Mitt Romney wrongly claimed deficits “multiplied … by a factor of four or five” under President Barack Obama. He also incorrectly stated that auto companies have repaid only a "small" share of the government bailout money.

The deficit was already running at $1.2 trillion when Obama took office, and it grew to more than $1.4 trillion during his administration — an increase of far less than 400 percent to 500 percent. As for the auto bailout money, nearly 50 percent of the roughly $80 billion has been paid back. By any reasonable measure, half is not "a small share."

Inflating Deficits

Romney, who is running for the Republican presidential nomination on the strength of his business experience, was asked during a June 6 interview on CNN's "Piers Morgan Tonight" why the economic crisis began under President George Bush's watch if Republicans are so much better on economic issues than Democrats. Romney criticized Bush for allowing federal spending to increase during his administration. He then blamed Obama for increasing deficit spending "by a factor of four or five."

Romney, June 6: Now, President Obama when he was candidate Obama pointed out those deficits were too large. He’s now multiplied them by a factor of four or five.

As we have written twice before, the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office projected the fiscal year 2009 deficit at $1.2 trillion two weeks before Obama took office. That fiscal year started Oct. 1, 2008. The fiscal year was already nearly one-third over when Obama took office on Jan. 20, 2009. After Obama took office, the deficit increased to $1.4 trillion for fiscal year 2009. At the end of the fiscal year, the CBO largely blamed the 2009 deficit on the recession, specifically a sharp decline in tax revenues and an increase in spending in response to the economic crisis — first by Bush and later by Obama.

Under Obama's watch, federal spending has remained at or near that level. In an April 2011 report, the CBO said (table 1-1) the actual deficit for fiscal year 2010 was nearly $1.3 trillion and the estimated deficit for the current budget is $1.4 trillion.

Republicans frequently make the argument that deficit spending should have returned to pre-recession levels by now, and that's an opinion that we leave for you to judge. But even if you go back to fiscal year 2008 — the last full year of the Bush administration — Romney's claim that Obama increased deficits "by a factor of four or five" would be way off base.

The federal government ended fiscal year 2008 with a deficit of $458 billion, as the CBO reported in table F-1 of a January 2010 report. Four times that would be about $1.8 trillion and five times would be roughly $2.3 trillion — both far higher than the deficit spending under Obama. Of course, as we already explained, it would be wrong to go back to 2008 and ignore the projected deficit as it stood when Obama took office.

Bailout Baloney

Romney, whose father was chairman and president of the American Motors Corp., also vastly understated how much the auto companies have repaid in government bailout funds.

Romney was asked if he was wrong to argue in his 2008 op-ed in the New York Times that auto companies should have to file for bankruptcy, rather than receive a government bailout. "Detroit needs a turnaround, not a check," Romney wrote at the time. As it turned out, General Motors and Chrysler got both: They went into bankruptcy and received government bailout funds to the tune of about $80 billion.

Morgan, June 6: How much of that money has now been paid back. Romney: Well, a small share of it. And that money did not have to be spent.

Romney is wrong to characterize the amount repaid so far as a "small share." The Department of Treasury provides a "Daily TARP Update" that provides data on how much money was spent under the Troubled Assets Relief Program. The June 6 report, which came out the day that Romney was interviewed on CNN, showed that TARP's Automotive Industry Financing Program provided a total of $79.69 billion to the auto companies. Of that, $39.61 billion has been repaid — roughly half. That's not a "small share."

— Eugene Kiely, with Lalita Clozel

Correction, June 15: This item originally stated that at the time Obama took office "Bush had signed all of the 2009 spending bills," which was not correct. We have deleted that statement. Bush signed a single, massive spending measure for FY 2009 (H.R. 2638) setting funding levels on which CBO based its $1.2 trillion deficit projection.

For most agencies, that bill provided only temporary funding expiring in March 2009. For those agencies, Obama later signed an omnibus spending bill (H.R. 38) that increased the government's discretionary spending levels only slightly — by a total of $9 billion for what remained of the fiscal year, according to a later CBO analysis (page 5). That of course was too small an increase to have affected CBO's original $1.2 trillion deficit projection, rounded to the nearest hundred billion. Nevertheless, we erred when we said Bush had signed "all" of the FY 2009 spending bills.