Title: Breaking Down the Federal Budget
1Breaking Down the Federal Budget
- Steps in the Budget ProcessandWhere the Money
Goes
2Federal Budget
- Annual plan outlining proposed revenues and
expenditures for the coming year - If balanced revenuesexpenses
- If a deficit expensesgtrevenues
3Spending Priorities
- Based upon broad economic goals
- Wishes of Executive and Legislative branch
- Special Interest Groups
- Citizens
4The Budget Process
- Executive branch agencies submit requests for
funds to the Office of Management and Budget. - President prepares and then submits to Congress a
proposed budget for next fiscal year (begins Oct.
1) - Congress reviews proposed budget submitted by
President, develops its own budget, and votes on
spending and revenue bills.
5Budget Process (continued)
- After Congress reviews and passes, and the
President signs, the required spending bills, the
budget is created.
6Specific Role of Congress in Budget Process
- Passes a budget resolution which outlines the
basic parameters within which Congress makes its
spending and taxing decisions. - Includes targets for Mandatory spending (2/3 of
all spending) which is authorized by permanent
laws. Includes Social Security and other social
safety net programs. - Includes targets for Discretionary spending (1/3
of all spending) which is decided upon through 13
annual appropriations bills. Includes money for
foreign aid and defense.
7Restrictions to Budget
- Law imposed Cap (or limit) through 2002 on total
annual discretionary spending. Levels of spending
can be changed for funded programs. (Being
Ignored!) - Law requires the increases in spending be offset
by increases in revenues (i.e. increases in
taxes). Pay-as-you-go plan designed to prevent
new spending priorities from increasing the
deficit.
8Breaking down the Budget
9The Budget Breakdown Basics
- Expected budget expenditure will be nearly 1.8
trillion in FY2000 - Expected surplus of over 117 billion in FY2000
- Total of nine (9) spending categories
- 52 of all federal spending is for Mandatory
Spending priorities
10Major Mandatory Spending Categories
- Social Security (Largest Federal Program)
- 22 of all Federal Spending
- Medicare
- 12 of all Federal Spending
- Medicaid
- 6 of all Federal Spending
11Major Mandatory Spending Categories
- Means-tested entitlements (such as Food Stamps,
Veterans pensions, Earned Income Tax Credit,
etc.) - 6 of Federal Spending
- Remaining Mandatory Spending (Federal retirement
and insurance programs, unemployment insurance,
payments to farmers, etc.) - 6 of Federal Spending
12Discretionary Spending Categories
- National Defense Spending
- 16 of Federal Budget
- Non-Defense discretionary spending for programs
such as education, technology, science, foreign
aid, etc. - 17 of Federal Budget
- Interest payments resulting from previous budget
deficits. Currently a surplus. - 11 of Federal Budget
13(No Transcript)
14Breakdown of President Bill Clinton's proposed
fiscal year 2000 budget
Revenues 1.883 trillion Outlays 1.766
trillion Surplus 117.3 billion Discretionary
outlays 591.5 billion Mandatory outlays
959.0 billion Interest 215.2 billion
15Budget Surpluses and Deficits
16 Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott, R-Miss.,
became the first leader to bid farewell to
spending caps, which until recently leaders were
still pledging to uphold. (AP Photo)
By A.B. Stoddard ABCNEWS.com
W A S H I N G T O N, Nov. 4 Its an open secret
on Capitol Hill The GOP leadership in Congress
has quietly killed spending restrictions that
helped create the historic budget surplus and is
planning to bury them without a funeral.
The time of death came Tuesday, when the Senate
sent its final appropriations bill to President
Clinton to veto, marking congressional
Republicans official abandonment of spending
restraints they imposed upon themselves in the
Balanced Budget Act of 1997.
17Budget Surplus
- As a result of cost cutting, 6 of the federal
dollar will not be spent and is considered a
surplus. Approximately 117 billion. - Off-budget Social Security program had a 124
billion surplus in FY1999 - Only by combining the on-budget and off-budget
numbers into a unified budget figure can it be
claimed that the federal government ran a surplus
for fiscal year 1999 -
18Surplus is to be reserved until a Social Security
revitalization plan is enacted.
Treasury Secretary Lawrence
Summers said that "reducing the supply of
Treasury debt held by the public brings enormous
benefits for our economy". (Discussion with BBC
on how to use the surplus)
19Last year, the government
had a surplus of 69.2 billion. For the
first time in 25 years, the US government plans
to reduce the size of the national debt.
The news represents a transformation of the US
budget position, after struggling with huge
deficits for most of the last decade.
Data from BBC Wednesday, August 4, 1999 Published
at 1654 GMT 1754 UK
20Official projections suggest trillions of dollars
in budget
surpluses over the next 15 years, boosted by a
strong economy
and strict controls on spending.
Data from BBC Wednesday, August 4, 1999 Published
at 1654 GMT 1754 UK
21Democrats and Republicans dont agree on what to
do with the growing US budget surplus.
- Republicans are proposing a tax cut
- President Clinton and the Democrats want to add
funds to the social security
retirement program and Medicare,
which provides health care for
older people. - Clinton administration indicated that it was
also prepared to consider using some
of the surplus to reduce the overall
government debt.
22The Budget Deficit and the National Debt
- According to Keyensian theory, deficit spending
to stimulate the economy is acceptable. - When government spends more than they take in
(expenses greater than revenues) this is called
deficit spending. - The Federal Debt represents money we borrowed to
make up the difference in revenues collected and
revenues spent.
23The Deficit
- The Deficit is the yearly amount by which
spending exceeds revenue. - Current deficit shrank to just 1 billion (for
on-budget accounts) in fiscal year 1999 without
counting the social security surplus - Reducing the deficit means we're adding less to
the Debt this year than we did last year.
24The National Debt
- The National Debt is the total amount of money
owed by the government. - It is calculated by adding up all the deficits
(and surpluses) incurred by the government over
the past 200 plus years. - The National Debt has continued to increase an
average of 211 million per day since November
30, 1998 (compliments of Ed Hall, The National
Debt Clock edhall_at_brillig.com)
25 26National Debt Clock
The estimated population of the United States is
273,998,792 so each citizen's share
of this debt is 20,679.22.
Total National debt projected in FY2000 is 2.07
Trillion rising to 4.09 trillion (or 36.4 of
GDP) by FY2005
27Ownership of the National Debt
28Burning Questions to Answer
The FY2000 budget projected budget anticipates a
surplus of over 117 billion. Should this
surplus be used to help eliminate the deficit,
shore up the social security safety net, increase
funding for other socially desirable programs, or
be returned to the tax payer via tax cuts? Our
government is trying to make those very decisions
as we sit here in class today! Your assignment
is to Review current expenditure proposals and
priorities. Read the public opinion and the
national budget debate articles on the handout I
will provide. Develop a plan on how the U.S.
should spend the budget surplus.