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The 2023 Deficit Is Projected To Total $1.5 Trillion. Here’s Why It Could Be Even Higher

Last Updated June 20, 2023

Due to a structural imbalance between revenues and spending, the federal government continues to run large and growing budget deficits. For 2023, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated in May that the federal budget deficit will total $1.5 trillion — about $160 billion larger than in 2022. The increase in the deficit this year is mainly driven by higher interest costs, continued growth in spending on Social Security and Medicare, and lower individual income tax receipts. However, this year’s deficit may turn out to be even larger because individual income tax revenues in April were lower than CBO expected, but not accounted for in their latest projections.

Here is a closer look at the drivers of the growing gap between spending and revenues in 2023.

Spending in Many Areas Will Be Higher in 2023

According to CBO, federal outlays in 2023 will total $6.4 trillion, $81 billion larger than last year. As a percent of gross domestic product (GDP), this year’s outlays will equal 24 percent of GDP, compared to 25 percent of GDP in 2022. The growth in the dollar amount results from a net increase in spending on a number of programs, as well as from higher interest costs. Some of the largest increases include:

The deficit of $1.4 trillion for 2022 included $379 billion related to the student loan forgiveness announced by the Biden Administration in August 2022. That plan, if implemented (it is currently under review at the Supreme Court), would reduce collections of principal and interest payments from borrowers in the future; the cost recorded last year represents the estimated present value of the total reduction in future collections of loan payments.

Excluding the student loan forgiveness plan, federal spending will increase by $461 billion in 2023.

Offsetting other increases, spending in certain areas is expected to fall in 2023, as a number of temporary provisions enacted in response to COVID-19 end. CBO anticipates that outlays for refundable tax credits will decline by $145 billion, to $107 billion in 2023, while federal funding provided to state, local, and tribal governments under the Coronavirus Relief Fund will fall from $106 billion in 2022 to $6 billion in 2023.

Individual Income Tax Revenues Will Be Lower This Year, but Other Revenue Sources Will Grow

Revenues in 2023 are projected to total $4.8 trillion, or 18.4 percent of GDP. That amount is $83 billion smaller than the $4.9 trillion, or 19.6 percent of GDP, recorded for 2022. The decrease in revenues primarily stems from lower income tax receipts, while receipts from other sources are expected to increase slightly. The largest changes in revenues include:

  • Individual Income Taxes: According to CBO’s projections in May, individual income tax receipts are expected to fall by 4 percent — from $2.6 trillion, or 10.5 percent of GDP, in 2022 to $2.5 trillion in 2023, or 9.6 percent of GDP. Revenues from individual income taxes were relatively high in 2022 because the government collected certain taxes that were deferred during the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition, high capital gains realizations and the spike in inflation likely contributed to a boost in revenues last year. However, CBO’s recent projections do not account for lower-than-expected collections of individual income tax receipts this April. Total collections of individual income taxes for 2023 could be well below the amount in CBO’s report.
  • Payroll Taxes: Revenues from payroll taxes, which mostly fund Social Security and Medicare, are projected to rise 5 percent, from $1.5 trillion (5.9 percent of GDP) in 2022 to $1.6 trillion (6.0 percent of GDP) in 2023. The projected increase in payroll tax receipts is mainly due to an expected rise in workers’ earnings as a share of GDP.
  • Corporate Income Taxes : CBO estimates that receipts from corporate income taxes in 2023 will total $475 billion, or 1.8 percent of GDP; that would be an 12 percent increase from the $425 billion (1.7 percent of GDP) recorded for last year. The increase mainly stems from certain provisions under the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act as well as the 2022 reconciliation act.
  • Other Sources: Other sources of revenues — including estate and gift taxes, excise taxes, and customs duties — are projected to total $252 billion (1.0 percent of GDP) in 2023, which is 29 percent smaller than the $357 billion (1.4 percent of GDP) collected in 2022.
Federal revenues will decrease by $83 billion in 2023 mainly due to lower individual income tax receipts

Conclusion

According to CBO, this year’s deficit will be about $160 billion larger than the deficit recorded for last year. Excluding student loan forgiveness, the deficit would be even higher. And if revenues for 2023 turn out to be lower than currently projected, this year’s deficit will grow noticeably larger. Any single year’s deficit is just a snapshot in time, but the trend of deficits rising annually, fueled by a structural mismatch of spending and revenues, is a clear indication that lawmakers must take action in order to establish a sustainable fiscal path for the nation.

 

Image credit: Photo by Chip Somodevilla /Getty Images

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