AP/ January 11, 2013, 2:43 PM

Budget deficit set to hit $1 trillion for fifth straight year

Timothy Geithner's signature appears on a freshly printed $20 bill.

Timothy Geithner's signature appears on a freshly printed $20 bill. / Mark Wilson/Getty Images

WASHINGTON The U.S. annual budget deficit is on track to reach $1 trillion for a fifth straight year, though government revenue jumped last month as people paid some taxes early to avoid higher rates in 2013.

The Treasury Department said Friday that the federal deficit grew just $260 million in December. But for the first three months of the budget year, the deficit widened to $292 billion.

In December, tax revenue rose 12 percent to $270 billion. Spending fell 17 percent to nearly the same amount.

The budget year begins on Oct. 1. The size of the annual deficit will hinge, in part, on how Congress and the White House resolve a debate over raising the nation's borrowing limit. Republicans are demanding deep spending cuts in return for any increase.

The deficit, in simplest terms, is the amount of money the government has to borrow when revenues fall short of expenses. The monthly figures are volatile and can be affected by calendar quirks that shift payments from one month to another.

Much of the December gain in revenue occurred because some companies accelerated bonuses or other payments into 2012 to avoid the possibility of higher taxes in 2013.

And spending fell last month partly because the government provided $14 billion to the mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in December 2011, after they had lost hundreds of billions from defaulted mortgages in the housing bust. The government didn't make any such payments last month.

The White House and Congress agreed last week to raise taxes on the wealthiest 2 percent of Americans this year as part of a deal to avoid the fiscal cliff. That deal also allowed a Social Security tax cut to expire. But the groups also postponed for two months the implementation of spending cuts that were included in the cliff.

Those cuts are now scheduled to kick in at around the same time the borrowing limit will be reached. And funding authority for most government programs will expire at the end of March.

The government has run annual deficits for more than a decade, although President Barack Obama's presidency has coincided with four straight $1 trillion-plus deficits.

The deficit reached a record $1.41 trillion in budget year 2009, which began four months before Obama was inaugurated. That deficit was largely because of the worst recession since the Great Depression. Tax revenue plummeted, while the government spent more on stimulus programs.

The budget gaps in 2010 and 2011 were slightly lower than the 2009 deficit as a gradually strengthening economy generated more tax revenue.

President George W. Bush also ran annual deficits through most of his two terms in office after he won approval for broad tax cuts and launched wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The last time the government ran an annual surplus was in 2001.

© 2013 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
23 Comments Add a Comment
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167irishboy says:
Thanks George Bush Jr. for attacking a country that had nothing to do with 9/11 and didn't have weapons of mass destruction. Thanks George for giving China free trade with America that created a wave of tax paying industry to leave America for slave labor in China, if your competitor leaves you better too, or he'll run you out of business. Thanks for all the lost payroll taxes from all the industry that left too. Thanks for the tax dollars spent on all the unemployed people who lost jobs when their jobs were moved to China. Thanks George Bush Jr. for being the ONLY President in U.S. history to take America into a war and cut taxes at the same time. Thanks George for borrowing gobs of money from communist China to fund the war in Iraq. Thanks George Bush Jr. for giving billions of taxpayer dollars to your buddies at Bechtel and Haliburton in unbid government contracts to rebuild the country that you wiped out for no reason. The innocent people of Iraq that were caught in the crossfire want to thank you too George Bush Jr. Thanks for bailing out the banks for giving out unsecured loans to people who had bad credit. The banks got their money replaced at the expense of the taxpayers and they got to keep all the houses they foreclosed on too. You are the man George Bush Jr. You'll go down in history as possibly the worst President in U.S. history
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mginga replies:
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Hatin much? Jeez, he's been outta office for what..5 years now? And the debt has gone down?? no......up, up,up! The quicker you can admit that both parties are to blame, the quicker we can get down to the business of solving the problem, not pointing fingers...
debrablaine replies:
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Whoa-what you wrote blows me away for it's lack and skewing of the facts. Too bad you really don't want to be rational and know the truth becuase if you did, ou wouldn't be able to maintain your positions. Democrats played a huge part in all of the above. I know you won't do any fact-checking on your own, but just for the record, Congress voted for both wars and George Bush was on the other side of the financing nonsense that brought the housing market to its knees. Barney Frank and Chris Dodd own that debacle, but that makes no difference to the likes of you. Guess you gotta keep blaming him in order to rationalize the damage the current president is doing to this country.
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hypnotoad72 says:
My recommendation: Obama should go around congress if they won't work together.

Look at congress' voting record and do the opposite.

Veto or do what it takes. The bought and paid-for congress will continue to line corporate pockets with taxpayers' money.

oh, wait, if Obama went around congress, his detractors would all whine "commie fascist dictator", even though they're whining about his doing nothing, and while ignoring congress decides on the details of the bills that get signed...
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TimeToRetire says:
It's that damn Bush guy again.
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hypnotoad72 says:
More job cuts means less revenue to get, so why congress won't be bothered to eliminate all corporate subsidy, especially to those that offshore jobs...

And if Obama went around congress, the same anti-Obama people right now would scream their usual cry of "fascist" or whatever, because that is what they have done in the past.
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TimeToRetire replies:
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Looks like we have no leader, doesn't it? Total chaos.
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askagain says:
My wife asked me why I was depressed at lunch. Then I remembered the $10,000 check for my quarterly Federal income taxes and the $3,000 check for my quarterly state income taxes that I mailed on my way to work. Then I thought about the potholes on my street which the county doesn't have enough money to fix after paying gasoline taxes on every $50 fill-up and $5,400 in property taxes for the year. Thinking about how I could be investing much of those taxes in my own future got me very depressed.
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TimeToRetire replies:
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Same here. My estmated income tax to the IRS on January 15 is $10,100 which is just about the time my $7,500 health insurance bill and my property tax of $2,300 are due.
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Initiator-US says:
Do not blame our freely elected President for this, or else you are being hoodwinked! Don't make the fatal mistake of letting your TV Show tell you how to think.

Our present Monetary Policy, as set these days and for the past century by the Federal Reserve System, effectively requires our overall public and private debt to grow on average of about 9% each year.

With that in mind, a "mere" $1 Trillion Federal Deficit is actually an improvement on that (i.e., only about a 6% growth in the National Debt portion of our overall debt, which is a little over four times that), but at what cost?

We are fighting that trend these days by raising taxes while lowering government services at the national, state and local levels, raising health insurance and health care costs while limiting the provision of actual medical services, etc. We can all see this with our own eyes, so it is foolish to blame the guy we just freely elected to a second term to be our President when there is this much more clear and accurate explanation, which allows one to think rather than just get mad, scared or both.

We are not at all powerless, but we have to pay attention and make the right moves, and make them right now!

Show a little respect, and read on for the rest of the story, and a simple yet astonishing idea on how to firmly and effectively clean up this nasty financial mess, and do that while we support our President, rather than upsetting everyone in our space by cantankerously whining, unless you care more about being right in proving your past words, perhaps learned from some TV Show, rather than hoping to fulfill the best interests of all whom you love.

Consider this easy to express idea: End all income, sales, and property taxes and deficit borrowing currently funding all levels of government, and in their place simply retain 70% of the interest paid on loans originated out of "thin air" by Federal Reserve System Shareholder Banks, money that does not even exist until loaned and is backed only by the Trust of our People (i.e., in the most real way possible, it is our own money to start with!), and with the total interest paid on these loans estimated to have been over $6 Trillion during 2012 alone, which is well over our federal budget.

How do you like them apples? Ditch the whole taxation system in one fell swoop, and pay ourselves most of the interest that we ourselves pay for lending ourselves our own money!

That makes a lot of sense to me, how about you?

If you are willing to give this idea a chance, check out the following link for more complete information, and also a link to a White House petition requesting that we do just that!

http://www.causes.com/causes/810177-unite-to-solve-our-financial-and-climate-crises
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Tank_Commander says:
A pox on both houses and parties! If they would stop sending our tax dollars overseas to support governments that spit on us, quit putting in pork for NASCAR, Rum, and Goldman-Sachs, pull out the 80,000 troops and close the 900 bases overseas, and charge these "too big to fail" banks just 1% for borrowing money from the US treasury, we'd have a balanced budget. But the idiots in DC still don't get it. That's why no one, I mean NO ONE trusts what any of these "public servants" say. As soon as the lips move, its a lie getting ready to form.
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gbull1986 replies:
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Amen, my friend. We need to cut a lot from both defense AND entitlements.
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askagain says:
Many people saw less spendable income in their paychecks this week. Be glad your taxes didn't go up. Oh, I forgot. Your taxes didn't go up. The tax holiday simply expired. To use the lingo of politicians, If your rates weren't increased, your taxes really didn't go up. Funny math can work both ways.
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Rocket_USA says:
I thought we just raised taxes on the rich to cover this??? Now what do we do?
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askagain replies:
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zmonkee - Get over it. The Middle Class aren't paying high enough taxes to cover the deficit Obama keeps increasing. If you want more services, be prepared to pay for them. The rich don't need those services so why should they pay more? If you want more, shell out your own money. And those dependent on government via the taxpayers. What can be said about them?
gbull1986 replies:
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It won't be long until the facade crumbles on their financial reform even to the Obama boot-lickers. Then they'll either be cursing him(fat chance), they'll complain that it is the fault of the house for putting forth cuts(even if it isn't enough cuts), and/or calling for the rich and/or middle class to have their taxes raised to cover the additional spending they want to do.
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Tater-salad says:
No big deal... press out a half dozen or so trillion dollar coins and were back in black!!!
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