Ok, according to the Treasury Department, the federal deficit totaled $439 billion in FY 2015, that's how much we borrowed and spent that we didn't collect in revenue. Yet the actual debt numbers do not show that at all. Per treasurydirect.gov:
----------------------Debt held by public---------intergovernmental debt----------Total debt
09/30/2015-----13,123,847,198,347.81--------5,026,770,468,136.52--------18,150,617,666,484.33
----------------------Debt held by public---------intergovernmental debt----------Total debt
09/30/2016-----14,173,423,516,895.82------5,400,021,197,040.97---------19,573,444,713,936.79
So we actually increased the debt held by the public by $1.049 TRILLION and intergovernmental debt by $373.25 billion. The intergovernmental debt is 2/3 of what our total stated deficit is but the debt held by public really doesn't make sense. How did we add an additional trillion dollars to the actual debt that we owe other people but run a deficit that is well below half of that? Did we stick half a trillion dollars in a bank account or something so it's still sitting on the books. Also, why isn't intergovernmental debt included in the deficit numbers, it's still money that we have to pay back so why does borrowing it from ourselves not count? If we go by the treasury's numbers on how much we actually borrowed the deficit would be almost $1.4 trillion yet the same treasury claims the deficit was less than a third of that. Are there legitimate reasons that I am not seeing, is it accounting games to make the numbers look better than they are, hundreds of billions in limbo or something?
Someone please help me with the math and how those two numbers are so far off, thanks in advance.
A side note, I guess it is theoretically possible that at some point we will run a surplus and be able to pay back intergovernmental debt without borrowing from the public but that is frankly a pipe dream. That is especially true considering the very large increases we are seeing to Medicare/Medicaid spending which rose 9.3% in FY2015 to $1.4 trillion combined. Hypothetically if we continue to see 9.3% increase in spending on just those two budget items they will cost $2 trillion dollars in just 4 years, an increase to our budget of $600 billion dollars and the math just gets worse going forward from there.
Treasury direct link for fiscal year 2015 if anyone wants to check for themselves.
http://treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/s...tYear=2015&endMonth=09&endDay=30&endYear=2016
Disclaimer: Not a Trump or Hillary supporter.
----------------------Debt held by public---------intergovernmental debt----------Total debt
09/30/2015-----13,123,847,198,347.81--------5,026,770,468,136.52--------18,150,617,666,484.33
----------------------Debt held by public---------intergovernmental debt----------Total debt
09/30/2016-----14,173,423,516,895.82------5,400,021,197,040.97---------19,573,444,713,936.79
So we actually increased the debt held by the public by $1.049 TRILLION and intergovernmental debt by $373.25 billion. The intergovernmental debt is 2/3 of what our total stated deficit is but the debt held by public really doesn't make sense. How did we add an additional trillion dollars to the actual debt that we owe other people but run a deficit that is well below half of that? Did we stick half a trillion dollars in a bank account or something so it's still sitting on the books. Also, why isn't intergovernmental debt included in the deficit numbers, it's still money that we have to pay back so why does borrowing it from ourselves not count? If we go by the treasury's numbers on how much we actually borrowed the deficit would be almost $1.4 trillion yet the same treasury claims the deficit was less than a third of that. Are there legitimate reasons that I am not seeing, is it accounting games to make the numbers look better than they are, hundreds of billions in limbo or something?
Someone please help me with the math and how those two numbers are so far off, thanks in advance.
A side note, I guess it is theoretically possible that at some point we will run a surplus and be able to pay back intergovernmental debt without borrowing from the public but that is frankly a pipe dream. That is especially true considering the very large increases we are seeing to Medicare/Medicaid spending which rose 9.3% in FY2015 to $1.4 trillion combined. Hypothetically if we continue to see 9.3% increase in spending on just those two budget items they will cost $2 trillion dollars in just 4 years, an increase to our budget of $600 billion dollars and the math just gets worse going forward from there.
Treasury direct link for fiscal year 2015 if anyone wants to check for themselves.
http://treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/s...tYear=2015&endMonth=09&endDay=30&endYear=2016
Disclaimer: Not a Trump or Hillary supporter.
