Fortune | FORTUNE 10月10日 06:03
联邦预算责任委员会批评政府停摆,指出2025财年巨额赤字
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联邦预算责任委员会(CRFB)严厉批评了近期无意义且浪费的政府停摆,并公布了2025财年高达1.8万亿美元的联邦赤字。这一数字由国会预算办公室(CBO)发布,反映了在政治僵局下国家财政路径的持续担忧。与此同时,特朗普总统却吹嘘经济增长和关税刺激是解决美国不断膨胀的37.8万亿美元债务的办法,但多数经济学家认为关税实际上是消费者或资本的税负。CRFB呼吁重新开放政府,并提出延长支出上限和实施“超级PAYGO”规则来管理支出和鼓励财政责任,同时强调解决医疗保险和社会保障等长期财政计划的紧迫性。

📊 **巨额联邦赤字与国家债务警报**:联邦预算责任委员会(CRFB)报告称,2025财年联邦赤字将高达1.8万亿美元,这表明国家财政状况严峻。CRFB指出,尽管赤字未较去年增长,但持续的巨额借贷已使国家债务相当于整个美国经济的规模,并可能很快超过二战后的最高纪录。预计未来十年每年将借贷近2万亿美元,CRFB主席Maya MacGuineas对此可持续性表示强烈质疑。

🏛️ **呼吁财政责任与政策建议**:CRFB批评近期政府停摆是“无意义且浪费的”,并敦促政府应优先重新开放,且不附加新的借贷条件。委员会还建议延长过去两年有助于控制支出的可自由支配支出上限,并强制执行“超级PAYGO”规则,即每新增1美元支出或减税,就需要2美元的抵消,以鼓励财政审慎。

⏳ **长期财政计划的紧迫性与改革呼吁**:MacGuineas强调,Medicare和Social Security等长期应享福利计划的信托基金面临约七年内耗尽的财务困境,迫切需要进行改革。为灌输财政纪律,CRFB提议成立一个财政委员会,目标是将赤字降至GDP的3%,以应对当前债务增长的轨迹。

💹 **金融界对债务问题的担忧**:对冲基金巨头Ray Dalio也对Trump总统关于通过“创纪录增长”摆脱债务的说法表示怀疑。Dalio根据对近50个主要债务周期的研究,警告由债务驱动的繁荣是暂时的,并建议投资者将约15%的投资组合分配给黄金,认为黄金的上涨反映了对债务资产和法定货币的转变,并与不断上升的全球债务水平相关。

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), Washington, D.C.’s leading nonpartisan budget watchdog, has sharply criticized the recent government shutdown as “pointless and wasteful” while unveiling the staggering $1.8 trillion federal deficit for the fiscal year 2025. This fiscal gap, reported by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) in its Monthly Budget Review, reflects ongoing concerns about the nation’s fiscal path amid political gridlock. The disclosure comes as President Donald Trump touts rapid economic growth and tariff-driven stimulus as the solution to America’s ballooning $37.8 trillion debt, with most economists warning that the tariffs are really functioning as a tax on the consumer or on capital.

According to CRFB President Maya MacGuineas, the government’s estimated borrowing for the fiscal year isn’t exactly growing, but that’s the cause for concern. “While the deficit didn’t rise from last year, it didn’t fall either, and we continue to borrow far too much. Our national debt is about the size of the entire U.S. economy and will exceed its highest ever record as a share of the economy—set just after World War II—in short order.” MacGuineas noted that the U.S. is on track to borrow nearly $2 trillion per year for the next decade. “How can anyone think this is sustainable?”

Reopening the government without attaching new borrowing strings should be a priority, the watchdog urged. In addition, CRFB called for extending the discretionary spending caps that have helped manage spending over the past two years and recommended enforcing a “Super PAYGO” rule—requiring $2 in offsets for every $1 of new spending or tax cuts—to encourage fiscal responsibility.

MacGuineas also emphasized the pressing need to address long-term entitlement program insolvencies, specifically Medicare and Social Security trust funds, which face financial depletion without reform within roughly seven years. To instill fiscal discipline, the CRFB proposed establishing a fiscal commission tasked with reducing deficits to 3% of GDP, an ambitious but necessary goal given the current debt trajectory.

“The tragedy of the failure of governance we are witnessing,” MacGuineas asserted, is that political leaders have not been able to overcome their differences to do the hard budgeting work required. Without change, she warned, the United States risks losing its status as a global superpower.

The $1.8 trillion deficit faced last fiscal year reflects the ongoing challenges of balancing spending with revenues amid rising costs for healthcare, social programs, and national defense, alongside tax policies (namely, a reluctance to raise them) that limit revenue growth. The CRFB’s analysis paints a cautionary picture that stresses the urgency for bipartisan cooperation in Congress to enact sustainable fiscal policies.

Dalio’s diagnosis

The CRFB is far from alone in fretting about the deficit, as many top voices in finance have long urged the government to get its fiscal house in order. One of the most prominent is hedge fund billionaire Ray Dalio, who has been skeptical of President Trump’s claims that, through “record growth,” the nation can essentially grow itself out of its $37 trillion debt load.

The Bridgewater Associates founder has studied nearly 50 major debt cycles and warns that prosperity fueled by rising debt is always temporary. In his 2018 book Principles for Navigating Big Debt Crises, Dalio cautioned that leaders mistake prosperity for immunity, and income must consistently outpace debt service costs. Current CBO projections actually forecast debt held by the public will swell to 118% by 2035, and net interest payments will climb as a share of economic output.

Of late, noting gold’s series of record-setting highs throughout 2025, Dalio has said that it makes sense when you look at the debt situation. At the Greenwich Economic Forum in October, Dalio urged investors to allocate around 15% of their portfolios to gold, saying the metal’s surge reflects a shift away from debt assets and fiat currencies, reminding him of the 1970s. He linked it to rising global debt levels—especially America’s $37.8 trillion burden—and he noted that many central banks are increasing their gold reserves, highlighting an ongoing “change in the monetary order.”

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

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联邦预算 政府赤字 国家债务 财政责任 CRFB 政府停摆 Ray Dalio Fiscal Responsibility Government Deficit National Debt CRFB Government Shutdown Ray Dalio
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