According to the U.S. Department of the Treasury the federal government ran a deficit of $431 billion in September 2022, the final month of FY2022. This deficit was the difference between $488 billion in revenues and $919 billion in spending. Receipts were up by $28 billion (6%), and outlays were up by $394 billion (63%) compared to September 2021. Timing shifts did move some payments to September that otherwise would have been paid in October (i.e., FY2023), contributing to the higher-than-expected deficit last month.

More significantly, the Biden Administration’s announcement of a continued repayment pause on and forgiveness of federal student loan payments caused September’s deficit to be much higher than forecasted. Since federal accounting rules require these changes to be a one-time charge to the government, estimated costs of $426 billion were recorded by the federal government in September. In fact, student loan forgiveness was the single largest contribution to increased federal spending – and the deficit – in September (and in FY2022 overall), accounting for $379 billion. Given the sizeable impact of these one-time policy changes, it is difficult to discern year-over-year major trends for the month of September.

आखरी अपडेट: 

क्या आप वाकई इस पृष्ठ को हटाना चाहते हैं?

क्या आप वाकई इस दस्तावेज़ को हटाना चाहते हैं?

पृष्ठ को हटाने में असमर्थ हैं क्योंकि इसमें निम्न स्थानों पर इसे संदर्भित करने वाले शॉर्टकट हैं:

    कृपया पहले इन शॉर्टकट को हटाएं, फिर पृष्ठ स्वयं हट जाएँगे।