Fiscal Year Trust Fund Operations - The United States Social Security . . . 1 The annual net increase in the funds is the change in the asset reserves from the end of one year to the end of the next In fiscal year 1983, the Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund borrowed money from the Hospital Insurance Trust Fund, and repaid the borrowed amounts in 1985 and 1986
Fiscal Year 2003 A Congressional Budget Office Analysis Receipts for the first 11 months of fiscal year 2003 were about $70 billion, or 4 2 percent, lower than in the com-parable period in the previous fiscal year Most of that decline was from receipts of individual income taxes, which fell by $62 billion
U. S. Treasury Fiscal Data With historical and current data, Fiscal Data is your hub for fiscal data Download datasets on topics such as debt, interest rates, and more
Government Spending Open Data | USAspending Learn more about government spending through interactive tools that explore elements of the federal budget, such as federal loan, grant, and contract data USAspending is the official open data source of federal spending information
U. S. Government Financial Report | U. S. Treasury Fiscal Data Detailed descriptions of each statement can be found in the Data Tables tab on this page Each year’s Financial Report also includes restatements of the previous fiscal year’s figures, enabling users to connect prior year ending balances with current year starting balances
Federal Budget Estimates, Fiscal Year 2002 Federal Budget of the United States Govern-ment, Fiscal Year 2002 shows a $231 2 billion surplus, a $49 5 billion decrease over the projected $280 7 billion surplus in fiscal year 2001 1 The sur-plus in fiscal year 2000 was $236 4 billion
Fiscal Year 2003 A Congressional Budget Office Analysis CBO estimates that receipts for the first quarter of fiscal year 2003 were down by 8 2 percent from the first quar-ter of fiscal year 2002 About $22 billion of that decline occurred in corporate receipts Those receipts were arti-ficially boosted by $23 billion in October 2001 by legis-lation that allowed corporations to delay making their