Title: The Federal Budget
1The Federal Budget
- How it is Supposed to Work, and How it Actually
Works
2Federal Budget 101
- Key Players
- The Executive Branch
- The White House
- Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
- Cabinet and Independent Agencies
- The Congress
- Budget Committee
- Appropriations Committee
- Other Authorizing Committees
3Federal Budget 101
- Key Elements
- Presidents Budget
- Submission marks the start of every budget year
- Basis against which Congressional budget is
crafted - Congressional Budget Resolution
- Does not have force of law
- Provides overall spending limits
- Congressional Appropriations Acts
- 13 individual bills (theoretically)
- Often late and/or combined into omnibus bill(s)
4The Executive Branch
- White House Plays Crucial Role with Annual
Submission of Presidents Budget - By law, the President must submit to Congress a
comprehensive budget no later than the first
Monday in February - This deadline is one of the few on the federal
budget calendar that is usually met
5Executive Branch Timeline The Year Preceding
the New Fiscal Year
- April-June Agencies develop budgets
- July-August OMB issues policy direction to
agencies - Early fall Agencies submit initial budget
requests to OMB - November-December OMB and the President review,
make decisions, and pass back agency requests
6Executive Branch Timeline The Year of the New
Fiscal Year
- First Monday of February President submits
Administration budget to Congress - February September Agencies defend requests to
Congress and submit any budget amendments - October 1 New Fiscal Year begins
7Congressional Timeline Theory
- First Monday in February Congress receives
Presidents budget - April 15 Target for completion of budget
resolution - May 15 Appropriations bills may be considered,
even without budget resolution - June 30 Target for House to complete
consideration of appropriations bills
8Congressional Timeline Reality
- Congress rarely produces a timely budget
resolution, and sometimes fails completely to
approve a budget resolution - Increasingly, Congress rarely provides funds
through 13 separate appropriations bills - The omnibus appropriations act, combing several
individual bills, has become a popular funding
mechanism
9Congressional Budget Resolution
- Recent history aside, the budget resolution
remains an important part of the budget and
appropriations process - Provides reconciliation protection for tax
legislation - Establishes spending limits that set parameters
for appropriations
10Congressional Budget Resolution
- While these limits can be circumvented, they are
a hammer for deficit control - Even in FY 2005, the discretionary limit (821.9
billion) was met, via an 0.83 percent
across-the-board cut (minus DOD and DHS) - Look for significant effort in Congress to
approve an FY 2006 budget resolution
11Budget 101 Authorizations
- Theoretically, policy and spending limits are
provided by authorizors, not appropriators - Most authorizing committees, though, rarely enact
authorizing statutes - Important Exceptions
- DOD
- Intelligence
- Transportation
- Tax Reform
12Budget 101 Authorizations
- Key Committees
- House and Senate Armed Services (HASC, SASC)
- House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence
(HPSCI) Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
(SSCI) - House Transportation and Infrastructure Senate
Commerce, Science and Transportation - House Ways and Means, Senate Finance
13Budget 101 Authorizations
- National Defense Authorization Act
- Annual authorization act stands out relative to
others because it is renewed every year - Can be influential (e.g., Boeing tanker lease
issue) - Must be enacted quickly to affect DOD
appropriations - Intelligence Authorization Act
- Not as regularly enacted as DOD authorization
- More policy than spending influence
14Budget 101 Authorizations
- Transportation Authorization Acts
- More determinative of spending (and policy) than
most authorizations because laws provide contract
authority (unique among authorizations) - ISTEA, TEA-21, NEXTEA are far-reaching laws
- Tax Legislation
- Obvious budget impacts
- Budget resolution can provide reconciliation
protection key in the Senate
15Placeholder for JB Appropriations
16Back to Reality Current Budget Status
- In FY 2004, the U.S. ran a deficit of
approximately 420 billion (a record) - In FY 2005, the U.S. is estimated to run a
deficit of around 350 billion - That figure does not reflect what the U.S. will
spend on the Iraq conflict, which will likely
push the deficit above 400 billion again
17FY 2004 Budget Summary
(in billions)
18FY 2004 Budget Summary
19FY 2004 Budget Summary
20Current Status FY 2005 Highlights
- DOE Budget of 23 billion is 1 billion above FY
2004, but slightly (145 million) below the
Presidents request - AAAS calculates that federal RD spending in FY
05 will hit 132.2 billion, 4.8 percent above FY
2004 - Non-defense RD, however, is only up 2.2 percent
(AAAS)
21Whats Ahead Near Term
- Recently-passed FSC/ETI bill will add 5.7
billion to the deficit in FY 05, and 18 billion
over the next three years, according to the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) - Reports surfaced in late October that the
Administration will seek 70 billion in new FY
2005 funds for Iraq in January
22Whats Ahead Long Term
- Several Tax Cuts are not Permanent Yet
- Upper Bracket Reductions
- Estate Tax Repeal
- Dividend Tax Reduction
- Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) is sure to be
addressed - Social Security reform could have 1 trillion
impact on the deficit, however it is scored
23Whats Ahead Long Term
24Conclusion Reality Bites
- AAAS estimates that deficit reduction efforts
will hold non-DOD, non-DHS RD increases below
inflation through FY 2009 - Congress will surely work to protect its favorite
programs, but will also continue to earmark
(Taxpayers for Commons Sense says earmarks are up
400 over last ten years - Pressure to control deficits will produce pain
- NSF FY 2005 funding is below FY 2004
- DOE is rumored to face a 1 billion reduction in
FY 2006