheon talk will still take place today and the background readings have been moved to this day's assignment.
In today's class, we will first turn our attention to the economics of federal deficits and debt, as well as their measurement. For an introduction to the subject, read pages 141-155 of Fiscal Challenges: Chapter Five: Michael J. Boskin, Economic Perspectives on Federal Deficits and Debt, which describes different ways that policymakers project future deficits and debt.
We will then turn to a 2015 paper by David Kamin that discusses different normative approaches in setting a budget “baseline”; please read the highlighted sections that discuss the purposes of budget baselines, and the different types of budget baselines. (For additional background on issue of dynamic scoring versus static scoring, see the Zink Briefing Paper on the topic included as background readings for today’s class.)
Individual Assignment: For today’s class, please write a short memorandum (2-3 pages) assessing the merits of Professor Kamin’s proposal with respect to budgetary baselines. Would you endorse his recommendation?
As background readings – in addition to the briefing paper on dynamic versus static scoring mentioned above — we have included several documents highlighting the complexities of longer-term budget projections. Scan the CBO's 10-year budget projection in 1998, which predicted surpluses through the 2000s. How did intervening geopolitical, legislative, and economic developments undermine the CBO's predictions for future surpluses? Finally, take a look at the Kliesen and Thornton article on CBO projections. What are the implications of their findings for federal budget policy?
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