Federal Deficit Hits $1.38 Trillion Through August

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - Federal Deficit Hits $1.38 Trillion Through August stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

MARTIN CRUTSINGER | 09/11/09 05:53 PM | AP

What's Your Reaction?
Graphic compares the FY2009-to-date federal deficit to the annual deficit or surplus of the previous 20 years

WASHINGTON — The federal deficit surged higher into record territory in August, hitting $1.38 trillion with one month left in the budget year.

The soaring deficits have raised worries about the willingness of foreigners to keep purchasing Treasury debt. The Chinese, now the largest foreign owners of U.S. Treasury securities, have expressed concerns about runaway deficits. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and other administration officials have sought to address those concerns by insisting that once the recession is over and the financial system is stabilized, the administration will move forcefully to get the deficits under control.

Republican critics contend the administration does not have a credible plan to address future deficits.

"The $9 trillion question is when will the White House do more than just pay lip service to tackling these jaw-dropping deficits that threaten our economic stability," House Republican Leader John Boehner of Ohio said in a statement. "Piling more and more debt on future generations while massively increasing federal spending is not a response."

Private economists worry the country could face the grim prospect of seeing interest rates soar in future years and the dollar weaken as foreigners dump their U.S. holdings.

The Treasury Department said Friday that last month's deficit was $111.4 billion, below the $152 billion that economists expected. Still, the imbalance added to a flood of red ink already accumulated through the recession and massive spending needed to stabilize the banking system.

The Obama administration last month trimmed its forecast for this year's deficit to $1.58 trillion, from an earlier $1.84 trillion. The recovery of the banking system led to the reduced estimate as it meant the administration did not need to get an additional $250 billion in bailout support for banks.

The $1.58 trillion estimate for the full budget year signals that that administration expects the imbalance in September to be around $200 billion. That would be a sharp deterioration from September 2008 when the government closed out that budget year with a $45.7 billion surplus.

Story continues below
advertisement

Many private economists have slightly smaller deficit estimates for the full year but all agree that 2009 will be a record-holder by a large margin. The previous record deficit in dollar terms was $454.8 billion last year.

The administration's revised budget forecasts issued last month also underscored how much the government's fiscal picture has deteriorated. It is now projecting the deficit over the next decade will total $9 trillion, $2 trillion more than its estimates from a few months ago.

The deterioration partly reflects the country's deep recession, the worst since the 1930s. That downturn has cut into government receipts and pushed up spending in such areas as unemployment benefits and food stamps, along with the cost of fighting wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In addition, the government is using a $787 billion economic stimulus program passed by Congress last February to jump-start growth and is spending massive amounts from the $700 billion financial bailout package passed in October 2008 to stabilize the financial system.

The Treasury Department budget report for August showed the government collected $145.5 billion in revenues, a drop of 7.3 percent from August 2008.

It marked the 16th consecutive month that revenues have been lower than the previous year, a string that reflects how much the recession, which began in December 2007, has cut into personal income and corporate taxes.

Spending in August totaled $256.9 billion, down 4.5 percent from the year before. However, that comparison was misleading because the deficit last month was lowered by timing shifts which saw some payments shifted into July because Aug. 1 fell on a Saturday.

Primarily because of the timing shifts, last month's deficit was 0.5 percent lower than in August 2008.

For the first 11 months of the budget year, spending totals $3.26 trillion, up 18.7 percent from a year ago, while tax receipts fell 16.1 percent to $1.89 trillion.

The spending increases include the administration's estimate that $174.2 billion has been tapped from the financial bailout fund and another $84.9 billion went toward propping up mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. In addition, federal spending on unemployment benefits totaled $104.7 billion through August, up from $41.4 billion in the year-ago period.

WASHINGTON — The federal deficit surged higher into record territory in August, hitting $1.38 trillion with one month left in the budget year. The soaring deficits have raised worries about the...
WASHINGTON — The federal deficit surged higher into record territory in August, hitting $1.38 trillion with one month left in the budget year. The soaring deficits have raised worries about the...
Report Corrections
 
Comments
95
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
- barnybilt I'm a Fan of barnybilt 3 fans permalink

The lunitics are so worried about the deficit, while still pumping trillions into Iraq and Afganistan. People must not have taken high school math. They can't add up what was spent not just by the supplimentals in Congress for the wars, but what was fed to them through all the other parts of the Government. If You want to fix the deficit, stop spending on foreign wars, for one thing. Put the Country back to work by getting off foreign oil, and putting the Country to work doing it by using existing fuels like ethanol and natural gas. The Government could put up the seed money, but charge the private sector to do it. We could do it in two years, if we were proded to do it. We need leadership, not people who want to continue our problems, and put actions off for ten or twenty years down the road. Waiting for electric, hydrogen, or some other fuel to save us in the future is asinine. Never put off till tomorrow what You can do today.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:09 AM on 09/26/2009

Stop defending these politicians. They are and always have been a bunch of crooks! Time to press for budget caps

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 09/13/2009
photo

We have budget caps. Had em for decades.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:01 AM on 09/14/2009

The following is fact!

This deficit is not because of the following.
778 Billion Stimulus Bill
400+ Billion Omnibus Bill
350 Billion Tarp Authorization by B.O.

Don't try and convince me otherwise because we all know it is GWB's fault.
.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:19 PM on 09/13/2009
photo

"Don't try and convince me otherwise because we all know it is GWB's fault."

Exactly.

BTW, you posted facts... but not ALL the facts.
Half-truths are the same as falsehoods.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:02 AM on 09/14/2009
photo

What the article does not mention is that MANY international economists and business people think that THIS Admin pulled the world back from total international financial implosion.
And that is NOT hyperbole.

However, this would seem to be the preference of many of the GOPer persuasion.

I would think total international financial implosion would be best when longest deferred.
But that may be just me.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:06 AM on 09/14/2009

Everyday it's the same old rethreads. NO change form Washington.

good articles: http://www.iamned.com

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 09/13/2009
- vippy I'm a Fan of vippy 69 fans permalink

Odd that people blame the cost of the healthcare reform on the huge deficit yet no one crows about the cost of the two wars. Why are we fighting 2 wars when we are broke. Obama surely knew that we wanted him to get us out of Iraq and Afghanistan. But I am sure that someone is pressuring him
to stay in Afghanistan because it is lucrative for them. Being proud to be an American, etc. and all of those sayings mean little when the majority of people is suffering. Whe need to have a reason to be
proud first and I cannot think of a single one at this time.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:24 PM on 09/12/2009
photo

"Odd that people blame the cost of the healthcare reform on the huge deficit yet no one crows about the cost of the two wars. "

Ron Paul has been yelling about the cost of wars for decades.

The most painless way to finance health care would be to terminate the monopoly over the creation of credit held by the illegal privately-owned Federal Reserve. Stop paying bankers interest for marketing the debt that supports the US dollar.

After all, what have the bankers ever done for you, except team up with the military-industrial complex to maneuver you into wars to increase the debt?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:53 PM on 09/12/2009

Republican critics have no place critizing plans for limiting the deficit because it was their president, Mr. Bush who caused the deficit to be so huge in the first place. He spent eight years building up the deficit to what it is today, Obama has been in office for just one year. He deserves some slack and some time to fix the problem that he inherited from the previous president.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:06 PM on 09/13/2009

The American public is constantly held in check by blown up fake threats to their security and at the same time is fed some phoney patriotism and pride as if it is up to the USA to save the world. If your citizens wouldn't suffer from all that it would be funny, but it isn't. You are denied proper healthcare, you are lied to about your image in the rest of the world and as many Americans don't or can't travel abroad, they have no clue. If the majority of Americans would find out how relatively comfortably we live in Europe they would start to ask questions. But until then it is easier to believe they are number one, whatever that means.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 09/13/2009
- LunaPark I'm a Fan of LunaPark 15 fans permalink

Ron Paul has pointed out the cost of keeping the American empire going for several years. It's the one point that gets the neocon repbulicans hating Paul. He was castigated during the debates. But he is so right on this issue. Our foreign policy is insane. We are keeping troops in over 150 countries around the world and it has cost us trillions. We have a Federal Reserve that as Ralph Nader says, "fuels American adventurism".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 PM on 09/13/2009
- tekjensen I'm a Fan of tekjensen 17 fans permalink
photo

When you look at the debt as a percentage of GDP, it isn't even close to what it was in during WW2 when the debt amounted to $10 trillion dollars in today money. Most economist agree it was our participation in WW2 that helped pull us out of the Great Depression do to the increased spending that followed. Once out we started to reduce the deficit in following administration until it took a significant turn upwards during Reagan and Bush I. It again fell during the Clinton years. Then along comes Bush and "deficits don't matter" Cheney and again it increased. Our level of debt isn't something new when you adjust the debt during WW2 into today's dollars. At that time it equaled about 120% of our GDP. I like many other people aren't fond of the debt but their have been many real world examples of increases in government spending pulling us out of depressions and recessions only to be reduced once economic grow began again.

http://www.project.org/images/graphs/End_of_Year_Debt_GDP.jpg

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 09/12/2009
- arktig I'm a Fan of arktig 32 fans permalink

Bad comparison. After WW2 America was the only industrialized nation in the world with its industry left intact. As a result of its WW2 involvement, the US enjoyed unprecedented economic growth and wealth in the 1950s while the former enemies paid war reparations and the allies paid war debts to the US while enduring food shortages into the late 50s. America has always been the largest lender to the world, now it's the largest debtor.

You apparently don't grasp the severity of the American decline, the death of manufacturing, the almost complete loss of competitive edge, the loss of principles, faith and the power to lead by example. It's all gone, destroyed by a corrupt financial system and a corrupt political process.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 09/12/2009

Manufacturing as a percentage of GDP is about the same. Manufacturers are simply more productive­(therefore need less people to perform tasks).

In 2005 it (manufacturing) was 14% of GDP. In 1987 it was 20%.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:03 AM on 09/14/2009
- bzb I'm a Fan of bzb 254 fans permalink
photo

denny8844 says:
So how is that Obamanomics working out for all of you?

A lot better than Bushonomics considering Bush passed bills with no clear incentive on how to pay for them. The Iraq war was costing at least $10 billion a month, Bush passed Medicare Part D but the Rethuglicans had no clear plan on how Part D was to paid. Not to mention per Cheney that he and Bush just shoved billions of dollars (think TARP) at Wall St and the auto industry because they had NO idea on how to fix anything and just left it for Obama. I could go on and on but I think you get the picture.

Bush and Cheney you certainly have destroyed America with your tyrannical way's of handling America's affairs. But 98% of America will never forget how bad a President you really were with you lies and games.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:40 AM on 09/12/2009

Time for the other countries to cash out! Let the dems choke on their bankrupt financial policies and corruption!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 AM on 09/12/2009
photo

We are choking on the crap the Bush left behind. Classic projection­...BushCo/­Enron/Hall­iburton-KB­R corporate corruption. Last time we all checked, these companies LOVED Republicans.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2009-08-12/the-gops-misplaced-rage/full/

Bruce Bartlett was one of the original supply-siders, helping draft the Kemp-Roth tax bill in the 1970s. In the 1980s and 1990s, he was a leading Republican economist. He now considers himself to be a political independent.

"the vast bulk of this year’s currently estimated $1.8 trillion deficit was determined by Bush’s policies, not Obama’s.
I think conservative anger is misplaced. To a large extent, Obama is only cleaning up messes created by Bush. "

"Conservative protesters should remember that the recession, which led to so many of the policies they oppose, is almost entirely the result of Bush’s policies. According to the National Bureau of Economic Research, the recession began in December 2007—long before Obama was even nominated. "

Nice try. Keep at it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:57 AM on 09/12/2009

mY a$$, keep spewing the BS......In­creasing dem control of Congress got this ball rolling! Bush made a huge mistake by trying to work with them, and it cost him as they continue to stab him in the back!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:02 AM on 09/12/2009

Democratic corruption? bankrupt policies? The right wing is never right, are they?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:31 PM on 09/12/2009
photo

The same day that Speaker Pelosi and Leader Reid announced that they "would support any provision that increases competition and accessibility for health insurance - whether or not it is the public option favored by most Democrats" a chief lobbyist for UnitedHealth, Steve Elmendorf, sent an email blast inviting people to a $5,000/PAC or $2400/individual fundraiser in his home for Nancy Pelosi.

http://www.openleft.com/diary/15066/unitedhealth-lobbyist-announces-big-fundraiser-for-pelosi-as-she-backs-off-public-option

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:22 AM on 09/12/2009
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 281 fans permalink
photo

so they play games what is new here. Lobbyist play games.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:23 PM on 09/12/2009
- OneTop I'm a Fan of OneTop 93 fans permalink
photo

No matter how distasteful it is to folks, at some point taxes will have to increase.

Economic growth, no matter how optimistic is not going to take care of the massively increasing debt.

I wonder which Political leader will have the fortitude to put this on the radar?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:17 AM on 09/12/2009

Bush has certainly dug us into a very deep hole.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:14 PM on 09/11/2009

Response of cowards

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 AM on 09/12/2009

No, the response of cowards is calling people names like coward for no reason.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:47 AM on 09/12/2009

You actually believe saying "Bush dug us into a hole" is cowardice?

Interesting. I belive it to be a fundamental truth.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:32 PM on 09/12/2009

Like bush's firing of Armando Falcon of the office of federal housing enterprise oversight (OFHEO) in 2004. Falcon was warning of a systemic crisis in housing markets for a year. You mean that cowardly firing instead of facing the reality and actually doing something positive?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:53 AM on 09/13/2009

Let's put it on Cheney's credit card.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:13 PM on 09/11/2009
- joebhed I'm a Fan of joebhed 46 fans permalink
photo

The Republicans are right.
And, so was my Dad - when he predicted the end of the debt-money system of fractional-reserve banking, when it reached its implosion point that manifests itself in the impossibility of creating more debts(money) when the present debts cannot be paid.
People and businesses know they cannot make the payments on the debts that are already out there. They are reducing their need for debt.
Unfortunately, the only way to raise the money necessary to make the payments on the debts is to create more money, which is to create more debt and even more debt-service payments DUE, which is contradictory to the need to reduce the debt.
The debt-money system is insolvent, living on the life-support of TRILLIONS of new debts that have been recently created by the bankers.

So, the Republicans have Obama by his short hairs.
They know there is no solution.
And they offer up cuts to the government's expenditures as the policy that is necessary in order to bring the ability to make those payments more into balance.
Unfortunately, the Democrats and Obama do not understand the debt-money system, what it is, and how it works.
Either fix the money system, or the bankers will fix the Democrats.
And then, the Republicans.
The Money System Common

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:17 PM on 09/11/2009

Mind you, I feel something has to be done. Too bad the GOP didn't care about it while we were bombing two countries to rubble. One of which was for zero reasons, other than hatred. Shave the defense fund down, come home from Afghanistan. Cancel some tanks, cancel some airplanes. Homeland Security isn't cheap either.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:39 PM on 09/11/2009

Cancel your 8+ years of security? And that provided for the rest of us? Wise up!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:50 AM on 09/12/2009
- LunaPark I'm a Fan of LunaPark 15 fans permalink

How would you fix the money system?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:44 AM on 09/12/2009

Duh! Stop spending maybe?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:38 AM on 09/12/2009
- joebhed I'm a Fan of joebhed 46 fans permalink
photo

Thanks for a straight-forward question.
The answer is twofold.
1. Replacing the debt-money system with an equity-based "real" money system, one that does not create an irrepayable debt every time we create a new dollar - this when we need about $350 BILLION new dollars every year.
2. Separation of the two principal monetary functions as called for in Milton Friedman's "A Fiscal and Monetary Framework for Economic Stability". The banking function would remain with the banks, who would lend "real" money, and the money-creation function would be restored to government, from where it comes and where it belongs.

It's OUR money system.
We need to take it back from the private bankers at the Federal Reserve.
The Chicago Plan for Monetary Reform.
The Money System Common.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 AM on 09/12/2009
- LunaPark I'm a Fan of LunaPark 15 fans permalink

What would the drawbacks be for a backed currency (gold, silver, copper, lead,etc..­.)? Is it even possible? And why not competing currencies? Hong Kong had the HK dollar and three other types of bank backed legal tender instruments. Why not let the market decide the best instrument for making transactions?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:56 AM on 09/12/2009
- joebhed I'm a Fan of joebhed 46 fans permalink
photo

The drawbacks and impossibility of a gold-based currency are best laid out, in my opinion, in Arthur Kitson's 1959 book entitled: "A Fraudulent Standard".
Kitson is also author of "A Scientific Solution to the Money Question", written over a hundred years ago, even before the Fed.

Please recall that we have been on and off the gold standard repeatedly, never preventing any financial collapse.
Gold is great as a commodity and for making jewelry, but it really does nothing to stabilize the money system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:47 PM on 09/12/2009

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:05 AM on 09/12/2009
- dadw5boys I'm a Fan of dadw5boys 281 fans permalink
photo

Well until the FEDERAL RESERVE is shut down and the Central Banker are throw out of the USA we are still at risk of Economic Slavery.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:24 PM on 09/12/2009
- cjt1957 I'm a Fan of cjt1957 19 fans permalink

This is what Obama would call a "pretty good start."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 PM on 09/11/2009
photo

And BushCo talking about how great they did.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:47 AM on 09/12/2009

For all who cannot give our President the time to work on deficit reduction once the financial crisis is better stabilized, get out your checkbooks: the United States Treasury accepts gifts to reduce the national debt.
Accordingly, make your check payable to: ~ Bureau of the Public Debt ~ and mail to:
Attn. Dept. G
Bureau of the Public Debt
PO Box 2188
Parkersburg, WV 26106-2188

Website: http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/

Thank you for your contribution to help reduce the public debt - I am sure that you must feel great, as I do, in taking personal responsibility for our country's debts and not pushing them off to future generation­s...please pass this post along to everyone you know - maybe we can really make a dent?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 PM on 09/11/2009
- roberto8ag I'm a Fan of roberto8ag 12 fans permalink
photo

"taking personal responsibility for our country's debts "

I didn't sign any paper so... is not my debt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:00 PM on 09/11/2009

Really? Not your debt? So you won't be paying your taxes then, right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 PM on 09/12/2009
photo

What a crock of c.r.a.p! Give him "the time"? I'll give him the time, the time is now! He's had plenty of time to realize that adding trillions after the Shrub did his worst is NOT helping; regardless of the economic meltdown.

While I am willing, like millions of others, to provide support when warranted - I'm not willing to start donating towards the National Debt; haven't we done enough as it is?

Puh-lease, more time will NOT dissuade him or his handlers (Corporate Oligarchs). Hope & Change? Many of us bought the rhetoric, hook, line and sinker, but we've gotten zero change and now have far less hope.

The Great Uniter, Waffler or Corporate Puppet?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:11 PM on 09/11/2009
- joebhed I'm a Fan of joebhed 46 fans permalink
photo

For those of us who resent the fact that bankers create all money as debts, rather than the government creating its own money, which would eliminate the need for any national debt, I want to take back my right to not make that payment.
So, tell Rahm and Obama they have tonight to work on that.
They will find they have discovered the Chicago Plan for Monetary Reform, a plan that has been long in the making, and even longer needed.
We need more than an administration that thinks the priority should be to save the banking system. The priority should be to save the money system and the economy. The banking system will take care of itself by being bankers.
By creating loans of real money.
Like people think they do now.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:28 PM on 09/11/2009

Chill, folks...I was speaking to the righties railing against deficits created largely by the last administra­tion...tho­se who say 'we can't afford health care reform' but didn't give a hoot about an unnecessary war adding to huge deficits, nor cared about the billions given away to big Pharma in the republican-led, completely unfunded Medicare Part D prescription fiasco...t­hese same righties who now insist that everything has to be budget-neutral - AS IF they have any credibility left...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:38 PM on 09/11/2009
- arktig I'm a Fan of arktig 32 fans permalink

The so called Chicago Plan is a mess as prone to corruption as the FED is. The problem comes from lack of transparency and the willingness of the government to bailout private banks. If they were left to go under, the good banks and the economy would be in much better shape today. Also the repeal of Glass-Steagall was a blunder of Galactic proportions.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 PM on 09/12/2009

Registered democrats should be required to donate! They voted for this abomination and I hope they are getting exactly what they voted for! You can keep the chagne!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:53 AM on 09/12/2009

And you can keep the extreme right where it belongs: outside the mainstream.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 09/12/2009

Registered Republicans should be required to apologize to the country for what their misguided enthusiasm hath wrought.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 09/12/2009

THIS president is not an abomination. He's the guy who will get us out of the destructive, misguided policies of the last president, a true abomination, and a demonstrated serial liar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 09/12/2009
Page: 1 2 Next › Last » (2 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect