Treasury Runs Second Largest July Deficit of All Time

SchiffGold US Debt Budget Deficit

A fall in Individual Taxes is very concerning

Exploring Finance https://exploringfinance.github.io/
08-12-2022

This article first appeared on SchiffGold.

The Federal Government ran a $211B deficit in July. Except for February, this was the largest deficit since last July when the Treasury ran a deficit of $302B.

Figure 1: Monthly Federal Budget

Looking historically, this is the second largest July deficit ever recorded behind last July. In July 2018 and 2019, the last normal years before Covid, the Treasury ran a deficit of $76B and $120B respectively. This July was nearly three times larger than July 2018.

Figure 2: Historical Deficit/Surplus for July

The historical average for July is $118B, which makes this July 79% above average.

Figure 3: Current vs Historical

The Sankey diagram below shows the distribution of spending and revenue. The Deficit represented 44% of spending in the most recent month.

Figure 4: Monthly Federal Budget Sankey

The monthly figure was significantly larger than the TTM deficit which only represented 16.55% of total spending, or $958B.

Figure 5: TTM Federal Budget Sankey

Total revenue was the smallest since August of last year. This was due to a big fall in Individual Taxes and a drop in Corporate Taxes which is much more volatile month to month.

The drop in Individual Taxes is something to note. In recent months, Individual taxes have been way above normal. The surge in revenues has helped offset much larger expenditures and help contain the deficit. The Treasury does not provide detail on revenue beyond the high-level categories, so it’s impossible to know the detailed source.

A recent report by the CBO highlighted the government provisions that drove the revenue surge along with deferred tax payments and the growing stock market. The surge was not expected to last and may have already come to an end.

Figure 6: Monthly Receipts

Total Expenses for July was lower than four of the last five months. This was mainly due to a fall of Income Security.

Figure 7: Monthly Outlays

Perhaps the most important expense to take note of is Interest Expense. As explained in the debt analysis, interest costs have been soaring lately. Last July, TTM interest expense was $351B. That figure now stands at $445B or 26.7% higher.

Even more discouraging is that this barely includes the combined 150bps rate hikes in June and July. As the higher rates start to roll into the debt, interest costs will only increase. This will become a major headwind for the Treasury as annual interest cost looks set to exceed $500B before in short order.

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

Receipts

Total

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 and is only being somewhat supported by a major surge in tax revenues.

While the deficit has fallen in response, it’s not falling far or fast enough to make a difference.

Figure 9: Trailing 12 Months (TTM)

The next two charts zoom in on the recent periods to show the change when compared to pre-Covid. The current 12-month period is $1.4T bigger than pre-Covid levels of 2019. Individual Taxes make up the vast majority of the difference, with 2022 exceeding 2020 and 2019 by almost $1T.

Figure 10: Annual Federal Receipts

Unfortunately, the major windfall from this tax revenue surge is being consumed by massive spending. Income Security is the only category getting noticeably smaller.

Figure 11: Annual Federal Expenses

Due to the changing dynamics, TTM Deficit compared to GDP has returned to pre-Covid levels of 3.9%, the lowest value since October 2018.

Note: GDP Axis is set to log scale

Figure 12: TTM vs GDP

Finally, to compare the calendar year with previous calendar years, the plot below shows the YTD figures through July. Looking at just the annual calendar, this would be the smallest YTD deficit since July 2016.

Figure 13: Year to Date

Wrapping Up

The Federal government continues to spend far more money than it receives in taxes. Despite record high individual taxes, the government has not been able to capitalize and continues to run massive deficits.

The Fed is currently working against the Treasury. By raising rates “aggressively”, the Fed is exerting a lot of pressure on the Federal Budget. In the last year, the increased interest cost has added almost $100B to annual expenses. This is a TTM basis which means the recent rate hiked have not yet been felt.

What happens when the Fed has to keep rates elevated for an extended period? This will trickle through the entire debt and continue raising the cost to borrow. The government has just added more spending with the passage of the new “Inflation Reduction Act”. This spending will have to be financed as well.

The Fed is in a box, unable to raise rates high enough to really combat inflation. Instead, they are praying and hoping inflation comes down on its own. This morning did show a let up in the CPI, but that was almost entirely driven by the drop in Energy. All other prices are still rising. As the Fed continues to tighten, the Treasury will feel the pain. Eventually the Fed will have to pivot or risk sending the Treasury into a debt spiral. When the Fed pivots, investors will flee to the safety of gold and silver. In a few years, current prices will look like an incredible bargain.


Data Source: Monthly Treasury Statement

Data Updated: Monthly on eighth business day

Last Updated: Period ending Jul 2022

US Debt interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/USDebt/