The US Treasury Department and the Office of Management and Budget this week released
the Fiscal Year 2007 Financial Report of the United States Government.
The report details the US government's short-term and long-term financial outlook,
including the government's biggest fiscal challenge- the unsustainable growth
in entitlement programs. The report complements the President's Budget, which
will be released in February 2008.
"The $2.6 trillion in record-breaking revenues that flowed into the Treasury
this year reflect a healthy economy. The 39 percent drop in our net operating
costs complements the deficit reduction reported in October," explained
Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson, Jr, continuing:
"But to continue this progress, we must maintain discipline on spending.
The expected revenue in years ahead will not come close to meeting the growing
cost of our social insurance programs. We all have a responsibility to fix this
problem now, before it becomes a severe economic burden for our children and
grandchildren."
"This year's budget results reinforce that tax relief combined with spending
restraint works. This formula has helped promote economic expansion that, in
turn, has helped generate higher-than-expected revenue and resulted in deficit
reduction of $250 billion over the last three years," added OMB Director
Jim Nussle.
"Reducing the deficit in the short-term will put us in a better position
for dealing with the longer-term entitlement issue, which can only be characterized
as an oncoming fiscal train wreck."
Revenue results in this year's fiscal report were $2.6 trillion, a 7.6% improvement
from last year. Consistent with the improved budget results, the Financial Report's
2007 net operating cost of $276 billion is approximately $175 billion lower
than the 2006 figure.
The report indicates that funding for Social Security and Medicare will come
up $45 trillion short in the next 75 years. Without reform, the cost of these
programs will total 18% of GDP by 2080.
The Government Accountability Office audited the Statement of Social Insurance
for the first time and issued a clean opinion this year. The SOSI, a critical
component of the Financial Report, compares the government's expected resources
for programs such as Social Security and Medicare to what it expects to have
to pay in benefits over the next 75 years in current dollar terms. A clean opinion
indicates that the report fairly and accurately reflects the financial position
of the social insurance programs.