In an election year, the average citizen is apt to hear a great deal of talk about income, taxes, spending, and more importantly budget deficits and the national debt. Given all of the talk, one may come to think that budget deficits and the national debt are one in the same. While the two do go hand-in-hand, it is important to understand that they are two separate things.
InvestorWords.com defines a budget deficit as the amount by which a government, company, or individual's spending exceeds its income over a particular period of time.
To remain within the limits of one’s income would create a budget surplus; something the United States has done only in one year since 1970 (Adamson, 2008). National debt, on the other hand, is the sum of all previously incurred annual federal deficits. Since the deficits are financed by government borrowing, national debt is equal to all government debt outstanding.
Whenever the U.S. has a deficit year, money is borrowed to pay for the deficit. Deficits are not a new concept as far as our nation’s history is concerned. Deficits were incurred during and after WWI. Then the country enjoyed a decade of annual budget surpluses until the Great Depression; and WWII only made it worse. The country never quite returned to the concept of living within its means since that time. This is not to say that there have not been any other years of budget surplus, but they have been few and far in between. However, up until 1975, the U.S. annual deficit has been rather miniscule compared to today’s standards. In 1975 is when the U.S. incurred a deficit that was almost as large as that
References: Budget deficit. InvestorWords.com. Retrieved August 5, 2008, from InvestorWords.com website: http://www.investorwords.com/601/budget_deficit.html National debt. InvestorWords.com. Retrieved August 5, 2008, from InvestorWords.com website: http://www.investorwords.com/601/budget_deficit.html Adamson, J.C. (2008). What is the National Debt – and What is the Deficit? Retrieved August 5, 2008, from The Muser website: http://www.greatreality.com/debtdef.htm Hall, E. (2008). U.S. National Debt Clock Retrieved August 5, 2008 from website: http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/