
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent touted the Trump administration’s progress on reducing the federal budget deficit.
“Thanks to President Trump, the health of the U.S. government’s finances is improving,” Bessent wrote on X. “The current calendar year-to-date deficit is $1.52 trillion, which compares to a deficit of $1.93 trillion for the comparable period last year under Biden, a 21% drop.”
Taking the baseline deficit figure for fiscal 2025 of $1.775 trillion and excluding the months of October, November, and December 2024 under President Joe Biden, while including October and November 2025, the total deficit for this calendar year—January–November—sits at $1.522 trillion.
Bessent also claimed that the deficit-to-GDP ratio would be substantially reduced by the end of this year thanks to the economic growth from President Donald Trump’s policies.
“Not only is the deficit smaller under President Trump—the economy is also bigger,” he wrote. “The full 2025 calendar year budget deficit to GDP may total only 5.5%, substantially lower than the unsustainably high 6.8% in calendar year 2024 under Biden.”
“Under [the Trump administration’s] leadership, we will grow our way out of debt and into prosperity,” Bessent wrote.
Receipts were up 18 percent from last year: notably, tax withholdings went up $20 billion (or 4 percent), which the CBO credited to rising wages; and customs duties—including tariffs—increased $48 billion, quadruple what they were from the same time last year.
Outlays were down 6 percent, the CBO noted, but that was due to the monthly shift in December payments. Had they not been shifted, outlays would have been slightly higher than last year due to increased spending on Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, as well as servicing the national debt.
“So, right now, it’s looking like the deficit for this year will be $600 billion lower than it was last year,” he said. “That really helps lower inflation.
“We’ve got the trade deficit cut in half from last year. And so all these things are things that should continue to move us towards the Fed target of two percent.”

