Budget Deficit: Is The Surge In Tax Revenues Over?

The Federal Government ran a deficit of $249B in November. This is the highest monthly deficit since July 2021 if you ignore the one-time student loan forgiveness-driven deficit in September.

Note: it’s possible the Supreme Court could strike down the student loan forgiveness program

One of the biggest drivers of the expanding deficit is a fall in Individual Income Taxes. The surge in tax revenue had been a huge windfall for the government over the last two years, but that appears to be fading.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 1 Monthly Federal Budget

Looking historically at November shows that this is the largest November deficit ever recorded! It has even exceeded the 2020 and 2021 Covid deficits.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 2 Historical Deficit/Surplus for November

For the decade before Covid, November averaged a deficit of -$145B, which makes Nov 2022 more than 70% larger than the average November deficit.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 3 Current vs Historical

The Sankey diagram below shows the distribution of spending and revenue. The Deficit represented nearly 50% of total spending! Extrapolating November out would mean a deficit of almost $3T!

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 4 Monthly Federal Budget Sankey

Looking at the TTM, the November Deficit was nearly twice the size of the Deficit over the last 12 months on a relative basis. Keep in mind, the TTM Deficit was still a whopping $1.35T or 21.7% of total spending.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 5 TTM Federal Budget Sankey

Total revenue fell for the second month in a row. The main driver was a fall in tax revenue from Corporate taxes and Individual income taxes. In fact, Individual Tax revenue fell to the lowest amount since November 2020.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 6 Monthly Receipts

Total Expenses were in-line with where it has been over the past 18 months, so there was no big spending that can be attributed to the surge… this is definitely from the revenue side.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 7 Monthly Outlays

One expense to keep an eye on though is the Net Interest Expense. As covered in the debt analysis, Net Interest costs have been exploding upwards.

TTM's Net Interest Expense has just passed $500B for the first time ever. This is up an incredible 62% since April 2021. Unfortunately for the Treasury, this surge is showing no signs of abating anytime soon without a massive pivot from the Fed.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 8 TTM Interest Expense

The table below goes deeper into the numbers of each category. The key takeaways from the charts and table:

Outlays

    • YoY all but two expenses increased
        • Only National Defense and Income Security saw a fall in costs
        • Net Interest and Education are both up over 50%!
    • On a TTM basis, only Income Security and Other (Stimulus Checks) saw decreases

Receipts

    • Only Social Security saw an MoM increase
    • Compared to the average over 12 months, every single revenue source has fallen
    • On a TTM basis, nearly every revenue category is still increasing
        • Individual Income Taxes is up 67% from Nov 2020 TTM
        • As mentioned, current months suggest the tax surge is slowing

Total

    • The Total TTM Deficit was still $1.35T despite falling 50% since 2021 when the Covid stimulus was still driving the deficits higher
    • Receipts were up 18% on a TTM basis vs a fall in spending by 8.7%

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 9 US Budget Detail
 

Historical Perspective

Zooming out and looking over the history of the budget back to 1980 shows a complete picture. It shows how a new level of spending has been reached that is being supported by a major surge in tax revenues. The blue bars on the far right show that the surge has definitely plateaued.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 10 Trailing 12 Months (TTM)

The next two charts zoom in on the recent periods to show the change when compared to pre-Covid.

As shown below, total Receipts have surged higher in recent years. The current 12-month period is $1.52T bigger than 2020. Individual Taxes make up the vast majority of the difference, with 2022 exceeding pre-Covid 2019 by $900B.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 11 Annual Federal Receipts

Despite no stimulus spending over the last 12 months (except for the Student Loan Forgiveness), spending is almost $2T higher than in 2019.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 12 Annual Federal Expenses

Despite massive expenditures driving huge deficits, the Deficit is down YoY as mentioned above. This has brought the TTM Deficit compared to GDP down to pre-Covid levels of 5.3%.

Note: GDP Axis is set to log scale

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 13 TTM vs GDP

Finally, to compare the calendar year with previous calendar years (not fiscal budget years), the plot below shows the YTD numbers historically. The current year’s deficit sits only behind 2009, 2020, and 2021.

(Click on image to enlarge)

Figure: 14 Year to Date
 

Wrapping Up

The Treasury is hitting a perfect storm of bad outcomes right now:

    • Surging interest rates are creating a huge increase in Net Interest Expense
    • The ongoing recession has taken a major bite out of tax revenues
    • Current spending has reached a new level that now exceeds $6T

Given the current dynamics, it’s not impossible that the Federal Government actually runs a deficit that exceeds the Covid deficits in the near future. Who is going to absorb all the new debt that has to be issued?

As the recession deepens, things are only going to get worse for the Treasury and the economy. The Fed has its final meeting of the year this week. No doubt they will try and toe the line of being dovish but sounding hawkish. It won’t be enough though.

The economy is teetering and needs Fed easy money to avoid a complete meltdown. The Fed will talk tough up until the moment things fall apart and then they will pivot fast and hard. The US Treasury will not be where things break, it will happen somewhere else first. Given the Treasury only has about 9 months before really spiraling, expect a major event in the economy somewhere in the next 3-6 months (or sooner).

When things break and the Fed pivots, gold, and silver are going to take off. That’s why physical supplies are disappearing at record rates. Get yours while you still can!


Data Source: Monthly Treasury Statement


More By This Author:

Producer Prices Rise More Than Expected In November
American Consumer Debt Continues Its Relentless Climb
Trade Deficit Grows For Second Straight Month As Dollar Weakens

How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Or Sign in with