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July Budget Deficit “Only” $63 Billion

16-8-2020 < SGT Report 29 717 words
 

by Peter Schiff, Schiff Gold:



The federal budget deficit for July was only $63 billion, according to the latest Monthly Treasury Statement issued by the Treasury Department.


Of course, $63 billion is a huge budget shortfall. I say “only $63 billion” simply because it pales in comparison to the $864.1 billion deficit in June. In reality, the July deficit continues the trend of unprecedented borrowing and spending we’ve seen throughout the year.


The only reason last month’s deficit gives an illusion of improvement is because the Treasury enjoyed a big influx of revenue with the tax filing deadline shifted to July due to coronavirus. All of those tax payments that would have normally come in April were shifted forward to last month. The federal government took in $563 billion in July compared to $241 billion in June. That represents a 133.6% revenue increase month-to-month.



Looking at the April 2019 Treasury report provides some perspective, as that was the month the Treasury saw its biggest influx of tax payments last year. There was no budget deficit in April 2019. The Treasury Department reported a $160.3 billion surplus. And going back one more year to April 2018, Uncle Sam enjoyed a 214.3 billion surplus. In fact, tax filing month typically means a budget surplus.


Not this year.


The revenue influx merely obscured the continuation of the federal government’s insane spending binge.


Last month, the government blew through another $626 billion. That’s a 68.7% increase over July 2019 – a year that gave us the fifth-largest deficit in US history.


On the year, Uncle Sam has spent a staggering $5.63 trillion. It has already eclipsed 2019 spending ($4.45 trillion) by over $1 trillion with two months left in the fiscal year.



The federal government has spent a record 100% more than it has brought in in fiscal 2019 with two months remaining. The yearly budget deficit currently stands at $2.81 trillion. That smashes the previous record shortfall of $1.41 trillion set in 2009 and the year isn’t even over.



It’s easy to blame the deficit on COVID-19, but the federal government was already spending as if there was a crisis before the pandemic. Through the first two months of fiscal 2020, the deficit was already 12% over 2019’s huge number and was on track to eclipse $1 trillion. Prior to this year, the US government had only run deficits over $1 trillion four times, all during the Great Recession. We were approaching that number prior to the pandemic, despite what Trump kept calling “the greatest economy in the history of America.”


Even with the economy supposedly in the midst of a boom, US government borrowing looked more like we were in the midst of a deep recession — before the government-induced coronavirus recession. Long-term US debt sales rose to levels not seen since the height of the financial crisis before the current financial crisis, and the Federal Reserve was already monetizing US debt with quantitative easing before the pandemic.


As of Aug. 13, the national debt stood at $26.6 trillion. The debt to GDP ratio stood at 136.57%.


Despite the lack of concern in the mainstream, debt has consequences. Studies have shown that a debt to GDP ratio over 90% retards economic growth by about 30%.


It’s hard to even fathom this level of debt. And nobody seems concerned. Virtually everybody agrees that trillions in government spending is “necessary” to boost the economy and mitigate the effect of the COVID-19 government shutdowns – Republicans and conservatives included. Everybody is a Keynesian now.


But nobody seems to be asking the most significant question: who is going to pay for all of this? After all, borrowed money has to be paid back.


The answer is simple: We will all be on the hook for this massive bill. We will either pay for it in higher real taxes or a massive inflation tax — probably both.



Read More @ SchiffGold.com



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