Clinton Projects $1.9 Trillion Budget Surplus
W A S H I N G T O N, Dec. 28, 2000 -- President Clinton today projected that the United States will have a $1.9 trillion budget surplus over the next decade. He said the increase in the expected surplus means the government will be debt-free by 2010.
The fiscal 2001 budget surplus was projected at $256 billion,White House officials said. The fiscal 2000 surplus was $237billion, officials said, which capped four straight years of budgetsurpluses.
This was the first time the country has had four straight budgetsurpluses since 1930, officials said.
The increase in the surplus, which does not include the SocialSecurity or the Medicare surplus, marks the ninth consecutive yearin which the government’s bottom line has improved, a first.In June, Clinton projected a 10-year surplus of $1.87 trillion.The new figure was $300 million higher.
“These are conservative numbers,” Clinton said at a WhiteHouse news conference.
Surplus Source of Proposed Tax Cuts
The booming economy also will allow the country to pay off thedebt by 2009 if it dedicates its entire budget surplus to debtreduction, White House budget director Jack Lew said. “America ison track to becoming debt-free,” Lew said.
Over that same 10-year period, the surplus for Social Securityis expected to grow to $2.5 trillion while the Medicare surplus isexpected to grow to $532 billion, Lew said.
President-elect Bush argued during his campaign that hisproposal for more than $1.3 trillion in tax cuts over 10 years canbe paid for by budget surpluses without eroding Social Security’strust funds. But he has also been cautioning of a potentialdownturn in the economy — a forecast that the White House deploredas without basis and likely to be damaging to the economy.