2001 United States federal budget

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SubmittedFebruary 7, 2000 [1]
Submitted byBill Clinton
Submitted to106th Congress
Total revenue$2.02 trillion (requested)[2]
$1.99 trillion (actual)[3]
18.8% of GDP (actual)[4]
2001 Budget of the United States federal government
SubmittedFebruary 7, 2000 [1]
Submitted byBill Clinton
Submitted to106th Congress
Total revenue$2.02 trillion (requested)[2]
$1.99 trillion (actual)[3]
18.8% of GDP (actual)[4]
Total expenditures$1.835 trillion[5]
$1.863 trillion (actual)[6]
17.6% of GDP (actual)[4]
Surplus$128 billion (actual)[6]
1.2% of GDP (actual)[4]
Debt$5.77 trillion (at fiscal end)
54.6% of GDP[7]
GDP$10.565 trillion[4]
WebsiteOffice of Management and Budget
 2000
2002

The United States Federal Budget for Fiscal Year 2001, was a spending request by President Bill Clinton to fund government operations for October 2000-September 2001. Figures shown in the spending request do not reflect the actual appropriations for Fiscal Year 2001, which must be authorized by Congress.

2001 Actual Receipts by Source
  1. Individual income tax (49.9%)
  2. Social Security/other payroll tax (34.9%)
  3. Corporate income tax (7.6%)
  4. Excise tax (3.3%)
  5. Estate and gift taxes (1.4%)
  6. Customs duties (1%)
  7. Other miscellaneous receipts (1.9%)

(in billions of dollars)

Source Requested[2] Actual[3]
Individual income tax 972 994
Corporate income tax 195 151
Social Security and other payroll tax 682 694
Excise tax 77 66
Estate and gift taxes 32 28
Customs duties 21 19
Other miscellaneous receipts 40 38
Total 2,019 1,991

Total Outlays

References

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