Looking Back at Fiscal 2009 14 comments
October 11, 2009
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A few days ago, CBO released its latest snapshot on the federal budget, documenting the remarkable challenges of fiscal 2009, which ended on September 30. The key phrase in the report is “in over 50 years” as in:
- At $1.4 trillion, the budget deficit was 9.9% of gross domestic product, the largest, relative to the economy, in over 50 years.
- At $3.5 trillion, spending was almost 25% of GDP, the largest, relative to the economy, in over 50 years.
- At $2.1 trillion, tax revenues were about 15% of GDP, the lowest, relative to the economy, in over 50 years. (I get the sense that this point is less well-known than the other two.)
Other highlights from the report:
- As expected, CBO estimates that the 2009 deficit was about $1.4 trillion, below the $1.58 trillion estimate in the Administration’s August budget forecasts. Assuming CBO is right, that means that next week, when the official Treasury figures are released, the Administration will be able to put a good news spin on the results, saying the deficit was less than it anticipated. (As noted in an earlier post, CBO’s summer update, released on the same day as the Administration’s, predicted a $1.4 trillion full-year deficit, when calculated on an apples-to-apples basis. The report was a bit complicated to interpret, however, because its headline deficit estimate used different accounting for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which resulted in a higher figure of about $1.6 trillion.)
- As shown in the following chart, the deficit exploded in 2009 for three main reasons:

- Tax revenues fell off a cliff (down 17% or $419 billion relative to fiscal 2008). The sharpest declines were in corporate income taxes (down 54%) and individual income taxes (down 20%). The declines reflect both the weak economy and, to a lesser extent, efforts to provide stimulus.
- The financial rescue required $245 billion in new spending. TARP accounted for $154 billion, while cash injections into Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac accounted for $91 billion.
- Other spending increased (up 13% or $347 billion relative to last year). These increases were spread across many spending programs, but were most pronounced for unemployment insurance (up 156%) and Medicaid (up 25%).
In addition:
- Interest payments provided a sliver of good news. Interest payments fell by 23% (or $61 billion) thanks to low interest rates and small inflation adjustments on indexed bonds.
- CBO estimates that the budget impact of the stimulus totaled about $200 billion by the end of September.
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This article has 14 comments:
I suppose, on the bright side of the picture, I can say that at least we haven't had TARP II yet.
seekingalpha.com/artic...
On Oct 11 09:25 AM Pat C wrote:
> To what extent in actual dollars is the 20% personal income tax decline
> compared to the 54% for corporate? Also does the government report
> somewhere a comparison of FICA (Social Security) contributions?
> It would seem to me that comparing FICA contributions would be an
> excellent indicator of the employment situation rather than the BLS
> estimates. Personal income tax has been subject to alot of manipulation
> so I don't think it would be a good measurement, but FICA should
> be.
www.irs.gov/pub/irs-so...
Excellent point about using FICA data to determine employment, by the way. Monthly data would be THE defining number. Much more accurate than some survey of a small percentage of the population.
On Oct 11 09:25 AM Pat C wrote:
> To what extent in actual dollars is the 20% personal income tax decline
> compared to the 54% for corporate? Also does the government report
> somewhere a comparison of FICA (Social Security) contributions? It
> would seem to me that comparing FICA contributions would be an excellent
> indicator of the employment situation rather than the BLS estimates.
> Personal income tax has been subject to alot of manipulation so I
> don't think it would be a good measurement, but FICA should be.
The core difficulty is the elected representatives of both parties want to see their influence, contacts and wealth increase, so they pander to the lobbyists of large corporations, the wealthy and others of influence and, in doing so, pass laws that skew the income distribution, increase the size of the federal government and run deficits like they were eating candy. We need to put a stop to it, but there is a problem. Specifically, we need effective campaign financing reform with teeth, much tighter control over lobbying and lobbyists and perhaps even some adjustments to the concept of Freedom of Speech and the Right of Petition in the context of efforts to hustle state and federal governments for laws, regulations and benefits that are contrary to the public interest but help the wealthy at the expense of the working middle classes.
The problem, of course, is that these changes in the law would have to be passed by those very same representatives who do not want to pass them because they comprise on their relationships with the wealthy, their own prospects for personal wealth and their political power bases which they want to enlarge -- the real reason our federal government continues to expand and grow beyond its optimal size. Both parties are guilty here. It is a real catch 22.
It looks unsustainable. When is the second dip going to happen?
Consider the Obamacare bill - another thousand plus page monstrosity that will cost the economy tens to hundreds of billions for simple compliance and that will open the door to massive amounts of additional fraud and abuse.
The true problem is that members of Congress derive personal power and "contributions" by making the law massively complex and obscure - as watching Barney Frank et al these days makes this so totally obvious.
Bush proposed a 2009 budget; it was dead on arrival (DOA) in a Dem congress (OH! now I remember). The budget that was finally passed was the one with all the earmarks (OH, Yeh?).
How convienient to forget!!!!!!!
On Obama's watch; nice try.............
On Oct 12 09:52 AM jdl51 wrote:
> This is the final Bush budget. All of the deficit, aside from the
> $200 billion stimulus spending, are what's left of the Bush administration
> "fiscal responsibility". In other words, Obama is not responsible
> for this deficit and it's increased government spending. And Bush's
> proposed budget for 2009/2010 had a projected deficit of $1.4 trillion.
> So before Obama even set foot in the WH, these deficits were already
> baked in the cake. Not bad considering Bush started with a budget
> in surplus and projected surpluses as far as the eye could see. He
> averaged around $750 billion a year in deficits with nothing to show
> for it except two wars and a financial meltdown that almost destroyed
> our economy. Now let's see if the public will remember how well the
> republicans did last time they were in power and vote for them again
> next year.
----------------------...
Wow! talk about not being able to remember history!! It was a year ago when the Dem majority split the 2009 budget in half with "the Bush budget" covering the 6 months to end of March when the second half Democrat/Obama budget could run the deficit up faster than Bush ever had. If you are going to write here, at least TRY to get your facts straight. BTW, I think that Bush and the GOP congress were complete fiscal failures as are Obama and the Dems. WE ARE TOAST!
Bush's 2009-2010 budget that he proposed, before Congress even looked at it, had a $1.2 trillion deficit, not including Iraq and Afghanistan, which he never included in his budgets since the wars started. So before Democrats touched it, he projected a $1.2 trillion/$1.4 trillion for this coming fiscal year which started a couple of weeks ago. Bush ran up close to $7 trillion in debt. Started at around $5 trillion and ended up close to $12 trillion, much of that when republicans had complete control of Congress. Of course, republicans have been saying for the past 30 years that deficits don't matter, except when a democrat is in charge. No one gave the dems credit when they fixed the budget mess left behind by Reagan and Bush I. They'll have to fix it again because the republicans are incapable of ever balancing a budget.
Your comments are dead on...This is the first time I have seen the facts enumerated by someone... so accurately. Limbaugh and the negative Republicans who ignore these facts..are a national embaressment, bordering on treason. They want the current administration to fail so badly.. that they care not that this Country may fail as well. How I hope the electorate are not so gullible as to re-elect any of these turncoats.
On Oct 12 12:22 PM shootpar2001 wrote:
> WRONG!!!!!!!!
> Bush proposed a 2009 budget; it was dead on arrival (seekingalpha.com/symbo...)
> in a Dem congress (OH! now I remember). The budget that was finally
> passed was the one with all the earmarks (OH, Yeh?).
> How convienient to forget!!!!!!!
> On Obama's watch; nice try.............