The Trump administration kicked off fiscal 2021 with the biggest October deficit in history. But with the first of November falling on a weekend, some November spending got shifted into October, inflating that month’s deficit. Now that we have the November monthly Treasury Statement, we have a better sense of how big deficits are running in the new fiscal year.

In a word — really big.

The November deficit came in at $145.3 billion. Some people wanted to spin this as good news because it was lower than the November 2019 deficit at $208.8 billion. But you have to factor in those calendar effects. The best way to gauge the budget shortfall through the first two months of FY2021 is to compare it to the deficit through the first two months of fiscal 2020.

The total deficit so far in fiscal 2021 comes to $429.3 billion. That compares to $343.3 billion in October and November 2020. In other words, through the first two months of the new fiscal year, the deficit is running $85.7 billion ahead of last year.

To add a little more perspective, the U.S. government is nearly halfway to a $1 trillion deficit in just the first two months of the fiscal year. Before last year, the federal government had only run $1 trillion deficits four times – all during the Great Recession.

Spending over the last two months came in at a staggering $886.7 billion. That compares to $814 billion through the first two months of fiscal 2020 — an 8.9 percent increase. Meanwhile, receipts to the U.S. Treasury fell from $470.7 through the first two months of FY2020 to $457.3 billion in October and November of this year.

As of Dec. 9, the national debt stood at $27.41 trillion. According to the National Debt Clock, the debt-to-GDP ratio is 128.59 percent. Despite the lack of concern in the mainstream, debt has consequences. Studies have shown that a debt to GDP ratio of over 90 percent retards economic growth by about 30 percent. This throws cold water on the Republican mantra “we can grow ourselves out of the debt.”

Most people shrug off these massive deficits, reasoning that they are simply a product of the economic problems caused by the coronavirus. But the pandemic has papered over an ugly truth – the federal government was getting into near-record deficit territory before COVID-19 arrived on the scene.

In fiscal 2019, the Trump administration ran a $984 billion deficit. At the time, it was the fifth-largest deficit in history. The upward trajectory continued through the first two months of fiscal 2020, with the budget shortfall running 12 percent over 2019’s huge number.

And the current massive budget deficit doesn’t factor in any additional COVID-19 stimulus that Congress will pass in the coming year.

According to a CBO report, on the current trajectory, the size of the national debt will be nearly double the size of the US economy by 2050.

A lot of people claim massive deficits and ballooning debt don’t matter. After all, the US government has been borrowing money for decades and the doomsday predictions haven’t come to pass. But debt is neither free nor is it irrelevant. Borrowed money has to be paid back – either through taxation or inflation – which is nothing more than a hidden tax.

In fact, the Federal Reserve makes all of this borrowing and spending possible by backstopping the bond market and monetizing the debt. The central bank buys U.S. Treasuries on the open market with money created out of thin air (debt monetization). This creates artificial demand for bonds and keeps interest rates low. The Fed now owns a record 16.5 percent of all the outstanding U.S. public debt. In the last 12 months, the Fed has doubled its holdings of Treasuries, adding a staggering $2.4 trillion in U.S. government bonds to its balance sheet – most of that since March. The Fed has monetized the equivalent of almost all the debt the U.S. has issued in the last year. All of the money printed to buy all of this U.S. debt is, by definition, inflation. That means it is devaluing your money as a matter of policy.

You can try to paper over the surging deficits and ballooning debt by claiming it is “necessary” to fight the coronavirus. The excuse certainly creates good political cover for Trump and other free-spending politicians in both political parties. But you can’t paper over the economic consequences of over-spending and debt. There is no such thing as a free lunch – even if you own a money printing press.

Mike Maharrey

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