U.S. Budget Gap Sets Record for Fiscal First Quarter
Written on January 15, 2009
The U.S. budget deficit soared to a record in the first quarter of the 2009 fiscal year, surpassing the shortfall for all of last year as the government used taxpayer money to shore up the financial system by purchasing stakes in banks.
The deficit swelled to $485.2 billion in the first three months of the fiscal year that started Oct. 1, the Treasury said today in Washington. For all of 2008, the shortfall was $454.8 billion. The monthly budget picture also worsened, as the excess of spending over revenue widened to $83.6 billion in December, compared with a $48.3 billion surplus a year earlier.
President-elect Barack Obama will take over Jan. 20 facing the biggest budget deficit as a percentage of U.S. gross domestic product other than during the Civil War and the two World Wars, his nominee to head the Office of Management and Budget said today cheap payday loans.
“We are inheriting a daunting fiscal position,” Peter Orszag, nominated by Obama to be the White House budget director, told the Senate Budget Committee. The budget shortfall in the 12-month period to Sept. 30 will likely exceed $1 trillion “even without steps to mitigate the economic downturn,” he said.
Government revenue fell 14.1 percent last month, while spending soared 40.5 percent compared with a year earlier.
The December shortfall was forecast to widen to $83 billion, according to the median of 35 estimates in a Bloomberg News survey of economists, the same as the Congressional Budget Office’s prediction on Jan. 9.
Filed in: economics.