Budget Deficits/Fiscal Policy
BNA's Web Watch is prepared by Laura
Gordon-Murnane. E-mail suggestions for future weekly topics
always welcome.
January 2004
Federal Government
Federal Reserve Banks
White House – Office of Management and Budget
ANALYTICAL
PERSPECTIVES BUDGET OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT (Fiscal
Year 2004)
Congressional Budget Office
The
Long-Term Budget Outlook (December 2003)
Congressional Budget Office. 2003c.
“An
Analysis of the President’s Budgetary Proposals for Fiscal
Year 2004.” (March 2003)
Federal Reserve
Forecasting
Exogenous Fiscal Variables in the United States by Darrel Cohen
Glenn Follette
Division of Research and Statistics Division of Research and Statistics
Federal Reserve Board Federal Reserve Board
International Organizations
International Monetary Fund
U.S.
Fiscal Policies and Priorities for Long-Run Sustainability
Martin Mühleisen and Christopher Towe, Editors
(January 8, 2004)
Nongovernment Organizations
American Enterprise Institute
Fiscal
and Generational Imbalances
Brookings Institution
Sustained
Budget Deficits: Longer-Run U.S. Economic Performance and the Risk
of Financial and Fiscal
Peter R. Orszag, Senior Fellow, Economic Studies ||| Robert E. Rubin,
Office of the Chairman, Citigroup |||
Allen Sinai, Chief Global Economist, Decision Economics, Inc.
Disarray Paper presented at the AEA-NAEFA Joint Session, Allied
Social Science Associations Annual Meetings, The Andrew Brimmer
Policy Forum, "National Economic and Financial Policies for
Growth and Stability", January 5, 2004
Restoring
Fiscal Sanity: How to Balance the Budget
Brookings Institution, January 13, 2004
Alice M. Rivlin, Senior Fellow, Economic Studies ||| Isabel V. Sawhill,
Vice President, Director, Economic Studies
A Brookings Macroeconomic Forum
DO
BUDGET DEFICITS MATTER? (March 11, 2003)
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
Is Domestic
Spending Exploding? An Assessment of Claims by the Heritage Foundation
and Others (January 7, 2004)
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the Committee for
Economic Development, and the Concord Coalition
Mid-Term
And Long-Term Deficit Projections: Estimates and Projections Underlying
the Joint Statement of September 29, 2003, issued by the Center
on Budget and Policy Priorities, the Committee for Economic Development,
and the Concord Coalition
THE
DEVELOPING CRISIS — DEFICITS MATTER ||| JOINT STATEMENT
Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, the Committee for Economic
Development, and the Concord Coalition
Concord Coalition
Federal
Spending Growth Rates: Going Up By Any Measure (Dec. 22, 2003)
Heritage Foundation
Most
New Spending Since 2001 Unrelated to the War on Terrorism Brian
M. Riedl
Omnibus
Spending Bill Hikes Discretionary Spending by 9 Percent in 2004
by Brian M. Riedl WebMemo #385 December 16, 2003
$20,000
per Household: The Highest Level of Federal Spending Since World
War II by Brian M. Riedl Backgrounder #1710 December 3, 2003
Institute for Policy Innovation
Putting
Taxpayers First—A Federal Budget Plan to Benefit the Next
Generation of American Taxpayers
New
10-Step Weight Loss Plan For the Federal Budget Offered Plan would
save $75,000 per household and pave the way to new tax code and
personal Social Security Accounts
Tax Policy Center
Are
Current Budget Deficits More Worrisome Than Those of the 1980s?
Rudolph G. Penner (November 21, 2003)
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