Thursday, July 16, 2009

U.S. Budget Gap Exceeds $1 Trillion

Vincent Del Giudice
Bloomberg
July 14, 2009

The U.S. budget deficit topped $1 trillion for the first nine months of the fiscal year and broke a monthly record for June as the recession subtracted from revenue and the government spent to rejuvenate the economy.

The shortfall for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1 totaled $1.1 trillion, the first time that the gap for the period surpassed $1 trillion, Treasury figures showed today in Washington. The excess of spending over revenue for June was $94.3 billion, the first deficit for that month since 1991, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Individual and corporate tax receipts are sliding even as the worst recession in five decades shows signs of easing because the jobless rate continues to rise — reaching a 26-year high in June — and companies have yet to see a sustained increase in demand. The shortfall is also widening as the government ramps up spending from the $787 billion stimulus program President Barack Obama signed into law in February.

2 comments:

Scott Ritsema said...

Good to have you back, Scott.

I remember when Ron Paul predicted a 1 trillion dollar deficit and it sounded totally outlandish and crazy. I didn't even beleive him.

Here's my archive of posts on government debt:
http://civicsnews.blogspot.com/search/label/Government%20Debt

Random Thoughts said...

I can hardly conceive a 1 trillion dollar debt! Glad you're back.