San Francisco Chronicle

Deficit hits record $1.7 trillion

- By Martin Crutsinger Martin Crutsinger is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — The U.S. government’s budget deficit surged to an alltime high of $1.7 trillion for the first six months of this budget year, nearly double the previous record, as another round of economicsu­pport checks added billions of dollars to spending last month.

In its monthly budget report, the Treasury Department said Monday that the deficit for the first half of the budget year — from October through March — was up from a shortfall of $743.5 billion in the same period a year ago.

The deficit has been driven higher by trillions of dollars in support Congress has passed in successive economic rescue packages since the pandemic struck in early March 2020. The latest round came in a $1.9 trillion measure that President Biden pushed through Congress last month.

Biden’s package included individual support payments of up to $1,400 and the administra­tion rushed to make those payments as soon as the president signed the measure into law. The Treasury Department statement showed that the payments in March totaled $339 billion.

The budget report showed that the deficit for just March totaled $659.6 billion, the thirdhighe­st monthly deficit. For the sixmonth period, the $1.7 trillion deficit total surpassed the previous record of an $829 billion deficit run up for the six months ending in March 2011. That was a period when the government was spending to deal with the economic damage from the recession caused by the 2008 financial crisis.

Last year’s deficit, for the budget year that ended Sept. 30, totaled a record $3.1 trillion. The Congressio­nal Budget Office estimated in February that this fiscal year’s deficit would total $2.3 trillion. But that estimate did not include the cost of Biden’s $1.9 trillion rescue plan that

Congress passed in March or the impact of the administra­tion’s “Build Back Better” infrastruc­ture proposal that Congress is considerin­g now.

Nancy Vanden Houten, senior economist at Oxford Economics, said she expects the deficit for this budget year will total $3.3 trillion, an alltime high but up just 6.5% from last year’s record shortfall of $3.1 trillion.

Analysts said the deficit’s surge in the first six months of the fiscal year reflected that the first half of the 2020 budget year was mostly unaffected by the pandemic. The loss of revenue from millions of job lost and the big spending measures Congress passed to deal with the pandemictr­iggered recession occurred in the second half of the 2020 budget year.

Vanden Houten said that, while she expects Congress will pass some version of Biden’s $2 trillion infrastruc­ture bill, the budget impact will not occur until the start of the next fiscal year.

For the first six months of the current budget year, Treasury said revenues totaled $1.7 trillion, a drop of 5.5% from the same period last year. Spending was $3.4 trillion, up 45.3%.

Biden’s rescue program passed without Republican support, unlike the previous packages passed during the Trump administra­tion, which were backed by both Republican and Democratic lawmakers.

Republican­s contend that new spending is not needed in light of rising deficits and increased signs that the economy is starting to rebound.

The Treasury report Monday showed that through the first six months of the current budget year, interest payments on the debt total $229 billion, $41 billion below the same period a year ago. That reflects lower interest rates on the rising level of debt.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press 2020 ?? Dark clouds hang over the U.S. Capitol on a rainy August day in Washington. The U.S. government’s budget deficit for the first six months of this budget year was nearly double the previous record.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press 2020 Dark clouds hang over the U.S. Capitol on a rainy August day in Washington. The U.S. government’s budget deficit for the first six months of this budget year was nearly double the previous record.

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