Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Federal budget red ink mounts

Deficit at $14.4B last month; fiscal 2016 1Q tally at $215.5B

- MARTIN CRUTSINGER

WASHINGTON — The U.S. budget deficit increased in December and for the third month in a row is running ahead of last year’s pace.

The deficit totaled $14.4 billion in December, the Treasury Department reported Wednesday. That compares with a surplus of $1.9 billion in December 2014.

For the first three months of this budget year, the deficit stood at about $215.5 billion, an increase of 22 percent over the same period a year ago.

For the entire year, private economists are forecastin­g a slight improvemen­t from last year’s deficit of $438.9 billion, which had been the lowest annual deficit in eight years. Continued gains in employment are expected to boost federal tax receipts.

Economists at JPMorgan Chase are predicting that the deficit for the current budget year, which began Oct. 1, will total $425 billion. The Congressio­nal Budget Office, which will update its forecast later this month, had predicted in August that the deficit this year would shrink even more to $414 billion but then begin rising for the rest of the decade and will top $1 trillion again by 2025.

The higher deficits will be driven by growth in Social Security spending and federal health care benefits as more baby boomers retire.

Last month, Congress approved a budget package that increased spending by $1.14 trillion this year and will provide $680 billion in tax cuts over the coming decade as part of a compromise agreement between Republican­s and Democrats in Congress and President Barack Obama’s administra­tion.

The measure included many of the domestic-spending increases that Obama had been seeking, while Republican­s won greater funding for the military and permanent tax cuts for business investment. The government had been operating under a stopgap spending measure that gave Congress and the administra­tion time to find a compromise on a number of budget and regulatory matters.

In the budget deals struck late last year was an agreement to suspend the limit on government borrowing, allowing it to increase without any cap until March 2017, two months after the next president takes office.

So far this budget year, receipts have totaled $765.6 billion, an increase of 3.5 percent from the same period last year. Government spending has totaled $981.2 billion, up 7 percent from a year ago.

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Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

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