To calculate a government's operating surplus or deficit, subtract total government expenditures from total government revenues. If revenues exceed expenditures, the result is an operating surplus; if expenditures exceed revenues, it results in a deficit. This calculation typically includes only current operating revenues and expenses, excluding capital expenditures and revenues. The formula can be expressed as: Operating Surplus/Deficit = Total Revenues - Total Expenditures.
Surplus or deficit as a percentage of GDP can be calculated by using deficit/GDP multiplied by 100, where deficit is calculated by subtracting expenses from sources.
The opposite of a deficit is a surplus. A deficit occurs when a country's expenses are greater than their revenues. A surplus is the opposite.
Germany currently has a trade surplus. COOL HUH !
It has a surplus in trade of invisibles, and a deficit in trade of visibles.
A surplus is more than needed, a deficit is a shortage or loss
Surplus or deficit as a percentage of GDP can be calculated by using deficit/GDP multiplied by 100, where deficit is calculated by subtracting expenses from sources.
The opposite of a deficit is a surplus. A deficit occurs when a country's expenses are greater than their revenues. A surplus is the opposite.
Deficit
Germany currently has a trade surplus. COOL HUH !
It has a surplus in trade of invisibles, and a deficit in trade of visibles.
A surplus is more than needed, a deficit is a shortage or loss
Trade deficit
The antonym of deficit is surplus.
deficit
The United States had a federal surplus in 1998. There was a surplus until 2001, but after 2001, the country has had a national deficit.
Surplus energy is an excess amount and deficit is not enough energy
The USA has a trade deficit.