Get 40% Off
🤯 Perficient is up a mind-blowing 53%. Our ProPicks AI saw the buying opportunity in March.Read full update

Dwindling Tax Receipts Highlight Looming Economic Slowdown

Published 08/11/2023, 07:49 AM
Updated 02/15/2024, 03:10 AM

Tax receipts are falling, which has historically preceded economic recessions. In a recent post, we discussed the issue of rising debt levels on economic growth and increasing debt levels. To wit:

“While Washington continues a seemingly unbridled spending spree under the assumption ‘more spending’ is better, debts and deficits matter. To better understand the impact of debt and deficits on economic growth, we must know where we came from. The chart shows the 10-year annualized growth rate of the economy over time.

What should immediately jump out at you is that the 10-year average economic growth rate was around 8%, except for the Great Depression era, from 1900 through 1990. However, there has been a marked decline in economic growth since then.”

Debt, Deficits & GDP 1901-to-Present

As noted in that post, the problem of rising debt and deficits is two-fold.

“First, ‘deficit spending’ was only supposed to be used during a recessionary period and reversed to a surplus during the subsequent expansion. However, beginning in the early ’80s, those in power only adhered to the ‘deficit spending part.’ After all, ‘if a little deficit spending is good, a lot should be better,’ right?

Secondly, deficit spending shifted away from productive investments, which create jobs (infrastructure and development), to primarily social welfare and debt service. Money used in this manner has a negative rate of return.”

Adding to the deficit problem is the aging demographic, which is increasingly dependent on Government welfare programs for more than 50% of their incomes. According to the Center On Budget & Policy Priorities, roughly 88% of every tax dollar goes to non-productive spending.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads .

Where Do Your Tax Dollars Go

Here is the real kicker. In 2022, the Federal Government spent $6 Trillion, equivalent to almost 20% of the nation’s entire nominal GDP (19.74% to be exact.) Of that total spending, ONLY $5 Trillion was financed by Federal revenues, and $1 Trillion was funded through debt.

In other words, if 88% of all expenditures is social welfare and interest on the debt, those payments require $5.3 Trillion of the $5 Trillion (or 105%) of revenue.

Debt Issuance To Meet Spending Requirements

However, that was as of the end of 2022. Since the turn of the calendar, the combination of higher interest rates and inflation on the consumer is leading to increasingly slower economic activity.

As the economy slows, revenues and incomes decline. Given that Federal taxes are collected on individual and corporate incomes, Federal tax receipts can tell us much about the actual strength of the economy.

Tax Receipts As A Recessionary Indicator

One of the conundrums in 2023 remains the avoidance of a recessionary impact from 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 Act. 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 Receipts vs 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.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads .

The change in Federal receipts is important 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 four percent (-4%).

Tax Receipts Annual Chg vs 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 to the 2% warning line. Such explains why the recession has not occurred yet.

Real Tax Receipts 2-year Change vs GDP

Note: 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.

Nonetheless, for investors, the implications should be evident.

Stocks Tend To Follow The Deficit

If tax receipts are falling, such suggests that economic activity is slowing, ultimately impacting earnings growth. As I have noted recently, investors have become quite exuberant that the economy will avoid a recession and earnings growth will return. To wit:

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads .

“Analysts have raised future earnings estimates, but the underlying data does not necessarily support such. More importantly, there is a limit to how much companies can ‘massage’ the bottom-line earnings if top-line sales growth slows.

As higher rates continue to weigh on consumption, particularly in a highly indebted economy, the risk of a slowdown in sales remains elevated. If that statement is valid, the earnings must decline to align with organic economic activity. Such is why, historically, a reversion eventually occurs when earnings are well deviated above the long-term growth trend.

While anything is certainly possible, the surge in analysts’ estimates since the end of 2022 seems based more on ‘hope’ than economic realities.”

Earnings Relative To Growth Trends

Analysts will likely be disappointed over the next year because the stock market tends to correlate to the deficit. As the deficit grows, such will translate into slower earnings growth and a repricing of risk.

With the deficit-increasing, such will also push the Federal Reserve to pressure rates lower to cut the Governments's interest expense.

Budget Deficit Vs Stock Market

While many indicators suggest a recession is coming, pay close attention to tax receipts. The rising debt levels and increased servicing costs will act as a brake on economic growth. A point recently made by Dr. Lacy Hunt:

Excessive indebtedness acts as a tax on future growth. It is also consistent with Hyman Minsky’s concept of ‘Ponzi finance. Such means the size and type of debt being added cannot generate a cash flow to repay principal and interest. While the debt has not resulted in the sustained instability in financial markets envisioned by Minsky, the slow reduction in economic growth and the standard of living is more insidious.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads .

This is simply something the stock market will likely not be able to avoid.

Latest comments

In today's automated world, I would wonder how much taxes any Treasury would expect to collect from machines taking people's jobs? Central Banks better stop printing birth certificate debt paid for by people's working hours, because automations won't pay it forward. lol
Biden doesn't care about the economy.  Liberals need to kill capitalism in order to replace it with socialism.  Bidens cartel gets paid regardless.
It appears every election year with a recession, caused a change in political party leadership. Look at the recession charts. What will happen in 2024 ?
… the money printing presses are working at top speed.
Excellent article Lance. Usa govt debt can rise to $34 trln 2023, $38 in 2024 and then debt ceiling fiasco in May, June 2025...will China invade Taiwan then....food for thought
hi
As I have posted previously in other articles about relying too heavily on analysis. To Wit: Price and trend are right 100 percent of the time.
until it doesn't
They'll just print more 💰 and issue bonds 🤡🤡🤡
let's assume everyone is paying the tax that is due according to our tax code. then congress needs to do two things.... decrease spending and raise taxes. or, are they smart enough to figure that out?
Oh, they know. But they will never curb spending.
you ignore expenditures on defense and if the wealthy paid taxes like they did in prior periods, there would be none of the problems you mention
The wealthy pay the majority of all taxes already. Even if you took 99% away from ‘the rich’ our economy would collapse.
Hi, Hi, you need to turn off the TV. I think I know you. Let me guess, you can't decide which accident/injury lawyers to use, you think junk food is an actual meal and your medicine cabinet is overflowing with the many drugs you see on TV telling you being overweight is not your fault. And when you're not watching TV, you may go to a play because you think "Hamilton" is an actual history lesson. Do yourself and this country a favor, put a little effort into research before you vote.
Very good and well presented.
Don't worry, Lance. More money creation will fix this
For over a year it's the steady drum beat of a looming recession, yet we continue to grow. Do you ever get tired of being wrong?
Looming? 🤣🤣🤣We’re IN a recession! Granted, they won’t call it one now, because the definition of recession has been altered for political reasons.
You tell us then. Pick a definition for recession that supports your assessment. By what measure are we in a recession?
two consecutive quarters of negative growth. That’s the traditional definition of a recession. We’ve already seen that.
Guess what ?
Unemployment is at its lowest, how? I hate this government
The government figures are pure fantasy. Companies have been laying off workers since the start of 2023, because they saw what’s coming.
Excellent article and topic. My wife prepares financial statements for 16 companies of sizes from 5m to 150m in revenue a year, and has been doing so for 28 years. With the exception of one of the companies, all the rest are in the red. The one bit of comfort that they have is they are not owing any quarterly (or presumably yearly) taxes. But this is going to run us into the debt limit really quickly as the only two sources of revenue for the government are tax receipts and borrowing (at wonderfully low low rates ;)
Excellent article.
Risk Disclosure: Trading in financial instruments and/or cryptocurrencies involves high risks including the risk of losing some, or all, of your investment amount, and may not be suitable for all investors. Prices of cryptocurrencies are extremely volatile and may be affected by external factors such as financial, regulatory or political events. Trading on margin increases the financial risks.
Before deciding to trade in financial instrument or cryptocurrencies you should be fully informed of the risks and costs associated with trading the financial markets, carefully consider your investment objectives, level of experience, and risk appetite, and seek professional advice where needed.
Fusion Media would like to remind you that the data contained in this website is not necessarily real-time nor accurate. The data and prices on the website are not necessarily provided by any market or exchange, but may be provided by market makers, and so prices may not be accurate and may differ from the actual price at any given market, meaning prices are indicative and not appropriate for trading purposes. Fusion Media and any provider of the data contained in this website will not accept liability for any loss or damage as a result of your trading, or your reliance on the information contained within this website.
It is prohibited to use, store, reproduce, display, modify, transmit or distribute the data contained in this website without the explicit prior written permission of Fusion Media and/or the data provider. All intellectual property rights are reserved by the providers and/or the exchange providing the data contained in this website.
Fusion Media may be compensated by the advertisers that appear on the website, based on your interaction with the advertisements or advertisers.
© 2007-2024 - Fusion Media Limited. All Rights Reserved.