from the Congressional Budget Office
The federal budget deficit was $212 billion for the first three months of fiscal year 2016, the Congressional Budget Office estimates. That deficit was $36 billion larger than the one recorded during the same period last year. Receipts and outlays were both higher than last year’s amounts, by 4 percent and 7 percent, respectively.
If not for shifts in the timing of certain payments (which otherwise would have fallen on a weekend or on New Year’s Day), the deficit for the three-month period would have been $9 billion larger than it was last year.
Total Receipts: Up by 4 Percent in the First Three Months of Fiscal Year 2016
Receipts through December totaled $766 billion, CBO estimates—$26 billion more than the amount for the same period last year. The largest changes between last year and this year were in the following categories:
- Individual income taxes and payroll (social insurance) taxes together rose by $26 billion (or 5 percent).
- An increase of $22 billion (or 4 percent) in amounts withheld from workers’ paychecks accounted for the bulk of that gain. The main reason is probably that total wage and salary income has grown at about that annual rate in recent quarters.
- Nonwithheld receipts, mainly from filings of tax returns for 2014 by people who had received filing extensions, rose by $5 billion (or 12 percent). They are a very small fraction of receipts at this point in the year.
- Those increases were slightly offset by income tax refunds, which were $1 billion (or 5 percent) higher than they had been the previous year.
- Corporate income taxes declined by about $12 billion (or 13 percent). For most corporations, the first quarterly estimated payment of those taxes in the current fiscal year was due on December 15, and the amounts paid in that month were about $8 billion less than the amounts paid in the previous December. That may not indicate, however, that corporate profits have dropped. Comparing last year’s tax payments with this year’s has been complicated by the enactment in the middle of last month of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Public Law 114-113), and by the enactment in the middle of December 2014 of the Tax Increase Prevention Act of 2014 (Division A of Public Law 113-295). Each of those acts retroactively extended, to the beginning of the calendar year in which it was enacted, various provisions that reduced tax liabilities, and they may have affected the timing of tax payments for each calendar year to different degrees.
- Other receipts rose by $12 billion, on net. That increase is more than explained by remittances from the Federal Reserve to the Treasury, which increased by about $18 billion, largely because of the recently enacted FAST Act (Public Law 114-94). That law requires the Federal Reserve to remit most of its surplus account to the Treasury and to reduce dividends paid to large member banks on their capital stock in the Federal Reserve. Somewhat offsetting the Federal Reserve’s larger remittances was a $7 billion decline in receipts from miscellaneous fees and fines, CBO estimates. Those receipts were unusually high in the previous year.
Total Outlays: Up by 7 Percent in the First Three Months of Fiscal Year 2016
Outlays for the first three months of fiscal year 2016 were $978 billion, about $62 billion higher than they were during the same period last year, CBO estimates. That increase would have been smaller—$36 billion, or 4 percent—if not for the shift of certain payments from January to December in each of the past two years. (The amount shifted into December 2015 was abnormally large because it included nearly $26 billion in Social Security benefits that normally would have been paid on January 3.) The discussion below reflects adjustments to account for those timing shifts.
Outlays in several major categories increased:
- Social Security benefits rose by $11 billion (or 5 percent), reflecting typical recent growth in the number of beneficiaries and their average benefits.
- Medicare spending increased by $6 billion (or 5 percent), partly because the payment made to prescription drug plans each fall to account for unanticipated spending increases in the preceding calendar year was larger in 2015 than in 2014.
- Outlays for Medicaid rose by $7 billion (or 8 percent), largely because of new enrollees added through expansions of coverage authorized by the Affordable Care Act.
- Payments to the Treasury from the government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac decreased by $4 billion, primarily because the GSEs were less profitable in the first quarter of fiscal year 2016 than in the same period a year earlier. Because those payments are recorded in the budget as offsetting receipts, which are treated as reductions in outlays, that decrease in payments has resulted in higher outlays.
- Spending for the Commodity Credit Corporation in the Department of Agriculture (which is included in “Other” in the table below) rose by $4 billion (or 49 percent). Because the 2014 farm bill terminated certain commodity programs, and because payments under most new programs authorized by that legislation begin in fiscal year 2016, spending was unusually low in fiscal year 2015.
- Spending for the Department of Veterans Affairs (which is also included in “Other”) grew by $4 billion (or 10 percent), largely because of increases in the number of veterans receiving disability payments and in the average amount of those payments.
For other programs and activities, spending increased or decreased by smaller amounts.
Estimated Deficit in December 2015: $11 Billion
The federal government incurred a deficit of $11 billion in December 2015, CBO estimates—compared with a $2 billion surplus in December 2014. If not for the shifts in payments from January to December in both 2015 and 2016 (because the regular payment dates fell on weekends or New Year’s Day), the federal government would have recorded a surplus of $34 billion this December, $13 billion more than the surplus of $21 billion for last December.
CBO estimates that receipts in December 2015 totaled $350 billion—$15 billion (or 4 percent) more than those in the same month last year. Individual income taxes and payroll taxes together rose by $7 billion (or 3 percent). Remittances from the Federal Reserve rose by $20 billion because of the central bank’s remittance of most of its surplus account, as the FAST Act requires. Corporate income taxes fell by $7 billion (or 9 percent), on net. Receipts from miscellaneous fees and fines also declined by $6 billion, CBO estimates, primarily because in December 2014, the government reclassified a $6 billion settlement, calling it positive receipts rather than negative outlays and thus boosting both outlays and revenues recorded for that month by that amount.
Total spending in December 2015 was $361 billion, CBO estimates—$28 billion more than it was in December 2014. Adjusted for timing shifts, it was $1 billion (or less than 1 percent) more. (The changes discussed below reflect adjustments to account for those shifts.) Among the larger changes in outlays were these:
- Outlays for the Department of Justice declined by $7 billion, primarily because of the December 2014 reclassification of settlement receipts described above.
- Spending rose for two of the government’s largest entitlement programs: for Social Security by $4 billion (or 6 percent) and for Medicaid by $1 billion (or 3 percent).
- The government received $4 billion less in payments from the GSEs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, resulting in higher net outlays. The GSEs make quarterly payments to the Treasury each December.
- Outlays for net interest on the public debt increased by $3 billion (or 17 percent).
- Spending for military activities of the Department of Defense fell by $3 billion (or 6 percent).
Actual Deficit in November 2015: $65 Billion
The Treasury Department reported a deficit of $65 billion for November—$1 billion more than CBO estimated last month, on the basis of the Daily Treasury Statements, in the Monthly Budget Review for November 2015.
[click here to read the entire report]
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