While it is unclear if the recent increase in government spending and the resulting increase in the budget deficit, has been a factor in the recent string of better than expected US economic data, at 2pm on Monday the US Treasury announced that in November, the government’s budget deficit rose to $136.7 billion, nearly double the $64.5 bilion deficit reported in the same month of 2015, which however was largely a function of a calendar quirk.
Not only was November total more than double the amount reported a year ago, but the $136.7 billion deficit, was also the highest going back all the way to February of 2016, when it jumped by $192.6 billion. February is traditionally the most spending-intensive month for the US government.
Why the spike? Two reasons: in November, total receipts were down about 2% from the same month a year earlier. Meanwhile, total federal outlays rose roughly 25% compared with November 2015, when some scheduled benefit payments had been recorded instead in October 2015 because Nov. 1 fell on a Sunday. However, even when adjusting for the “quirk”, the trend was concerning: the Treasury said that adjusting for that timing shift, spending rose about 6% last month from a year earlier and the monthly deficit widened by roughly 21% on the year.
This was the highest monthly outlay reported for the month of November in US Treasury history.
The calendar quirks continued: for the first two months of the 2017 fiscal year, the budget deficit totaled $180.84 billion, down about 10% from the $201.11 billion deficit in the same period a year earlier. However, because Oct. 1 fell on a Saturday this year, some federal payments for October were instead recorded in September, substantially reducing outlays in the current fiscal year; normalizing for the data would have shown a substantial increase in the US deficit in Fiscal 2017 compared to last year.
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