FY07 Results: Deficit
Declining Towards 2012 Surplus
Tax Relief Working - Economy Growing -
Record-Level Tax Revenues
Budget numbers for Fiscal Year 2007 released today by the
Department of Treasury and Office of Management and Budget show the
Federal deficit declined by $250 billion in the last three years.
In February the Federal budget deficit for 2007 was projected to be
$244 billion. Today's numbers show that the budget deficit is now
just $163 billion. This is just 1.2 percent of the economy.

As a percentage of the economy, the deficit is now lower
than the average of the last forty years. Tax cuts work to
promote economic growth, and that economic activity brings in higher
revenues to the Federal treasury. This year tax revenues grew by
$161 billion to reach $2.568 trillion, the highest level of Federal
revenues ever recorded. That's an increase of 6.7 percent. And it
builds on the 14.5 percent and 11.8 percent increase in revenues
during the last two years.
Democrats' "tax and spend" agenda threatens economic
growth and a balanced budget. Democrats in Congress are
proposing to:
- Spend $205 billion more taxpayer dollars over the next five
years than the reasonable and responsible levels proposed by the
President.
- Raise taxes by nearly $400 billion more than ever before in
history.
- Ignore the need for entitlement reforms, while expanding
entitlement spending and raising taxes.
Today's budget numbers are further proof that tax relief
combined with spending restraint promotes economic growth.
- The U.S. economy is in its sixth year of sustained economic
growth.
- Since August 2003, the economy has added more than 8 million
new jobs for 49 straight months of growth.
- The national unemployment rate is at 4.7 percent, low by
historical standards.
Beyond the positive short-term outlook however,
entitlement spending is a serious long-term threat to America's
fiscal health. The President's Budget proposed changes to
confront the unsustainable growth of important entitlement programs
like Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security. Democrats in Congress
have not come forward with their ideas of how to address this
serious challenge. We have a responsibility to confront problems
today and not pass them on to future generations.
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