When the economy hits a recession, tax revenues drop automatically,  without any change in legislation. Spending on certain programs to help  those in need rises automatically, as more people draw on those  programs, without any change in legislation. How much of the current  budget deficits are due to discretionary changes in tax or spending  policy, and how much to these kinds of automatic changes?
The Congressional Budget Office addresses this question in an April 2011 report.  The dark blue line shows the actual budget deficits and surpluses. The  light blue line shows what the budget deficits or surpluses would have  been if the automatic stabilizers had not occurred. Thus, the gap  between the two lines is the measure of the effect of the automatic  stabilizers. 
 The effect of the automatic stabilizers is large in recent years. The CBO writes: "In 2010,
CBO estimates, automatic stabilizers added the equivalent of 2.4 percent of potential GDP to the deficit, an
amount  somewhat greater than the 2.1 percent added in 2009.3 According to  CBO’s baseline projections, the contribution of automatic stabilizers to  the budget deficit will decrease as a share of potential GDP—to 2.1  percent in 2011, 1.7 percent in 2012, and 1.5 percent in 2013 ... . That  contribution will then continue to fall—to 1.0 percent in 2014, 0.5  percent in 2015, and 0.1 percent in 2016—consistent with CBO’s
projection for output to come back up near potential output by 2016."
It's  also interesting to note that the budget surpluses of the late 1990s  were made larger because of automatic stabilizers: that is, the  unsustainably booming economy of that time brought in extra tax revenue  and held down the need for supportive social spending in those years.  
 
