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Deficit Spending the Only Thing Keeping the Economy Out of Recession Now

Published 01/19/2024, 11:00 AM
Updated 02/15/2024, 03:10 AM

Economic growth continues to defy expectations of a slowdown and recession due to continued increases in deficit spending.

The U.S. Treasury recently reported the December budget deficit, which shows the U.S. collected $429 billion through various taxes while total outlays hit $559 billion.

Receipts, Outlays, and Surplus/Deficit

As noted, the problem remains on how the economy has avoided a recession despite the Fed’s aggressive rate hiking campaign.

Numerous indicators, from the leading economic index to the yield curve, suggest a high probability of an economic recession, but one has yet to occur.

One explanation for this has been the surge in Federal expenditures since the end of 2022 stemming from the Inflation Reduction and CHIPs Acts.

The second reason is that GDP was so grossly elevated from the $5 Trillion in previous fiscal policies that the lag effect is taking longer than historical norms to resolve.

Federal Tax Receipts & Expenditures vs GDP

However, that red line in the chart above is the most interesting. Notice that while Federal expenditures are rising, Federal tax receipts are falling. Such is why the national deficit is increasing.

When we discussed this previously, many thought the shortfall was temporary. To wit:

California’s tax payments are delayed due to the emergency declaration. However, that doesn’t account for the magnitude of the decline in filings.

Secondly, given the shuttering of the entire economy in 2020, which also delayed filings nationwide, the extent of the current decrease seems more than just a single event.”

Given the length of time and the fact the collection rate fell further, it suggests there is more to the decline.

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Tax Receipts Send A Warning

The change in Federal receipts is essential as the Government’s revenue is from the taxes on both corporate and individual incomes.

Unsurprisingly, if revenues and incomes decline, such would reflect economic activity.

As shown below, there is a very high correlation between the annual change in Federal receipts and economic growth.

Historically, when the yearly change in Federal receipts falls below 2% annual growth, such has preceded economic recessions. Federal receipts’ yearly rate of change is currently a negative five percent (-5%).

Federal Tax Receipts vs Nominal GDP

We see the exact correlation by smoothing the data and using inflation-adjusted tax receipts on a 24-month rate of change. Again, a recession follows when tax receipts fall below 2% annual growth rates.

I like this measure better as it accounts for the “lag effect” in the economy. The 2-year yearly change in receipts has fallen well below the 2% warning line and is currently at -5.77%. Federal Tax Real Receipts vs GDP

While tax receipts suggest economic weakness is more pervasive than headlines suggest, the deficit spending flows keep economic growth from becoming recessionary.

The Frog And Deficit Spending

If we look at the current economy, there is no noticeable collapse in the dollar, private capital, rampant Inflation, or recession. However, like bringing the water to a slow boil, the frog doesn’t realize it is in trouble until it’s too late.

The government’s serious endeavors into deficit spending began with Ronald Reagan in 1980. Since then, politicians concluded that a lot should be better if a little deficit spending is good.

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For politicians, there are only positive benefits of deficit spending increases. More spending provides a short-term boost in economic activity, which gets them re-elected to office.

However, the water temperature is clearly rising in the longer term.

While the dollar hasn’t collapsed under the weight of deficit spending, the negative strength trend relative to other currencies is slowly rising in temperature.Federal Surplus/Deficit vs Dollar

Of course, as the dollar weakened and deficits grew, Inflation, for both producers and consumers, rose.

CPI vs DeficitPPI Vs Deficit

While deficits may not appear to crowd out private investment, the rise of behemoth companies like Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL), Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL), and others do crowd out innovation and new company formations.

Such activities require capital, and a reasonable correlation exists between the ebbs and flows of deficits and capital acquisition.

Federal Surplus/Deficit vs Bank Loans & Leases

Not surprisingly, as the dollar weakens, the movement of capital slows, and Inflation rises, the economic growth rate slows.

Such should not be surprising as debt used for non-productive purposes diverts money from productivity to interest service.

Federal Surplus/Deficit vs GDP

The one thing that deficits have not led to is surging interest rates and massive increases in borrowing costs.

Interest Rates vs Deficit

However, that suppression of interest rates has come from two primary sources.

  1. Slower rates of economic growth
  2. Massive interventions by the Federal Government to suppress rates.

Government Interventions vs GDP

Given the sharp increases in Federal debt since 2008 to support economic growth, the economy can not sustain higher borrowing costs for long.

The Economy Is Close To Recession

While economic growth continues to defy expectations on the surface, if it weren’t for increases in deficit spending, economic growth would be flirting with recessionary levels at just 0.7% in Q3 rather than 6.21%GDP vs GDP less Govt. Spending

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In GDP accounting, consumption is the most significant component. Since deficit spending doesn’t filter down into the average household, it is no wonder why Presidential approving ratings are so dismal.

Should governments use deficit spending for “productive investments” during economic downturns? That answer is clearly in the affirmative category.

However, once the economy returns to growth, the deficits should be reversed into surpluses to prepare for the next inevitable downturn. Such is the entire underlying premise of Keynesian economic theory.

But, unfortunately, politicians, in their ongoing endeavor to get reelected, ignore the part about repaying debts.

While short-term deficits may have no consequences, the rising levels of corporatism, wage disparities, and wealth inequality provide ample evidence that something has gone wrong.

Are all the problems in the U.S. solely the result of rampant deficit spending? Of course not. The U.S. has also spent four decades making poor political and economic choices.

  1. Massive increases in consumer and corporate debt.
  2. A shift from productive to non-productive labor.
  3. Poor immigration policies.
  4. The slow erosion of the rule of law; and,
  5. An undermining of capitalism and a move to socialistic policies.

If you ignore all of the anecdotal evidence, an argument can be made for running continual economic deficits. However, suggesting “deficit spending” has no consequences is entirely wrong.

We can continue our path for quite some time, and probably longer than most imagine.

But, just because we haven’t realized it yet, it doesn’t mean we aren’t slowly being “boiled by deficits.”

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Latest comments

Joe Biden is president now, so all the above will be fixed. haha
“If I keep digging deeper I’m bound to get out.”
Sounds like a real sustainable plan
Blah blah blah you missed out on an 18 month bull market
Otis its obvious you have no clue what you are talking about. If you had followed Lance for any length of time, you would know that he caught most if not all of the bull market.
Congratulations. This is not happening only in the USA, but also in several important depeloped and emerging countries. Government spending is out of control, even in China, although there they hide the bad numbers and the consequence is an unsustainable GDP growth as you need to increase taxes to pay off debt and/or let inflation run higher to devalue debt slong time. Usually everything is artificially kept until elections and then the frog jumps as the water is boiling and a recession takes place ….
True. As a European, I can assure you that here is even worse because our population is getting older and even starting to decrease, save for immigration. Even All four Euro Area largest economies (Germany, France, Spain, and Italy) are under large deficits and there is no possibility of solving it and winning the elections.
Crap article. If you think it’s good, take a step back and realize you’ve been brainwashed your entire life by the Supply-side Mafia.
very good article 👍
great article
Thanks for a detailed explanation of a matter not understood by many of us.
If you take this artcle as truth then you still dont understand the situation. It half truths at best remdering it more progamda then actually insightful.
There is an obvious and easy solve for defecits: tax billionaires. The exclusion of any discussion about seqestered/non-productive capital from this piece renders the whole thing an exercuse is class warfare propaganda. Cherry picking half the story is intellectually bankrupt. Case in point: #1 cause of wealth inequality is not deficits, it is tax/fiscal policy.
sorry, your obvious ignrance on the subject of how fiat currenices function render your criticisms menaingless and render you an pawn. Governments that issue currency do not and should not function like the average person and their simple bank account. Once you start to understand this immutable fact you will set yourself down the path of actually knowing what youre talking about. You’ve been brainwashed by the Supply-side Propaganda machine. Good luck deprogamming yourself. The first step is to start by understand you don’t know anything because you’ve been lied to your while life. The bigger problem is that you believed the lies, but thats the part you control. Good luck!
also, your flat tax idea is a totally via option to consider, but again proves your ignrance on the subject. Billionaires pay a very small net effective tax, well below the average person.
It's frustrating that Democrats and Republicans won't restore appropriate taxation because Republicans will use this against Democrats and billionaires use this against Republicans.
Great article also. Thanks
When we do go into a recession or depression the Fed would have to lower rates despite inflation and the Government would have to give stimulus checks again because the Economy can not function without them. The problem is the isn't any money available now for either option because of our debt / deficits and all credibility would be lost so that was a one shot deal. No one has any gas to start the fire again. Just buy Gold and wait. It won't be long.
In the stock market, the dominant factor for a year and a half has been the level of interest rates. all investors have been in love with the prospect of lower rates. what would be really bad is continuing wage and price inflation with a slowdown in economic activity. then the FED would not be able to raise interest rates to curb inflation without provoking a deep recession as the cost of money continued to rise
that's a lie. the government said the economy is strong. and they would never lie.
hahahaha, i assume your being sarcastic
No one mentions that the Treasury bond market is headed to a default with most governments de- dollarizing from our fiat currancy
Agreed. Why is nobody talking about or factoring this in? And, isn't the same true for Mortgage Backed Securities? Reverse Repo Market? No economic degree, so only basic understanding of how intertwined these all are. Forgive in advance if completely off base....
hello happy new year 2024.
Soon bubble will pop, biggest collapse human history
Weird... this is a strangely politically charged article. Still, it's nice to finally read an article that isn't a hodgepodge of random economic indicators that confirm your priors... who am I kidding, it's mostly that, too. The government can infinitely borrow money. I don't want to debate why, I just want to discuss the effects.  Widely accepted impacts of Gov spending (whether deficit spending, or through taxation) is crowding out private industry. If it is through direct spending in the real economy, (subsidies, projects, industry, etc.), the effect is self explanatory. Another way the Gov. crowds out industry is discussed in the article, and occupies the minds of many libertarians. Gov. spending may crowd out private industry (through price distortions) by increasing the money supply through open market operations.  1/2
The article claims that the latter effect is leading to M&As, which are apparently unproductive and monopolistic, and leads to acquiring companies (cited as apple and google) needing to service these acquisitions burdensome interest spending... but where are these interest payments? It doesn't appear on the income statement as even a percent of revenue for google's case, and hardly a percent in apple's. It's encouraging to see some real theory behind even a few of the indicators thrown around. But you need to substantiate this theory with relevant data!  If you want to predict a crash, you need to answer the following the question: Where is the bubble? You alluded to tech companies, but you don't make a case by vaguely gesturing at deficit spending.  You make brazen, partisan political appeals. Instead, maybe you should show where and why the market's projections are wrong—and not by using poorly extrapolated trends, like in your last article about employment. 2/2
you really 🤔 the government can borrow as much as it wants. really. at what rate
So long as there are those willing to lend, which is dependent on the confidence on the US economy, which is one of the strongest in the world. So it's functionally unlimited.
Political hot potato. For the last 50 years deficits have been higher as a percentage of GDP under Republicans. We’re still waiting on tax cuts to solve the problem. Maybe next century?
every time we have had tax cuts, the government has had an increase in taxes recieved. It's a spending problem, not an income problem
And just today Biden cancelled 4.9b student debt. Taxpayers in the US, I'm sorry for you..
Sleepy says open border and forgiving student loans = votes.
Excellent article.
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