WASHINGTON – The US budget deficit totaled $2.77 trillion for 2021, the second highest on record but an improvement from the all-time high of $3.13 trillion reached in 2020.
The deficits in both years reflect trillions of dollars in government spending to counteract the devastating effects of a global pandemic.
The Biden administration said that deficit for the budget year that ended Sept. 30 was $360 billion lower than 2020, as a recovering economy boosted revenues, helping to offset government spending from pandemic relief efforts.
Before the deficit ballooned during two years of a global pandemic, the biggest deficit had been a shortfall of $1.4 trillion in 2009. At that time, the US was spending heavily to lift the country out of a severe recession following the 2008 financial crisis.
As a percentage of the overall economy, as measured by the gross domestic product, the 2021 deficit represents 12.4 per cent of GDP, down from the 2020 deficit, which was 15 per cent of GDP.
The 2020 deficit was the highest in relation to the overall economy since World War II, when it hit 29.6 per cent of GDP in 1943 as the United States was borrowing heavily to finance the war effort.
Those figures remained elevated at 22.2 per cent of GDP in 1944 and 21 per cent of GDP in 1945 before beginning to retreat once the war was won, AP reported.
For 2021, the joint report from Treasury and the Office of Management and Budget said government spending increased 4.1 per cent to $6.82 trillion.
This was offset by an increase of 18.3 per cent in government revenues to $4 trillion.
The revenue gain reflected an improving economy as millions of people who had lost jobs at the start of the pandemic went back to work and corporate profits rebounded after a horrendous 2020.
“Under President Biden’s leadership, the US economy is getting back on track and Americans are getting back to work,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Shalanda Young, acting director of the Office of Management and Budget, said in a joint statement.
The non-partisan Congressional Budget Office expects the deficit will fall to $1.15 trillion in the current budget year, which began Oct. 1, and will dip below $1 trillion for three years from 2023 through 2025 before rising again above $1 trillion for each year through 2031.