Fiscal year 2022 closes with another record in revenue
This article first appeared on SchiffGold.
The Federal Government ran a deficit of $88B in October which is down significantly from the deficit last month that was a record for September due to the student loan forgiveness program. The deficit is also down compared to last October which was -$165B.
Looking historically at the month of October shows that this is actually the smallest October deficit since 2017. This is mainly due to revenues having increased 35% since 2017 and is even up 12% just since last October.
For the decade prior to Covid, this October was 18.5% below the average October of $108B.
The Sankey diagram below shows the distribution of spending and revenue. The Deficit represented 21% of total spending. More importantly, Net Interest represented 10.6% of total expenditures, which is up from only 6.6% last October.
Looking at the TTM, the Deficit was nearly the same relative size of October at 20.8% of total expenditures (vs 21.6%). Net Interest relative to all expenditures was 7.8%, up from only 5.2% a year ago. This represents a relative increase of 50% in one year!
Total revenue fell MoM, as Corporate Taxes dropped. Corporate Tax revenue is fairly volatile MoM as shown below.
Total Expenses fell quite a bit this month, even compared to August and other months in 2022. October was the smallest expenditure month since January, and the second smallest going back to November 2020.
Ignoring the September Education expense, the fall in Spending this month was primarily driven by a drop in Medicare (-$103B in September vs -$18B this month) and Veterans Benefits (-$35B to -$11B).
As mentioned above, the real issue facing the Federal Government right now is the massive increase in Interest Expense. The chart below shows the TTM total Net Interest expense. TTM expenses increased $12B since last month and are up an incredible $139B since last October or 40%.
The table below goes deeper into the numbers of each category. The key takeaways from the charts and table:
Outlays
Receipts
Total
Monthly and Average Monthly Comparison | Trailing Twelve Month (TTM) Comparison | |||||||||
Category | Oct 2022 | Oct 2021 | TTM Avg Monthly | YoY % Change | TTM % Change | TTM Ending | TTM Ending | TTM Ending | TTM | TTM |
Outlay | ||||||||||
Social Security | -104.4 | -96.3 | -102.2 | 8.4% | 2.2% | -1,226.8 | -1,138.0 | -1,099.8 | 7.8% | 11.5% |
National Defense | -76.5 | -68.7 | -64.5 | 11.3% | 18.6% | -774.4 | -743.9 | -734.5 | 4.1% | 5.4% |
Health | -70.5 | -69.6 | -76.3 | 1.3% | -7.6% | -915.4 | -803.3 | -760.0 | 14.0% | 20.4% |
Net Interest | -43.0 | -29.9 | -40.7 | 43.8% | 5.7% | -488.2 | -349.7 | -344.6 | 39.6% | 41.7% |
Income Security | -42.7 | -70.2 | -69.8 | -39.1% | -38.8% | -838.0 | -1,646.3 | -1,304.3 | -49.1% | -35.8% |
Other | -21.1 | -20.6 | -27.1 | 2.1% | -22.4% | -325.6 | -880.1 | -1,166.7 | -63.0% | -72.1% |
Medicare | -18.7 | -53.9 | -60.0 | -65.3% | -68.8% | -719.9 | -654.1 | -816.5 | 10.1% | -11.8% |
Education & Social Services | -18.0 | -17.7 | -56.4 | 1.6% | -68.1% | -676.9 | -303.7 | -236.3 | 122.9% | 186.4% |
Veterans Benefits and Services | -11.5 | -22.0 | -22.0 | -48.0% | -47.9% | -263.8 | -226.4 | -231.0 | 16.6% | 14.2% |
Receipt | ||||||||||
Miscellaneous Receipts | 3.8 | 8.9 | 10.9 | -57.4% | -65.1% | 130.4 | 131.3 | 120.2 | -0.7% | 8.5% |
Customs Duties | 8.2 | 7.8 | 8.4 | 5.1% | -2.3% | 100.3 | 81.6 | 66.9 | 22.9% | 49.8% |
Other | 12.9 | 11.0 | 16.2 | 16.8% | -20.6% | 194.9 | 166.4 | 151.1 | 17.2% | 29.0% |
Corporation Income Taxes | 14.6 | 15.7 | 35.3 | -6.9% | -58.6% | 423.8 | 378.4 | 214.4 | 12.0% | 97.6% |
Social Security Taxes | 103.7 | 96.6 | 118.2 | 7.4% | -12.2% | 1,417.9 | 1,255.0 | 1,268.4 | 13.0% | 11.8% |
Individual Income Taxes | 175.3 | 143.9 | 222.0 | 21.8% | -21.0% | 2,663.6 | 2,079.5 | 1,591.0 | 28.1% | 67.4% |
Total | ||||||||||
Outlay | -406.4 | -449.0 | -519.1 | -9.5% | -21.7% | -6,229.0 | -6,745.4 | -6,693.8 | -7.7% | -6.9% |
Receipt | 318.6 | 283.9 | 410.9 | 12.2% | -22.5% | 4,930.8 | 4,092.2 | 3,412.1 | 20.5% | 44.5% |
Total | -87.8 | -165.1 | -108.2 | -46.8% | -18.8% | -1,298.2 | -2,653.2 | -3,281.7 | -51.1% | -60.4% |
Data as of: Oct 2022. % Changes are capped at 1,000%. |
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 that is being supported by a major surge in tax revenues. What happens if these revenues evaporate in a recessionary environment?
The next two charts zoom in on the recent periods to show the change when compared to pre-Covid.
As shown below, total Receipts have surged higher in recent years. The current 12-month period is $1.52T bigger than 2020. Individual Taxes make up the vast majority of the difference, with 2022 exceeding 2020 and 2019 by more than $1T.
Unfortunately, the major windfall from this tax revenue surge is being consumed by massive spending. The 2022 Spending was more than $2T larger than 2018 spending!
Despite massive expenditures driving huge deficits, the deficit is down YoY as mentioned above. This has brought the TTM Deficit compared to GDP down to pre-Covid levels of 5.1%.
Note: GDP Axis is set to log scale
Finally, to compare the calendar year with previous calendar years (not fiscal budget years), the plot below shows the YTD numbers historically. The current year deficit sits only behind 2009, 2020, and 2021.
The Treasury is hitting a perfect storm of bad outcomes right now. Tax Revenues have surged in recent years, but that windfall seems to be slowing or reversing as shown in the table above where Revenue is below the TTM average in every single category. This should be watched over the coming months as it could lead to huge deficits if the trend continues.
At the same time, the government has hit a new level of spending that is being made worse by surging costs on Net Interest. A deficit of $1.3T is massive! This has led to large increase in debt issuance, reaching $1.6T YTD!
If tax revenues start to fall due to the recession as spending increases, the Treasury will quickly find itself running deficits that exceed $2T again. This is completely unsustainable if interest rates remain high. This is why the Fed will pivot. The recent inflation report is being interpreted as soft enough to give the Fed cover to begin the pivot. When this goes from speculation to fact, expect gold and silver to see another surge. Just in the past week, gold has seen three $40+ moves. This is a preview of what will be seen when the Fed does pivot. Make no mistake, given the current Federal Budget, it has no other choice.
Data Source: Monthly Treasury Statement
Data Updated: Monthly on eighth business day
Last Updated: Period ending Oct 2022
US Debt interactive charts and graphs can always be found on the Exploring Finance dashboard: https://exploringfinance.shinyapps.io/USDebt/