Monthly Budget Review for May 2016
The federal budget deficit was $408 billion for the first eight months of fiscal year 2016, CBO estimates—$41 billion more than the shortfall recorded during the same period last year.
Summary
The federal budget deficit was $408 billion for the first eight months of fiscal year 2016, the Congressional Budget Office estimates—$41 billion more than the shortfall recorded during the same period last year. Outlays were 3 percent higher than they were at this time last year, and receipts were 2 percent higher.
Total Receipts: Up by 2 Percent in the First Eight Months of Fiscal Year 2016
Receipts totaled $2,137 billion during the first eight months of fiscal year 2016, CBO estimates—$33 billion more than they did during the same period last year. The changes were as follows:
- Individual income taxes and payroll (social insurance) taxes together rose by $41 billion (or 2 percent).
- Amounts withheld from workers’ paychecks accounted for an increase of $61 billion (or 4 percent). Growth in wages and salaries probably explains that increase.
- Nonwithheld receipts declined by $4 billion (or 1 percent). That decline stemmed from two partially offsetting changes: a drop of $16 billion (or 5 percent), mostly in people’s final tax payments for 2015, during the tax-filing season from February through April; and an increase of $11 billion during the other months covered in this report.
- Income tax refunds increased by $13 billion (or 6 percent), reducing net receipts.
- Receipts from unemployment insurance taxes (one kind of payroll tax) fell by $2 billion.
- Corporate income taxes declined by $21 billion (or 11 percent). About half of the decline occurred between October and March, when firms paid taxes that were largely on their taxable profits in the 2015 tax year. The other half of the decline occurred in April and May, when most firms began paying taxes on their taxable profits in 2016. Part of the decline in receipts in the past two months probably stems from the enactment in December of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2016 (Public Law 114-113), which extended—retroactively and prospectively—tax rules that allow businesses with large amounts of investment to accelerate their deductions for that investment. Because of the timely enactment of that law, many businesses will make lower payments of estimated taxes in 2016 than they made in 2015, when the rules had temporarily expired.
- Other receipts rose by $13 billion, on net. Remittances from the Federal Reserve to the Treasury increased by $22 billion, largely because of the Fixing America’s Surface Transportation Act (P.L. 114-94), which required the Federal Reserve to remit most of its surplus account to the Treasury. The central bank remitted that additional amount, $19 billion, in late December. All other receipts decreased by $9 billion, on net.
Total Outlays: Up by 3 Percent in the First Eight Months of Fiscal Year 2016
At $2,545 billion, outlays for the first eight months of this fiscal year were $75 billion (or 3 percent) more than they were during the same period last year, CBO estimates. The largest increases were in the following categories:
- Spending for Social Security benefits rose by $20 billion (or 3 percent), reflecting typical growth in the number of beneficiaries and in the average payment.
- Outlays for net interest on the public debt increased by $17 billion (or 11 percent). Most of that increase resulted from differences in the rate of inflation. The principal of Treasury inflation-protected securities is adjusted to account for inflation using the change in the consumer price index for all urban consumers that was recorded two months earlier. That adjustment was negative in both 2015 and 2016—that is, it reduced outlays in both years—but the reduction in 2016 was smaller than the one in 2015.
- Medicare spending climbed by $16 billion (or 4 percent), partly because the payments made to prescription drug plans each autumn to account for unanticipated increases in spending in the preceding calendar year were larger in fiscal year 2016 than in fiscal year 2015. Without that change, Medicare outlays would have increased by $10 billion (or 3 percent).
- Outlays for Medicaid grew by $13 billion (or 6 percent), largely because of new enrollees added through expansions of coverage authorized by the Affordable Care Act.
- Spending by the Department of Veterans Affairs increased by $6 billion (or 6 percent), mostly because of increases in the number of veterans receiving disability payments and in the average amount of those payments.
Outlays in some areas of the budget declined:
- Outlays for the Department of Housing and Urban Development decreased by $12 billion, primarily because the department made downward revisions in April 2016, but upward revisions in April 2015, to the estimated net subsidy costs of loans and loan guarantees issued in prior years.
- Spending by the Department of Defense dropped by $6 billion (or 2 percent), mostly in the area of operation and maintenance.
For other programs and activities, spending increased or decreased by smaller amounts.
Estimated Deficit in May 2016: $53 Billion
The federal government incurred a deficit of $53 billion in May 2016, CBO estimates—$31 billion less than the deficit in May 2015. Because May 1 fell on a weekend this year, certain payments scheduled for that date were instead made in April. If not for that shift, the deficit in May 2016 would have totaled $94 billion, or $10 billion more than in May 2015.
CBO estimates that receipts totaled $223 billion in May 2016—$10 billion (or 5 percent) more than they did last May. Receipts from individual income taxes and payroll taxes combined rose by $17 billion (or 9 percent). That increase was largely explained by taxes withheld from workers’ paychecks, which were up by $16 billion (or 10 percent)—May 2016 had one more major payment day for withheld taxes than May 2015 did. All other receipts declined by $7 billion, on net.
Total spending was $276 billion in May 2016, CBO estimates—$20 billion less than in May 2015. If not for the shift in the timing of payments from May to April this year, outlays would have increased by $20 billion (or 7 percent). The following discussion reflects adjustments to account for that shift.
Among the largest changes in outlays were the following:
- Outlays increased by $12 billion because this May there were no payments to the Federal Communications Commission from auctions of licenses to use the electromagnetic spectrum. Because proceeds from those auctions are recorded in the budget as offsetting receipts (that is, as reductions in outlays), the decrease in payments resulted in higher outlays.
- Spending for the three largest entitlement programs—Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid—rose by a combined $5 billion (or 3 percent).
- Spending by the Department of Defense dropped by $3 billion (or 6 percent), mostly in the area of procurement.
For other programs and activities, spending increased or decreased by smaller amounts.
Actual Surplus in April 2016: $106 Billion
The Treasury reported a surplus of $106 billion for April—$3 billion less than CBO estimated, on the basis of the Daily Treasury Statements, in its Monthly Budget Review for April 2016.