
The flag is at half mast for the plight of the fading middle class and the millennials who will inherit the debt and the global warming crisis.
The federal budget deficit was $625 billion for the first five months of fiscal year 2020, CBO estimates. This is $80 billion more than the deficit recorded during the same period last year. Revenues and outlays alike were higher through February of this year—by 7% and 9%, respectively—than during the first five months of fiscal year 2019. The era of Trillion Dollar Deficits is now firmly in place with no end in sight. The open question is how much COVID-19, aka corona virus, will depress the world economy.
Outlays during the first five months of this year were raised slightly by shifts in the timing of certain payments that otherwise would have been due on March 1, which fell on a weekend. Those shifts increased outlays through February by $52 billion. CBO claims that without them, the outlay increase would have been 6% and the deficit for the first five months of 2020 would have been $572 billion, roughly $28 billion larger, rather than $80 billion larger, than the amount for the same period last year. This of course will all even out during the balance of the fiscal year. Continue reading →
Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the US
The outbreak first started in Wuhan, China, but cases have been identified in a growing number of other locations internationally, including the United States. In addition to CDC, many public health laboratories are now testing for the virus that causes COVID-19.