Hartford Courant

Amid virus, US budget deficit hits record $3.1T

- By Andrew Taylor

WASHINGTON — New federal budget figures show an enormous $3.1 trillion deficit in the just-completed fiscal year, a record swelled by coronaviru­s relief spending that pushed the tally of red ink to three times that of last year.

The Congressio­nal Budget Office released the unofficial 2020 figures Thursday, saying the deficit equaled 15% of the U.S. economy, a gap that was the largest since the government undertook massive borrowing to finance the final year of World War II.

The government spent $6.6 trillion last year and borrowed 48 cents of every dollar it spent, CBO said. The numbers amount to a 47% increase in spending, led by $578 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program for smaller businesses, and a $443 billion increase in unemployme­nt benefits over the past six months alone.

The massive figures were expected but still more than double the previous deficit record of $1.4 trillion that was registered during former President Barack Obama’s first year in office during the Great Recession in 2009.

Revenues also contribute­d to the bleak fiscal picture, falling $44 billion to $3.4 trillion, as income tax receipts dropped almost 16% as the jobless rate spiked. Corporate income taxes dropped by 21%, even as Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes climbed 5%.

Economists say the most significan­t measure of government deficits is to compare them to the gross domestic product. By that score, the flood of red ink in 2020 still blew past Obama’s 2009 record, in which the deficit almost hit 10% of GDP.

The CBO estimate is preliminar­y, based on daily Treasury reports, but is likely to match the official numbers due from Treasury and the White House budget office this month.

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