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uzzCharts
is probably the only conservative column in America that was happy last
week about the media feeding frenzy regarding the President’s State of
the Union speech. That’s because the State of the Union/uranium-gate story
sucked enough oxygen out of the previous week’s new-largest-deficit-in-history
story to drop it from super-frenzy status down to regular-frenzy
status.
This is a good thing
because almost all the deficit coverage was wrong. The announcement by the
Office of Management and Budget that the projected 2003-04 deficit would
be $455 billion quickly morphed into the inaccurate assertion that this
was the largest deficit in American history. It is not. The largest deficit
in history occurred in 1943 under FDR; the second largest deficit in history
occurred in 1945 under Harry Truman; the third largest deficit in history
occurred in 1944 under FDR. When adjusted for inflation and expressed in
1996 dollars (the base line used by the OMB for their record keeping) those
deficits were: $499 billion, $421 billion, and $419 billion, respectively.
The current deficit, adjusted into 1996 baseline dollars, is $388 billion,
which makes it the fourth-largest deficit in recent history, not the first.
The most reasonable
basis of comparison is not only to adjust the numbers for inflation but
also to adjust the numbers for variations in the size of the economy. If
concern over deficits is based on their impact on the overall economy, then
their relative size to the overall economy is the most relevant statistic.
By that standard, moving from largest to smallest, here is the ranking of
federal deficits as percentages of GDP:
Deficits can be a cause
of concern but the current deficit is ranked as the 15th largest since the
beginning of World War II. Given the fact that the current deficit is also
occurring during a time of war, it is well within the mainstream of deficits
in U.S. history and it is certainly not the end of the world.
Jerry Bowyer is a talk show host on WPTT radio in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
He can be reached through www.BowyerMedia.com.
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