The
deficit for the first six months of the 2021 fiscal year
ballooned to a record $1.706 trillion, compared to a $743
billion deficit for the comparable year-earlier period.
The COVID-19 pandemic did not have a big impact on the first six
months of fiscal 2020, as increased outlays tied to rising
unemployment due to pandemic-related lockdowns and major new aid
spending did not start until the very end of March 2020 and
ramped up in the following month, a Treasury official told
reporters.
The March 2021 deficit was the third highest U.S. monthly
deficit on record, surpassed by gaps of $864 billion in June
2020 and $738 billion in April 2020.
The March deficit, which compared to a year-earlier fiscal gap
of $119 billion, included receipts of $268 billion and outlays
of $927 billion - both record highs for that month.
The 13% increase in March receipts was buoyed by an increase in
taxes withheld from individuals, representing strong earnings
among higher-paid Americans who were able to work remotely, the
Treasury official said, as well as from improved overall
employment levels compared to a major drop in employment in the
second half of March 2020.
The March outlays were further increased by $339 billion in
direct payments of $1,400 that were sent to many individuals
under Biden's American Rescue Plan Act that was enacted last
month, the Treasury official said.
More funding from the $1.9 trillion stimulus package will roll
out in coming months, the official added, likely keeping outlays
elevated.
For the first six months of fiscal 2021, outlays were a record
$3.410 trillion, while receipts were $1.704 trillion, the
Treasury said. Total direct payments in the six-month period
came to $487 billion, including those from a year-end stimulus
package passed under former President Donald Trump, the Treasury
official said.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Paul Simao)
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