US Biden to Propose $6 Trillion Budget to Make U.S. More Competitive - "Total debt held by the public would more than exceed the annual value of economic output, rising to 117 percent of the size of the economy in 2031"

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The president’s plans to invest in infrastructure, education, health care and more would push federal spending to its highest sustained levels since World War II.
President Biden will propose a $6 trillion budget on Friday that would take the United States to its highest sustained levels of federal spending since World War II, while running deficits above $1.3 trillion throughout the next decade.
Documents obtained by The New York Times show that Mr. Biden’s first budget request as president calls for the federal government to spend $6 trillion in the 2022 fiscal year, and for total spending to rise to $8.2 trillion by 2031. The growth is driven by Mr. Biden’s two-part agenda to upgrade the nation’s infrastructure and substantially expand the social safety net, contained in his American Jobs Plan and American Families Plan, along with other planned increases in discretionary spending.
The proposal shows the sweep of Mr. Biden’s ambitions to wield government power to help more Americans attain the comforts of a middle-class life and to lift U.S. industry to better compete globally in an economy the administration believes will be dominated by a race to reduce energy emissions and combat climate change.
Mr. Biden’s plan to fund his agenda by raising taxes on corporations and high earners would begin to shrink budget deficits in the 2030s. Administration officials have said the jobs and families plans would be fully offset by tax increases over the course of 15 years, which the budget request backs up.
In the meantime, the United States would run significant deficits as it borrows money to finance his plans. Under Mr. Biden’s proposal, the federal budget deficit would hit $1.8 trillion in 2022, even as the economy rebounds from the pandemic recession to grow at what the administration predicts would be its fastest annual pace since the early 1980s. It would recede slightly in the following years before growing again to nearly $1.6 trillion by 2031.
Total debt held by the public would more than exceed the annual value of economic output, rising to 117 percent of the size of the economy in 2031. By 2024, debt as a share of the economy would rise to its highest level in American history, eclipsing its World War II-era record.
The levels of taxation and spending in Mr. Biden’s plans would expand the federal fiscal footprint to levels rarely seen in the postwar era, to fund investments that his administration says are crucial to keeping America competitive. That includes money for roads, water pipes, broadband internet, electric vehicle charging stations and advanced manufacturing research. It also envisions funding for affordable child care, universal prekindergarten, a national paid leave program and a host of other initiatives. Spending on national defense would also grow, though it would decline as a share of the economy.
The documents suggest Mr. Biden will not propose major additional policies in the budget, or that his budget will flesh plans that the administration has thus far declined to detail. For example, Mr. Biden pledged to overhaul and upgrade the nation’s unemployment insurance program as part of the American Families Plan, but such efforts are not included in his budget.
Mr. Biden’s spending requests do not include money for a so-called public option for health care, which would allow Americans to choose to enroll in a public health insurance plan like Medicare instead of a private plan. But Mr. Biden will call on Congress to create such a public option as part of his budget proposal, a document obtained by the Times shows.
Mr. Biden will also express support for Congress allowing Americans as young as 60 years old to enroll in Medicare, and for efforts in Congress to reduce federal spending on prescription drugs, including allowing Medicare to negotiate prices with pharmaceutical companies, the document shows. It supports an expansion of Medicare to cover dental, vision and hearing services. Those efforts have been a top priority for Senator Bernie Sanders, independent of Vermont, the chairman of the budget committee. They are presented as goals in the budget but are not included in the proposed spending.
“Health care is a right, not a privilege,” the document reads. “Families need the financial security and peace of mind that comes with quality, affordable health coverage.”
The budget is simply a request to Congress, which must approve federal spending. But with Democrats in control both chambers of Congress, Mr. Biden faces some of the best odds of any president in recent history in having much of his agenda approved, particularly if he can reach agreement with lawmakers on parts of his infrastructure agenda.
If Mr. Biden’s plans were enacted, the government would spend what amounts to nearly a quarter of the nation’s total economic output every year over the course of the next decade. It would collect tax revenues equal to just under one fifth of the total economy.
In each year of Mr. Biden’s budget, the government would spend more as a share of the economy than all but two years since World War II: 2020 and 2021, which were marked by trillions of dollars in federal spending to help people and businesses endure the pandemic-induced recession. By 2028, when Mr. Biden could be finishing a second term in office, the government would be collecting more tax revenue as a share of the economy than almost any point in modern statistical history; the only other comparable period was the end of President Bill Clinton’s second term, when the economy was roaring and the budget was in surplus.
The documents also show the conservative approach Mr. Biden’s economic team is taking with regard to projecting the economy’s growth, as compared to his predecessor’s. Mr. Biden’s aides predict that even if his full agenda were enacted, the economy would grow at just under 2 percent per year for most of the decade, after accounting for inflation. That rate is similar to the historically sluggish pace of growth that the nation has averaged over the past 20 years. Unemployment would fall to 4.1 percent by next year — from 6.1 percent today — and remain below 4 percent in the years thereafter.
Former President Donald J. Trump consistently submitted budget proposals that predicted his policies would push the economy to a sustained annual rate of nearly 3 percent for a full decade. In his four years in office, annual growth only reached that rate once. The final budget submitted by President Barack Obama, when Mr. Biden was vice president, predicted annual growth of about 2.3 percent on average over the span of a decade.
The Biden forecasts continue to show his administration has little fear of rapid inflation breaking out across the economy, despite recent data showing a quick jump in prices as the economy reopens after a year of suppressed activity amid the pandemic. Under the Biden team’s projections, consumer prices never rise faster than 2.3 percent per year, and the Federal Reserve only gradually raises interest rates from their current rock-bottom levels in the coming years.
Mr. Biden has pitched the idea that now is the time, with interest rates low and the nation still rebuilding from recession, to make large up-front investments that will be paid for over a longer time horizon. His budget shows net real interest costs for the federal government remaining below historical averages for the course of the decade. Interest rates are controlled by the Federal Reserve, which is independent of the White House.
Even if interest rates stay low, payments on the national debt would consume an increased share of the federal budget. Net interest payments would double, as a share of the economy, from 2022 to 2031.
A spokesman for the White House budget office declined to comment on Thursday.
Administration officials are set to detail the full budget, which will span hundreds of pages, on Friday in Washington. On Thursday, Mr. Biden is scheduled to deliver an address on the economy in Cleveland.

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Lol at everyone crying about the debt. What did you think was going to happen? Nobody cares about the debt. Dealing with it is politically untenable on both the right (since it would involve raising taxes and cutting military spending) and the left (since it would involve cutting a ton of non-military spending). Best to just hope modern monetary theory is correct and move on.
 
AAAAAAA.jpg
 
Yup Biden's strategy... TAX and spend. You know this is coming.
And that's if your lucky. The VA shuffles people around so much, some places you can call once a week and every week you have a new case handler; and you're lucky if your paperwork didn't get lost in the shuffle.

Government Healthcare is like Bethesda games. "It just works." As you go in for compound fracture on your leg, the doctors will decide to have you run on a treadmill to stress test you.


Hundreds of pages. Gonna have to pass it, to know what's in it.
Considering that my friend, who was a marine I've known for 21 years recently died to what you are referring too.. Yes your comment is correct.
 
Faster, faster, and faster still. Let's accelerate this ride until it goes off the tracks! Six-trillion? C'mon, aim for twenty! Why even pretend you're not wrecking everything when you can embrace the speed and bring it all down?
 
The final asset strip - I dunno, sounds like more looting to me. You know this isn't Biden's idea. When has Bidden ever pushed for anything like this in 50 years? This is permagov working through their puppet, and it's just too perfect. I'm gonna need proof that this is NOT a lizardman plot before I will discount it as such. Even if it was Biden's pet project, there's absolutely zero reason to believe it's done in the best interest of the NATION (you know, that thing globalists hate).

Either jew money theory is right, and you can basically just make fake paper forever, or it's wrong and actions like this are the same as calling a man a woman (fake, gay, and disastrous). Based on everything I know about life, everything I've ever learned, and observations of current events, I'd gamble on "fake economy" not being sustainable. There's a lot of ruin in a nation, it might take longer than doomers think (they always think it's happening anyway), but there's no way you can just stack fake wealth on fake wealth forever. Our economy is already mostly fake. Rich people aren't ACTUALLY worth tens of billions, as you can see when their enterprises fail and get sold off piece by piece - or more likely these days, when they're bailed out by fake money from the gov'mt.

There's no logic behind this - where will the money come from in the future? Are we gonna double our economic output by selling things to Africa as it's population explodes? I sincerely doubt it. We reached diminishing returns a long time ago, and there's no new source of real wealth, unless you count billions of new third worlders as wealth (they're not).
 
Just call it cracking a few eggs. Feds making us competitive bad though. Nestle committing crimes as private business good=dungo brain.
 
"Nestle committing crimes as private business good=dungo brain." Who is even making this argument?
Conservatives don't bitch when Private meagconglomerates commit crimes when those businesses excuse it as being competitive. But oh no, our own government?! How dare they. Dungo, brain.
 
Conservatives don't bitch when Private meagconglomerates commit crimes when those businesses excuse it as being competitive. But oh no, our own government?! How dare they. Dungo, brain.
Pretty sure even the dumbest of conservatives are starting to care about that kind of shit. Especially when a company's retardation directly affects them like with social media.
 
Conservatives don't bitch when Private meagconglomerates commit crimes when those businesses excuse it as being competitive. But oh no, our own government?! How dare they. Dungo, brain.
What does Nestle have to do with the government inflating the currency into oblivion?
 
1 (ZWD) Zimbabwe Dollar= 0.0028 (USD) U.S. Dollar
So a loaf of bread would cost 1000?
:(
 
Once they figured out that they could just print as much money as they want via "quantitative easing" and then funnel it to their friends and benefactors, it was only a matter of time until they sped us all off the cliff. This whole situation is like radiation poisoning. We're starting to fall apart now, but what killed us happened way back then in 2010 when they wrote their own ticket. Joe's "budget" is just a symptom of that bloat.
 
Will all this shit inevitably cause the election of Hitler 2 in an attempt to turn things around?
 
Conservatives don't bitch when Private meagconglomerates commit crimes when those businesses excuse it as being competitive.
they get sued and have to pay fines if they do it in the west. if they do it in the 3rd world, nobody cares...


This is very good for me. im looking for some cheap $ credits as long those idiots on wallstreet still think that the $ is as strong as the €(the Ecb is alot more conservative with printing money).
 
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