Governments often operate on fiscal years for budgeting and legislation.
✓ TRUE FACT
A fiscal year is a government’s accounting period for budgets and public spending, which doesn’t always match the calendar year. For example, the U.S. federal fiscal year runs Oct 1–Sep 30, shaping when budgets, appropriations, and audits happen.
🤯 "Governments often operate on fiscal years for budgeting and legislation. Timeframes shape policy."