The Presidential Scoring Framework
Category 1 · Economic outcomes
1.3

Fiscal trajectory

All 16 modern US presidents ranked by their net score on this single sub-criterion. Good and harm are scored 0–10 independently; net is good minus harm. Click a name for the full scorecard.

01
Bill Clinton
Democrat · 1993 – 2001
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Four consecutive budget surpluses (FY1998-2001), first since 1969. Debt-to-GDP fell from ~63% (1993) to ~55% (2001). OBRA 1993 + 1990 PAYGO + tech boom + spending restraint.

E1 — era-defining 10-good for fiscal trajectory
View 1 source
  • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    OBRA 1993 raised top marginal rate to 39.6% and increased gasoline tax, combined with PAYGO discipline and tech-boom revenue produced four consecutive surpluses (FY1998-2001).

    whitehouse.gov
+10/1
+9
02
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Republican · 1953 – 1961
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Balanced budgets in FY1956, 1957, 1960. Debt-to-GDP fell from ~70% to ~55%. Among the strongest fiscal records of the modern era.

View 1 source
  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Eisenhower achieved balanced budgets in three of eight fiscal years and reduced debt-to-GDP ratio by ~15 percentage points.

    whitehouse.gov
+8/2
+6
03
Harry S. Truman
Democrat · 1945 – 1953
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Federal debt fell in nominal terms (~$260B to ~$266B) and dramatically in debt-to-GDP terms (120% to ~70%) during boom years. Korean War partially reversed end-of-term.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Debt-to-GDP ratio fell from ~120% (1945) to ~70% (1953), driven by GDP growth rather than debt reduction — exceptional fiscal trajectory.

    whitehouse.gov
+7/2
+5
04
George H.W. Bush
Republican · 1989 – 1993
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1990 budget agreement raised taxes and created pay-as-you-go rules. Set up 1990s fiscal consolidation. Politically costly ('read my lips').

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  • good·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    1990 budget deal created pay-as-you-go rules that helped enable the 1990s deficit reduction and eventual budget surpluses.

    congress.gov
+7/3
+4
05
John F. Kennedy
Democrat · 1961 – 1963
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Modest deficits during recovery years. Debt-to-GDP continued declining from ~55% to ~50%.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Debt-to-GDP fell modestly during Kennedy term despite tax-cut planning; strong economy held fiscal trajectory positive.

    whitehouse.gov
+6/2
+4
06
Gerald Ford
Republican · 1974 – 1977
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Deficits remained large from inherited stagflation. Tax Reduction Act 1975 added stimulus.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 2·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal deficits remained large under Ford due to recession-era stimulus and continued inflation pressure.

    whitehouse.gov
+4/4
0
07
Jimmy Carter
Democrat · 1977 – 1981
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Deficits modest. Inflation eroded debt-to-GDP. Major spending program restraint.

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  • good·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal deficits remained moderate under Carter; debt-to-GDP held roughly stable at ~33%.

    whitehouse.gov
+4/4
0
08
Richard Nixon
Republican · 1969 – 1974
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Closed gold window August 15, 1971 ending Bretton Woods fixed-exchange-rate system. Deficits returned. Wage-price controls (Aug 1971-Apr 1974) controversial.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    The Nixon Shock ended the Bretton Woods gold standard, restructuring international monetary system; effects on US fiscal trajectory mixed but the structural change was profound.

    archives.gov
+4/4
0
09
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Democrat · 1933 – 1945
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Federal debt grew from ~$22B (1933) to ~$260B (1945) — from ~40% of GDP to ~120% of GDP. Era-defensible given Depression and war; scored against fiscal-trajectory criterion at face value.

E2.1 Interwar / E2.2 WWII — wartime spending unavoidable
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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal debt rose from $22.5 billion in 1933 to $258.7 billion in 1945, debt-to-GDP from ~40% to ~120%.

    whitehouse.gov
+4/5
-1
10
Barack Obama
Democrat · 2009 – 2017
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ARRA $787B stimulus + Great Recession revenue collapse + bailouts produced record $1.4T (2009) deficit. Annual deficit fell to $585B by 2016. Debt rose from $10.6T to $19.9T.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal debt nearly doubled during Obama term ($10.6T to $19.9T) due to ARRA stimulus, Great Recession revenue collapse, and continued Bush tax cuts; annual deficit reduced ~60% from peak.

    whitehouse.gov
+4/5
-1
11
Donald Trump (T2)
Republican · 2025 – —
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TCJA extension proposed (deficit expansion). DOGE federal workforce reduction (revenue impact contested). Tariff revenue partial offset. Net fiscal trajectory contested.

low confidence
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  • harm·Tier 1·Primary document·Unverified

    Proposed TCJA extension estimated to add $4-5T to federal debt over 10 years per CBO; DOGE federal workforce reductions modest fiscal impact relative to scale.

    TCJA extension proposals 2025; DOGE federal workforce reduction
+3/6
-3
12
Joe Biden
Democrat · 2021 – 2025
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ARP $1.9T + Infrastructure $1.2T + CHIPS $280B + IRA $370B major spending. Federal debt rose from $27.8T to $36T. Annual deficit ~5-7% of GDP. Continued fiscal expansion.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal debt rose from $27.8T to ~$36T during Biden term; annual deficits ran ~5-7% of GDP; major spending legislation (ARP, Infrastructure, CHIPS, IRA) totaled ~$3T over multi-year period.

    whitehouse.gov
+3/6
-3
13
Lyndon B. Johnson
Democrat · 1963 – 1969
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Guns-and-butter fiscal expansion. Vietnam War + Great Society without commensurate revenue. Surcharge enacted 1968 belatedly. Debt-to-GDP rose modestly but inflation pressure built.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal deficit grew from $5.9B (1964) to $25.2B (1968); 1968 surcharge tax came too late to prevent late-1960s inflation buildup.

    whitehouse.gov
+3/6
-3
14
Donald Trump (T1)
Republican · 2017 – 2021
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TCJA 2017 + COVID-19 spending produced massive deficits. Federal debt rose from $19.9T (Jan 2017) to $27.8T (Jan 2021). Annual deficit reached $3.1T (FY 2020).

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal debt rose from $19.9T to $27.8T during Trump T1; TCJA reduced revenues by ~$1.5T over 10 years; COVID-19 spending added trillions more.

    whitehouse.gov
+2/7
-5
15
Ronald Reagan
Republican · 1981 – 1989
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Federal debt nearly tripled: ~$994B (1981) to ~$2.85T (1989). Annual deficits ran ~3-6% of GDP throughout term. Largest peacetime fiscal expansion to that point in US history.

View 1 source
  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal debt rose from ~$994 billion to ~$2.85 trillion under Reagan; debt-to-GDP rose from ~33% to ~52% — largest peacetime debt expansion since WWII.

    whitehouse.gov
+2/7
-5
16
George W. Bush
Republican · 2001 – 2009
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Inherited budget surplus (2001) → $1.4T deficit (2009). Federal debt rose from $5.7T to $10.6T. Tax cuts + Iraq War + Medicare Part D + TARP without revenue offsets.

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  • harm·Tier 1·Statistic·Unverified

    Federal debt nearly doubled during GW Bush term ($5.7T to $10.6T); inherited surplus converted to $1.4T deficit; debt-to-GDP rose from ~55% to ~74%.

    whitehouse.gov
+1/8
-7