Treasury posts unexpected surplus in June as tariff receipts surge - With government red ink swelling throughout the year, June saw a surplus of just over $27 billion, following a $316 billion deficit in May. Customs duties totaled about $27 billion for the month, up from $23 billion in May and a 301% gain from June 2024.

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The U.S. government posted a surplus in June as tariffs gave an extra bump to a sharp increase in receipts, the Treasury Department said Friday.

With government red ink swelling throughout the year, last month saw a surplus of just over $27 billion, following a $316 billion deficit in May.




That brought the fiscal year-to-date deficit to $1.34 trillion, up 5% from a year ago. However, with calendar adjustment, the deficit actually edged lower by 1%. There are three months left in the current fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30.

A 13% increase in receipts from the same month a year ago helped bridge the gap, with outlays down 7%. For the year, receipts are up 7% while spending has risen 6%.

The government last posted a June surplus in 2017, during President Donald Trump’s first term.

Increasing tariff collections are helping shore up the government finances.

Customs duties totaled about $27 billion for the month, up from $23 billion in May and 301% higher than June 2024. On an annual basis, tariff collections have totaled $113 billion, or 86% more than a year ago.




Trump levied across-the-board 10% tariffs on imports in April on top of other select duties. He also announced a menu of so-called reciprocal tariffs on various U.S. trading partners and has been in negotiations since.

The Treasury Department noted that the month benefited from calendar adjustments, without which the deficit would have been $70 billion.

Persistently high Treasury yields again posed a challenge for federal finances.

Net interest on the $36 trillion national debt totaled $84 billion in June, down slightly from May but still higher than any other category with the exception of Social Security. For the year, net interest — what Treasury pays on the debt it issues minus what it earns on investments — is at $749 billion. Total interest payments are projected at $1.2 trillion for the full fiscal year.

Trump has been pushing the Federal Reserve to cut short-term rates to help with the financing burden of servicing federal debt. But markets don’t expect the central bank to ease again until September, and Fed Chair Jerome Powell has said he remains leery of the potential impact that tariffs might have on inflation.

Trump’s own “big beautiful” spending bill that made its way through Congress earlier this month is expected to add about $3.4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office’s projections.

Clarification: This story has been updated to clarify the current deficit figures.
 
Lol, the ""Treasury"" that is run by a soros puppet and who has no real ability to do anything outside of being the FED's bitch. The FED ponzi being an unelected group of central bankers (so it's not even truly federal) who were installed in 1913 to debase our national wealth. The middle man between the American people and the Treasury has more pull than the Treasury itself. Clown Shitstem.
 
No, no. I'm sorry but this is clearly misinformed. I was told by very intelligent and very serious economists that having any tariff on any country by the US would cause 300% inflation, total economic collapse, and collect no revenue at all. Please recheck the numbers and come back when you get them correct.
 
Lol, the ""Treasury"" that is run by a soros puppet and who has no real ability to do anything outside of being the FED's bitch. The FED ponzi being an unelected group of central bankers (so it's not even truly federal) who were installed in 1913 to debase our national wealth. The middle man between the American people and the Treasury has more pull than the Treasury itself. Clown Shitstem.
what
 
Monthly surpluses aren't that uncommon. The "surge" is really tiny, but it's just a data point.

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Are you guys crowing about how paying more for stuff is a good thing? I mean, duh, of course nothing has happened, except that people are tightening their belts a a little bit, but because it hasn't had catastrophic results three months in, that means paying extra for shit is good? It hasn't solved any underlying issues, like the lack of manufacturing, in those three months, either, but for me to point that out would be a false argument. It's been three months.
 
Are you guys crowing about how paying more for stuff is a good thing? I mean, duh, of course nothing has happened, except that people are tightening their belts a a little bit, but because it hasn't had catastrophic results three months in, that means paying extra for shit is good? It hasn't solved any underlying issues, like the lack of manufacturing, in those three months, either, but for me to point that out would be a false argument. It's been three months.
Inflation has gone down retard.
 
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I hate to spoil all of the fun but, if we still have fiat currency, did anything really happen?

So we have some extra monopoly dollars. Assuming this is true.
 
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Wait, I thought Trump was gonna crash the economy with a deficit
The fact he only brought in an extra couple billion for a month? And not infinity bucks? Will be the new party line that proves it's failure, please download the latest patch, its all in there.
 
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