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BUDGET DATA

US Budgets

Download Data for Year 2010:

Would you like to download government revenue data from usgovernmentrevenue.com, revenue data that covers all levels of government, United States federal, state, and local government revenue? No problem. We have four ways you can download revenue data. And more to come.

Fast Lane

Click to download your government revenue data for Fiscal Year 2010

CSV file simple text tab-delimited
text
simple html <table>
without styling
fully styled
html <table>

Slow Lane

Here is how to get your government revenue data. To select the fiscal year, the view, and the level of revenue detail that you want to download, just follow the easy steps outlined below.

Step 1: Select the data set you want

In the table below, click the controls to get the data you want.

  1. Click the “-1yr” and “+1yr” text-links or the “FY 2010” drop-down to change the year from 2010 to the year you want.
  2. Click the “Change View” controls to change the data labels to the view you want.
  3. Click the expander [+] controls to add more detail.
  4. Click the “$ billion” drop-down to change the units.
  5. Click the “United States” drop-down to change to an individual state.

Go ahead and use the controls on the table below to get the particular revenue information you want to download.

Units: By default, values are displayed in billions of dollars. By using a dropdown control in the table heading you can select millions of dollars, percent of GDP, percent of federal total, percent of overall total, dollars per capita of population, and thousand dollars per capita of population.
Fiscal Year: The default year displayed is the current US government fiscal year. But you can select any year you want using the dropdown control in the table heading. At the top and bottom of the dropdown only years ending in “0” are shown. Select a year to get close, then select the year you want. You can increase or decrease the year using the “yr” text links in the table heading.
US Budget Year: By default, the table displays budgeted and estimated numbers in the current US Budget submitted to the Congress by the president. But you can look at previous budgeted numbers using the dropdown control at the bottom of the table.
GDP: $14,551.8 billion(1)
State and Local Revenue: By default, state and local revenue are displayed separately. But you can select state'n local and display state and local revenue combined.
US or State: By default, the table shows values for governments in the United States overall. But you can select individual states by selecting the state dropdown control in the table heading or the text link right above it.
Pie Chart: Click on a pie icon to display a pie chart. You can create a pie chart for federal, state and local, and overall revenue.

United States Federal
State and Local Government Revenue
US CA >
Pop: 308.7 million
-5yr -1yr   Fiscal Year 2010 in $ billion   +1yr +5yr
Fed
(2)
Gov.
Xfer(3)
State
(3)
Local
(3)
Totalcharts
[+]  Income Taxes 1,090.0 0.0 272.8 29.9 1,392.7
[+]  Social Insurance Taxes 864.8 0.0 124.7 6.2 995.7
[+]  Ad-valorem Taxes 132.1 0.0 429.5 563.6 1,125.2
[+] 
Charts: Click on a to display a bar of data in a row or column of this table.
Click on to display a time-series chart of data in a row.
[+] Drill-down: Click on the [+] to drill down to more detailed numbers.
Fees and Charges 0.0 0.0 168.7 234.0 402.7
[+]  Business and Other Revenue 75.8 0.0 456.3 268.1 800.3
[+]  Balance -0.0 0.0 8.3 0.0 8.3
[+]  Total Direct Revenue 2,162.7 0.0 1,460.1 1,101.9 4,724.8
[+]  Federal Deficit 1,293.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 1,293.5
[+]  Gross Public Debt 13,528.8 0.0 1,113.4 1,770.7 16,412.9
Click for Bar Chart -> 
Revenue:
Pie Chart: Click on a pie icon to display a pie chart. You can create a pie chart for federal, state and local, and overall revenue.
actual estimated
Notes:
1. Measuring Worth - U.S. GDP
2. Budget of the US Government: Historical Tables 2.1, 2.4, 2.5 and 7.1
3. State and Local Government Finances
4. “Guesstimated” by projecting the latest change in reported revenue forward to future years
Switch to spending

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OK. Now you are ready to download your data.

Step 2: Copy Your Data

We offer four ways of downloading your data:

  • A simple text table with the top-line numbers for total revenue across all governments.
  • A tab-delimited table that you can cut and paste into your spreadsheet program.
  • A simple table using html <table> tags without styling.
  • A fully styled html <table> with all the styles included.

Top-line numbers

If you want just the top-line total numbers for overall government revenue, federal, state, and local, then here they are:

Use your cursor to copy and paste the following lines into your own content:

United States Federal
State and Local Government Revenue
Fiscal Year 2010

Income Taxes: $1,392.7 billion
Social Insurance Taxes: $995.7 billion
Ad-valorem Taxes: $1,125.2 billion
Fees and Charges: $402.7 billion
Business and Other Revenue: $800.3 billion
Balance: $8.3 billion
Total Direct Revenue: $4,724.8 billion
Federal Deficit: $1,293.5 billion
Gross Public Debt: $16,412.9 billion

source: usgovernmentrevenue.com

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Here is a bar chart of the top-line numbers. Right click the cursor to copy or save the image:

Tab-delimited Table

Here is the revenue table with columns tab-delimited. You can cut and paste directly into a spreadsheet:

You can copy all the text in the textbox by clicking your cursor in the box. Then press Ctrl-A and Ctrl-C and paste the text into your spreadsheet.

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Simple html <table>

Maybe you want to get the data formatted in html for insertion into your content as a table. Here is the data in html with a simple table setup. There are no fancy tags or styles. Just a straight table with <table>, <tr>, and <td> tags.

You can copy all the text in the textbox by clicking your cursor in the box. Then press Ctrl-A and Ctrl-C and paste the html into your content.

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Fully styled table

Here in the textbox is the full table with styles but without controls. The styles are built around an id called “usgs342”. It shouldn’t interfere with your styles.

You can copy all the text in the textbox by clicking your cursor in the box. Then press Ctrl-A and Ctrl-C and paste into your content.

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More Download Methods to Come

That’s all the download methods for now. But we are planning more.

Perhaps we will even let you load Javascript into your content and allow you to manipulate the controls on the table to allow your visitors to use the full functionality available to users here on usgovernmentrevenue.com.

 

You Can Help!

What do you want from usgovernmentrevenue.com? Email us at chrischantrill@gmail.com

Best wishes from all of us at the usgovernmentrevenue.com team.

 

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Next Data Update

> US GDP CY11

> data update schedule.

State Finances Update for FY 2010

On December 14, 2011 the US Census Bureau released data on state finances for FY 2010 here, including spending and revenue for each individual state and for all states combined.

On December 27, 2011 we updated state and local spending and revenue data as follows:

  1. We replaced "guesstimated" state spending and revenue data for FY2010 using the data from the Census Bureau.
  2. We replaced "guesstimated" local spending and revenue data for FY 2010 with estimates for each spending and revenue category using the trends in state finances between FY 2009 and FY 2010.
  3. We replaced "guesstimated" state revenue data for FY 2011 with data from the Census Bureau's quarterly state tax summary here.
  4. We replaced "guesstimated" local revenue data for FY 2011 with estimates for each category using trends for each category of state revenue between FY 2010 and FY 2011.
  5. We replaced "guesstimated" state and local spending and revenue for FY 2012 thru FY2017 with new guesstimates based on the latest Census Bureau data for FY 2010 state finances and FY 2011 quarterly tax data.
The Census Bureau expects to release local spending and revenue data for FY 2010 in July 2012.

Highlights: State spending on Welfare was up from a "guesstimated" $164 billion to $237 billion.  Business and Other Revenue was up from a "guesstimated" $174 billion to $456 billion.  This reflects the $289 billion profit reported on state pension plans for FY 2010, a partial recovery from the FY 2009 loss of $524 billion.

Tax links

us dataus chartdeficit/gdptaxes/gdpdebt/gdpus gdpus real gdp2009breakdownfederalstatelocal2010californianew yorktexas

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usgovernmentrevenue.com was designed and executed by:

Christopher Chantrill.

Email here.


Mutual Aid

In 1911... at least nine million of the 12 million covered by national insurance were already members of voluntary sick pay schemes. A similar proportion were also eligible for medical care.
Green, Reinventing Civil Society

Education

“We have met with families in which for weeks together, not an article of sustenance but potatoes had been used; yet for every child the hard-earned sum was provided to send them to school.”
E. G. West, Education and the State

Democratic Capitalism

Three dynamic and converging systems functioning as one: a democratic polity, an economy based on markets and incentives, and a moral-cultural system which is plural and, in the largest sense, liberal.
Michael Novak, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism

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