Talk About Platner’s Other Perversions and Creepiness; Leave His VA Stuff Out of...
Maine Führer: Graham Platner Wins Dem Primary
So Long, Nancy Mace
Platner Is No Nazi, but Hegseth on D-Day Is; We Get a Lesson...
When Leadership Loses Its Moral Compass
Our Informational World Is Getting Smaller
Kristen Welker Insults President Trump With 'No Evidence' Guff
An Obama-Era Border Crosser
More Money Won’t Fix Our Schools. Mississippi Data Proves It.
College Grads Hurt by H-1B Visas
Fight Night at 1600: The Outrage Industry Meets the Octagon
June Belongs to the Nuclear Family, Not LGBTQ Activists
Sometimes Justice Does Prevail
Karmelo Anthony Has Just Been Handed His Sentence
NJ Moves to Criminalize Interference With Abortion and 'Gender-Affirming Care' Procedures
OPINION

2013 Deficit Spending Nearly $5 Billion Per Day

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
2013 Deficit Spending Nearly $5 Billion Per Day

Just two months into FY 2013, the government has racked up nearly $300 billion of red ink – nearly $5 billion per day of deficit spending – a virtual guarantee of the fifth consecutive year of deficit spending in excess of a trillion dollars.  With the economy barely expanding, the federal government is spending 4 percent more than the FY 2012 level.  Spending on the big three entitlement programs is up by more than 8 percent over just last year.  Interest on the debt is up 5%. 

Advertisement

Following is an excerpt from The Hill:

The federal budget deficit has reached $292 billion just two months into fiscal 2013, the Congressional Budget Office estimated Friday.

That is a fast start for a fiscal year that CBO already predicted will have a deficit of more than $1 trillion — the fifth year in a row that has happened, all under President Obama.

The deficit was $172 billion in November, CBO estimates.

For October and November, the deficit is $57 billion more than the deficit for the first two months of fiscal 2012. The fiscal year for the federal government begins in October.

A large portion of this results from the shifts in payments due to the timing of weekends. If not for timing, the deficit for this year is actually $8 billion lower.

Despite all the battles between President Obama and Congress over the last two years on the budget, spending is 4 percent higher — or $22 billion — this year compared to 2012, even with timing shifts taken into account.

Advertisement

Social Security is up 8 percent, Medicare by 8 percent and Medicaid by 9 percent. Interest payments are up 5 percent.  Read more

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement