Title: Report to the Chairman
1- Report to the Chairman
- On the
- 108th Congress, 1st Session
21st Session Overview
- Big Changes
- New Majority Leader
- New Budget Committee Chairman
- Seven new majority Budget Committee members
- Deteriorating fiscal situation
- Deficits rising due to slumping economy,
expensive war on terrorism, and investments in
homeland security. - After hitting 2.0 trillion in 2000, federal
revenues fell for three straight years to 1.8
trillion in 2003. -
- Unfinished business
- Spent nearly a month (Jan 15 to Feb 13)
completing work on eleven unfinished 2003
appropriations bills. - Completed Budget Resolution in near-record time
- Received Presidents budget on February 3
- Received CBO re-estimate on March 7
- Reported S.Con.Res. 23 on March 15
- Passed S.Con.Res. 23 on March 26
- Passed H.Con.Res. 95 on April 11
32004 Budget Resolution Recap
- Senate Budget Committee hearings 8
- Amendments considered in Committee mark-up 32
- Amendments considered on the Senate floor 81
- Days of Senate floor consideration 8
- Days of vote-a-rama 3
- Vote on conference agreement 51-50 (VP voted
aye) - Total spending in 2004 2.3 trillion
- Total spending over 10 years 28.1 trillion
- Total revenue in 2004 1.9 trillion
- Total revenue over 10 years 26.7 trillion
- Budget balanced by 2012.
4The Economy
- THEN
- Payroll jobs were declining, oil prices were
rising, GDP growth was slowing, and consumer
confidence was waning. The risk of a second
economic downturn was a very real concern at the
beginning of 2003. - The economic outlook was further clouded by a
potential war in Iraq and the specter of
deflation. Most economists agreed that the
downside risks to economic growth far outweighed
the possibility of an unexpected increase. - NOW
- Real GDP increased at an 8.2 percent annualized
pace in the third quarter of 2003, registering
the fastest rate of growth in two decades. - The current Blue Chip consensus forecast for real
GDP growth in 2004 is 4.6, one percentage point
higher than its forecast a year ago. - The combined market capitalization of the NYSE
and the NASDAQ increased 35 percent from 11.1
trillion to 15.1 trillion from February 2003 to
December 2003. - Over the last five months, the economy created
more than a quarter of a million new jobs.
5Discretionary Spending
- Even though the Budget Resolution passed prior to
the April 15 deadline, both the House and Senate
Appropriations Committees waited two months
before moving appropriation bills. - This delay and other difficulties resulted in
adjournment in 2003 without enactment of seven of
the thirteen regular appropriations bills. - With enactment of the Omnibus, total
discretionary spending for the year will end up
just under 3 percent higher than last year,
factoring in supplementals in both 2003 and 2004. - Not including supplementals in either year, total
discretionary spending will rise at about the
rate envisioned by the Budget Resolution - 2.3
percent. - However, nondefense spending grew substantially
more than the Presidents request, mostly at the
expense of the defense budget.
6Discretionary Spending Growth Budget Authority in
Billions of Dollars TOTAL APPROPRIATIONS
(including 2003 2004 supplementals) 2003 2004
Change Defense 454.9 459.9 1.1 Nondefense 39
4.2 413.6 4.9 TOTAL 849.2 873.5 2.9 REGULA
R APPROPRIATIONS (excluding 2003 2004
supplementals) 2003 2004 Change Defense 392.1
394.7 0.6 Nondefense 375.9 391.3 4.1 TOTAL
768.1 785.9 2.3
7Non-Defense, Non-Homeland SpendingMuch Higher
than Presidents RequestBudget Authority in
Billions
1.8 billion rescission of defense for nondefense
(in Omnibus)
3 billion shift from defense to nondefense (June
12 WH appropriations agreement)
2.2 billion shift of advances from 2004 to 2003
(June 12 WH appropriations agreement)
8Mandatory Spending
The Budget Resolution provided for 497 billion
in net new mandatory spending from 2003-2013, the
large majority of which was dedicated to
Medicare. Congress approved slightly less in new
mandatory spending than was budgeted over the
2003-2013 period, however spending increases in
2003 and 2004 exceeded the Budget Resolutions
assumptions. Congress also approved large
spending increases for veterans concurrent
receipt (40 billion), aid to states (20
billion), and unemployment insurance (8 billion)
that were not included in the Budget
Resolution. The Budget Resolutions most
significant proposal to reduce mandatory spending
-- medical malpractice reform (-15 billion) --
was not enacted.
- Billions of Dollars Budgeted Spent
- Medicare 400 395
- Uninsured 50 0
- Growth package outlays 27 10
- EGTRRA permanence outlays 22 0
- State Aid 0 20
- Veterans concurrent receipt 0 40
- Unemployment insurance 0 8
- Medical malpractice reform - 15 0
- Customs User Fees - 18 - 2
- All other 31 10
- TOTAL MANDATORY SPENDING 497 481
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10Tax Cuts
- The Budget Resolution provided for 1.2 trillion
in tax relief over eleven years. - Congress only enacted 322 billion in tax cuts,
almost all of which was attributable to the Jobs
Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act. - Other major tax relief initiatives, such as
permanent extension of the 2001 Bush tax cut,
were not considered. - The conference agreement on the Energy Policy
Act, which was subject to a filibuster in the
Senate as the year concluded, would have added
23.5 billion in tax cuts to that total.
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12Budget Enforcement
- The Budget Resolution restored and strengthened
budget discipline by establishing - Enforceable caps on discretionary spending for
2003, 2004, and 2005, - Limits on advance and non-defense emergency
appropriations, and - A pay-as-you-go point of order against mandatory
spending increases or revenue decreases in excess
of the budget. - After Congress approved the 2004 Budget
Resolution, the Senate voted 61 times on motions
to waive the Budget Act. - The motion to waive was agreed to on only two
occasions and only one of those waivers was for
increased spending. - Of the 61 points of order raised, over half (35)
occurred during debate on appropriations bills,
saving taxpayers more than 800 billion over ten
years.
13Other Budget Oversight Activities
- SBC majority staff reviewed the budget impact of
nearly every bill and resolution placed on the
Senate calendar. - A budget-impact Senate Calendar was provided on
a regular basis to leadership and cloakroom staff
providing guidance on the more than 200 bills
with a direct spending or revenue impact. - The majority staff also continued to produce the
Budget Bulletin, a semi-weekly analysis and
commentary on timely budget and fiscal issues. - Twenty-three issues of the Bulletin containing
about 75 articles were circulated to hundreds of
individuals and posted on the committee website. - (http//budget.senate.gov/republican/)
14Outlook for the 2nd Session
- Big deficits, looming entitlement crunch,
significant uncertainties (War on Terrorism) - Presidential politics
- Challenging timetable
- Presidential nominating conventions extend the
summer recess by two additional weeks,
compressing the amount of time available to
process appropriations bills. - Early spring recess (March 15-19) falls in the
middle of the budget process. - Popular, but expensive, legislation
- Highway bill