$404,155,000,000:
Taxes Set Record in First 2 Months of FY15—Deficit Still $179B
(CNSNews.com)
- The U.S. Treasury continued to rake in tax dollars at a record rate in
November as the federal government closed out the first two months of fiscal
2015 with $404,155,000,000 in total receipts, according to the Monthly Treasury
Statement released today.
In constant 2014 dollars, this is the first time federal revenues
have topped $400 billion in the first two months of the fiscal year.
Even with these record revenues, the Treasury ran a deficit of
$178.531 billion deficit in October and November as it spent $582.686 billion.
This continued to follow the trend seen in fiscal 2014, when the
Treasury brought in a record $3,020,809,000,000 in revenue, but spent
$3,504,145,000,000, and ended up running a deficit of $483,336,000,000.
In the first two months of this fiscal year, the Treasury spent
$1.44 for each $1.00 in tax receipts.
Given that there are 115,831,000 households in the United States,
according to the Census Bureau, the Treasury spent $5,030 per household in the
first two months of fiscal 2015.
The $178,531,000,000 deficit the Treasury ran in those two months
equaled $1,541 per household.
The biggest source for the record federal revenue during the
two-month period was the individual income tax. It brought in $192,619,000,000
in October and November. The second biggest source was “Social Insurance and
Retirement Receipts,” the taxes Americans pay for Social Security and Medicare.
These brought in $146,263,000,000.
Corporate income taxes brought in $12,810,000,000 over the two
months.
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