Obama’s new budget proposal is so laughable it has more holes than a block of Swiss Cheese. Let’s take a look at just a few things to see how ridiculous it is.
The U.S. economic recovery that began in 2009 will continue to gain momentum over the next few years.
Oh yeah, based on what? If anyone in the Government had bothered to study economic cycles they would soon conclude that they can’t forecast prosperity into perpetuity. Particularly, today’s recovery that has been driven entirely by credit and speculation. As our forecast clearly indicates (Click Here) the US Economy and financial markets are about to go through a major bear market/recession. Good luck with that momentum.
The unemployment rate, which was 6.6 per cent in January, will continue to slowly decline over the next five years, stabilizing at 5.4 percent by 2018
Why not just say 1.2% by 2075. Again, the upcoming recession and bear market (2014-17) will drive unemployment much higher. Would you want to read something scary? Here, 4 Reasons US Unemployment Rate Will Be At 20% By 2017.
U.S. housing market has shown clear signs of recovery.
I would hope housing would show some signs of recovery after the FED pumped over a $1 Trillion into the economy over the last 3 years alone. Yet, this recovery is nothing but a dead cat bounce. Would you like to know what the real future of real estate is? Click Here to read our comprehensive real estate report.
In a nutshell, this report is not worth the paper it is printed on.
P.S. I have no political affiliation either way. In fact, I believe we will be much better off without government at all.
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama’s $3.9 trillion budget proposal for next year suggests the U.S. economic recovery that began in 2009 will continue to gain momentum over the next few years but that the unemployment rate won’t fall to pre-recession levels of below 6 percent until 2017.
The White House forecast that the budget deficit would fall from $649 billion in the fiscal year that ends Sept. 30 to $564 billion in fiscal 2015 and $458 billion in 2017. If the projections hold up, it would mark three years in a row of annual red ink below
$1 trillion.
The unemployment rate, which was 6.6 per cent in January, will continue to slowly decline over the next five years, stabilizing at 5.4 percent by 2018, the administration projected. That’s down from a high of 10 percent reached during the 2008-2009 recession.
The economic forecasts, included in the president’s budget proposal for the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, are generally in line with projections made by other government and private forecasters.
However, the White House projects a 6.7 percent unemployment rate for 2015. While that’s the same level as in the Blue Chip Consensus — an average of about 50 private-sector forecasts— it is more optimistic than the Congressional Budget Office, which projects 2015 unemployment at 7.1 percent.
The administration forecast is based on assumed congressional approval of all of Obama’s budget tax and spending proposals, an unlikely prospect.
The most recent unemployment rate available is January’s 6.6 percent. That’s getting close to the 6.5 percent threshold the Federal Reserve suggested might be the point at which it would back away from its policy of keeping short-term interest rates at near zero.
The budget document said that the U.S. housing market has shown “clear signs of recovery, after its collapse in 2007 and 2008, which was a major cause of the financial crisis and recession.”
The administration projects that, as a share of the nation’s total economic output, the deficit next year would be 3.1 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product. That’s down from the 2009 peak of 10.1 percent.
Still, spending is expected to rise again in the next decade as the population ages and draws on retirement and health care benefits without new sources of revenue.
The White House projected that interest on a 10-year Treasury bill would rise from 3.0 percent now to 4.3 percent in 2017 and reach 5.0 percent by 2021.
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