Ho Hum to that. If the country does not come up with some compromises, and we do fall of the fiscal cliff, the recession will be much large than a half percent decline.
I don’t blame the CBO for these big misses. It is not its job to predict wars and the biggest recession in 80 years. But a look at what was thought to be reasonable a decade ago shows that the expectations were not reasonable at all. Bad “stuff” happens. Bubbles, wars and recessions can’t be predicted with any degree of accuracy, but it is predictable that they will occur.
I don’t think it’s possible for the CBO to miss the 2012 ten-year projection of Debt to GDP by 400% as it a decade ago. If that were to occur, debt/GDP would push towards 300%.That can’t happen.The country would simply blow up before we got to that level. But there are significant forecasting errors in the latest CBO outlook, we will just have to wait to see what they missed.About The Author – Bruce Krasting had worked on Wall Street for 25 years–“For 25 years I woke up thinking, “What am I going to do today to make some money in the market”. I don’t do that any longer. But I miss it.” Nowadays, Bruce blogs about his take on financial events at Bruce Krasting. (EconMatters author archive here.)
The views and opinions expressed herein are the author’s own, and do not necessarily reflect those of EconMatters.
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