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Based on the Monthly Treasury Statement for March and the Daily Treasury Statements for April | May 9, 2002 |
Receipts in April were 29 percent lower than in the same month last
year and about $60 billion less than CBO had projected. So far this year,
receipts are 11 percent below last year's level and about $75 billion less
than CBO's baseline projection. The dramatic decline in revenue in April
contributed to a deficit of $66 billion for the first seven months of fiscal
year 2002, CBO estimates. That deficit is a sharp contrast to the $165
billion surplus recorded for the same period last year. CBO will issue
revised estimates of the 2002 budget this summer.
MARCH RESULTS (In billions of dollars) |
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Preliminary Estimate |
Actual | Difference | ||||
Receipts | 110 | 111 | 1 | |||
Outlays | 170 | 175 | 5 | |||
Deficit (-) | -60 | -64 | -4 | |||
|
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SOURCES: Department of the Treasury; CBO. | ||||||
The Treasury reported a deficit of $64 billion in March, $4 billion
more than CBO had projected on the basis of the Daily Treasury
Statements. Spending was $5 billion higher than projected by CBO, with
most of the additional outlays recorded by the Departments of Defense,
Agriculture (USDA), and Veterans Affairs. USDA's outlays included a $1.3
billion adjustment for increased subsidy costs for credit programs. Receipts
in March were $1 billion higher than estimated by CBO.
ESTIMATES FOR APRIL (In billions of dollars) |
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Actual FY2001 |
Preliminary FY2002 |
Estimated Change |
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Receipts | 332 | 236 | -95 | |||
Outlays | 142 | 169 | 27 | |||
Surplus | 190 | 68 | -122 | |||
SOURCES: Department of the Treasury; CBO. | ||||||
CBO estimates that the surplus in April was about $68 billion--$122 billion less than in the same month last year and the lowest April surplus since 1995. Receipts were about $95 billion lower, and outlays $27 billion higher, than in April 2001.
The sharp decline in receipts occurred mainly in nonwithheld income and self-employment (social insurance) taxes, which shrank by $67 billion, or 33 percent--the largest percentage decline in decades. In April, those receipts largely represent final payments of individual income taxes for the previous tax year. In addition, individuals received a substantial increase in refunds, which exceeded last April's refunds by $8 billion, or almost 25 percent. Other receipts were also weak in April. Receipts from corporate income taxes fell by $14 billion, or more than 40 percent, from last April's level, in large part because of the corporate tax cuts enacted in March 2002. Withholding of income and employment taxes fell by $7 billion, mostly because of the cuts in individual income taxes enacted last year.
Much of the increase in outlays reflects unusually low spending last
April. Because April 1, 2001, fell on a weekend, about $11 billion in payments
were made in March that year instead of in April. In addition, last April
the Small Business Administration recorded a $2 billion offset to outlays
to reflect revised estimates of the cost of credit subsidies. Excluding
those differences, outlays were about 8 percent higher this April than
in April 2001.
BUDGET TOTALS THROUGH APRIL (In billions of dollars) |
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October-April
|
Estimated Change |
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FY2001 | FY2002 | |||||
Receipts | 1,254 | 1,115 | -138 | |||
Outlays | 1,089 | 1,181 | 93 | |||
Surplus or Deficit (-) | 165 | -66 | -231 | |||
SOURCES: Department of the Treasury; CBO. | ||||||
The government recorded a deficit of $66 billion for the first seven
months of fiscal year 2002, CBO estimates--a net reversal of $231 billion
from the $165 billion surplus recorded for the same period last year. Receipts
were about $138 billion lower than last year's figure, and outlays were
about $93 billion higher.
RECEIPTS THROUGH APRIL (In billions of dollars) |
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October-April
|
Percentage Change |
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Major Source | FY2001 | FY2002 | ||||||
Individual Income | 659 | 536 | -18.7 | |||||
Corporate Income | 103 | 88 | -14.9 | |||||
Social Insurance | 404 | 409 | 1.3 | |||||
Other | 87 | 83 | -5.2 | |||||
Total | 1,254 | 1,115 | -11.0 | |||||
SOURCES: Department of the Treasury; CBO. | ||||||||
Total receipts through April of this fiscal year were 11 percent lower than in the same period last year. About half of that decline resulted from the weak collections of nonwithheld income and self-employment taxes in April. Although CBO had anticipated some of that weakness, the decline was almost $45 billion more than expected. Furthermore, refunds of individual income taxes were about $15 billion above CBO's previous estimate. Withholding of income and employment taxes and payments of corporate income taxes also fell short of expectations. As a result, total receipts through April were roughly $75 billion lower than CBO had projected in March.
It is not possible now to say whether the unexpected weakness in receipts will persist through the rest of the fiscal year. Additional refunds as the Internal Revenue Service finishes processing April tax returns may add to the shortfall. But the economy grew faster in the first quarter of calendar year 2002 than CBO projected in March, which could buttress receipts as the year progresses. But even if the situation improves later in the year, receipts in fiscal year 2002 will still be significantly lower than CBO projected in March.
The unexpected weakness in receipts largely reflects economic activity in 2001, although currently available data are not sufficient to indicate which types of income are responsible for the shortfall. CBO expects that the measures of wages and salaries for 2001 in the national income accounts will be revised downward substantially in July, consistent with lower-than-anticipated taxable income. Changes in the distribution of income may also be playing a role in the revenue decline.
Taxes paid on capital gains realizations are probably another important
factor underlying the weak receipts in April. In recent years, individuals'
capital gains have accounted for only about 5 percent of total tax receipts,
but they have represented a much larger share of nonwithheld receipts
in April. CBO cannot isolate the precise contribution of capital gains
taxes to April receipts because taxpayers do not pay taxes separately on
different types of income, and taxes on gains can be paid to the Treasury
through withholding, estimated payments, or final payments. However, mutual
funds, which in recent years have distributed roughly 10 percent of the
capital gains reported on tax returns, sharply reduced their distributions
in 2001. That decline is likely to have particularly affected final payments
in April. In addition, part of the unexpected revenue surge in the second
half of the 1990s resulted from capital gains, and it is likely that a
similar phenomenon played a role this April--in reverse.
OUTLAYS THROUGH APRIL (In billions of dollars) |
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October-April
|
Percentage Change
|
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Major Category | FY2001 | FY2002 | Actual | Adjusteda | |||||||
Defense--Military | 165 | 187 | 13.4 | 11.5 | |||||||
Social Security Benefits | 245 | 259 | 5.5 | 5.5 | |||||||
Medicare | 134 | 145 | 8.4 | 10.8 | |||||||
Medicaid | 74 | 85 | 14.6 | 14.6 | |||||||
Unemployment Insurance | 18 | 29 | 67.2 | 67.2 | |||||||
Other Programs and Activities | 322 | 371 | 15.1 | 13.5 | |||||||
Subtotal | 958 | 1,076 | 12.3 | 11.8 | |||||||
Net Interest on the Public Debt | 130 | 105 | -19.6 | -19.6 | |||||||
Total | 1,089 | 1,181 | 8.5 | 8.1 | |||||||
SOURCES: Department of the Treasury; CBO. | |||||||||||
a. Excludes the effects of payments that were shifted because of weekends, holidays, or legislative action. | |||||||||||
Outlays were 8.5 percent higher in the first seven months of fiscal
year 2002 than in the same period last year, CBO estimates. Adjusted for
shifts in the dates of certain payments, that growth rate was about 8.1
percent. CBO projects that for the entire fiscal year, spending will be
about 8 percent higher than in 2001. Although net interest on the public
debt has declined, other spending is growing at an annual rate of almost
12 percent.
NOTE: Unless otherwise indicated, the figures in this report include the Social Security trust funds and the Postal Service fund, which are
off-budget. Numbers may not add up to totals because of rounding.
Prepared by Kathleen Gramp, Chad Chirico, and Mark Booth. |