Posted on 11/21/2002 4:33:15 PM PST by Willie Green
For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use.
WASHINGTON (AP) The government started off the 2003 fiscal year with a $54 billion budget deficit, while the 2002 budget shortfall was slightly smaller than the government had earlier reported, the Treasury Department said Thursday.
The deficit posted in October reflecting spending of $178.9 billion and revenues of $124.9 billion dwarfed the $7.7 billion of red ink the government recorded for October 2001. It was bigger than some private economists forecast but in line with a projection made by the Congressional Budget Office.
CBO cited a number of reasons the deficit was much bigger in October compared with the same month a year ago.
Revenues in October 2001 got a big boost from a law that allowed corporations to pay an estimated $23 billion in income tax payments that month, rather than September, CBO said. Spending in October 2002, meanwhile, was higher than a year ago, with much of the increase for defense, Social Security, Medicare and unemployment benefits, CBO said.
For the entire 2002 budget year, which ended Sept. 30, the government ran up a deficit of $157.7 billion, Treasury said in revised figures released Thursday. That was a little better than the $158.5 billion shortfall previously reported Oct. 24, based on less complete data.
The government's spending for the 2002 budget year came in slightly less than originally reported, while revenues were a bit higher, leading to the small improvement. Spending in the 2002 budget year totaled $2.01 trillion and revenues came to $1.85 trillion, according to Treasury's revised figures.
The 2002 budget deficit ended four straight years of surpluses and followed a $127 billion surplus the second biggest ever for fiscal 2001.
Both the White House and the Congressional Budget Office expect annual surpluses to return in a few years.
The Bush administration has blamed the return of deficits on last year's recession and the costs of waging war in Afghanistan and battling terrorism at home. Democrats blame much of the red ink on President Bush's $1.35 trillion, 10-year tax cut, which Congress enacted last year.
In October, the biggest spending categories were Health and Human Services Department programs, including Medicare and Medicaid, $43.9 billion; Social Security, $40.9 billion; military, $28.8 billion; and interest on the public debt, $13.7 billion.
Individual income tax payments in October came to $67.7 billion, down from $77.8 billion for the same period last year.
Another basis for my supposition? Willie LOVES Maglev --- a government make-work boondoggle program of magnificient proprtions .. perfect for the "working people" (and the union thugs).
Willie, be happy.
Big whup....We have almost half that out here in little ol' California all by ourselves.
I was told earlier today that I'm not allowed to talk about funding for the National Endowment for the Arts either.
That's probably where all the money is going.
The first constitutional duty is now in third place...how special...
The correct "salary" analogy would be to compare the National Debt to federal revenues, not GDP.
If you want to compare to GDP, one would have to add all forms of private debt to the National Debt. In other words, the sum total of corporate debt, consumer debt, home mortgages, debts incurred by state and local government, etc. etc.
I'm not sure where to find that statistic.
Already blew your bogus "salary" analogy out of the water in reply #29.
!7% of the budget devoted to interest payments only, not principle.
And piling up even more debt every day.
Won't be long before ALL our taxes will be going to make interest payments, with nothing left for any other government expenditures.
Actually, I know that's an exageration.
We'll be in default long before that occurs.
Too rich to touch.
Snicker...chuckle..LAUGH OUT LOUD!!!!
You are the king of diversion...
But wearing thin here.
Let's see, for the audience: If you could partially invest a portion of your Social Security tax, and pass on any gains to your heirs, would you, Willie? Let's see you divert, and personally attack. You are good at it, sorta.
Drumroll....crickets....
He'll duck, bob, and weave, but never answer a "yes or no." I encourage you all to ask him.
He freaks. :)
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