Being Emotionally Incontinent Does Not Help
Trump Rules Out Military Action to Seize Greenland
A GOP Senator's Stance on This Election Integrity Bill Is Quite the Gut...
Will Trump Invoke the Insurrection Act? He Gave His Answer Last Night.
LA Times Reported That ICE Busted Into Homes Without Warrants, Made Kids Cry....
Watch This Lefty Commentator Get Wrecked Over This Tweet About Palestinians and Hamas
Watch a Lib CNN Guest Walk Right Into a Trap Discussing the Ongoing...
NHS Nurse Wins Her Job Back After 'Misgendering' Male Patient
Check Out Justice Brown Jackson's Latest Judicial Word Salad
ICE Doesn’t Need Permission
Howard Lutnick Slams Globalization at the World Economic Forum
The Reality of the Middle East
Leftists Upset About Trump’s Second Term, but Not Biden’s Disastrous Reign
Maryland Proposes New Congressional Map to Cut Lone GOP Seat
Blood Is the Last Currency of Iran's Failing Theocracy
Tipsheet

Surprise! Last Year's Deficit Actually $5 Trillion

Since 2009, and since Senate Democrats last passed a budget, the Congressional Budget Office has calculated $1 trillion deficits each year with 2012 being no exception. But now, a new USA Today study shows that last year's budget deficit wasn't $1 trillion....it was actually $5 trillion.

Advertisement

The deficit was $5 trillion last year under those rules. The official number was $1.3 trillion. Liabilities for Social Security, Medicare and other retirement programs rose by $3.7 trillion in 2011, according to government actuaries, but the amount was not registered on the government's books.

It is well known by now that even if the government confiscated 100% of the wealth held by millionaires and billionaires in America, we still couldn't pay off the $15 trillion+ national debt. But the latest $5 trillion deficit number doesn't only impact millionaires and billionaires.

The typical American household would have paid nearly all of its income in taxes last year to balance the budget if the government used standard accounting rules to compute the deficit, a USA TODAY analysis finds.

Under those accounting practices, the government ran red ink last year equal to $42,054 per household — nearly four times the official number reported under unique rules set by Congress.

A U.S. household's median income is $49,445, the Census reports.

Advertisement

So how is it that the CBO was off by $4 trillion?

The big difference between the official deficit and standard accounting: Congress exempts itself from including the cost of promised retirement benefits. Yet companies, states and local governments must include retirement commitments in financial statements, as required by federal law and private boards that set accounting rules.

Math is hard when you're not adding all the numbers.....over to you Paul Ryan.





Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement