Congressional Budget Process: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on Legislative and Budget Process and Subcommittee on Rules and Organization of the House of the Committee on Rules, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fourth Congress, First Session ... July 13, 19, and September 13, 1995U.S. Government Printing Office, 1995 - 223 lappuses |
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1.–5. rezultāts no 58.
10. lappuse
... billion . The reported deficit for that year was $ 220 billion . The deficit for 1993 - the year in which the revised targets were to require a balanced budget— was $ 255 billion . The BEA created a much different process than Gramm ...
... billion . The reported deficit for that year was $ 220 billion . The deficit for 1993 - the year in which the revised targets were to require a balanced budget— was $ 255 billion . The BEA created a much different process than Gramm ...
37. lappuse
... billion in budget authority and $ 551.7 billion in outlays . In June 1995 , the House and Senate agreed to a budget resolution that set the fiscal year 1996 602 ( a ) alloca- tions at $ 489.2 billion in budget authority and $ 534 billion ...
... billion in budget authority and $ 551.7 billion in outlays . In June 1995 , the House and Senate agreed to a budget resolution that set the fiscal year 1996 602 ( a ) alloca- tions at $ 489.2 billion in budget authority and $ 534 billion ...
44. lappuse
... this country on average in those 20 years of about 1 percent of GDP . That was about $ 30 billion , again , in con- stant dollars , that was an average of $ 30 44 Stephen Moore, Director, Fiscal Policy Studies, Cato Institute (prepared.
... this country on average in those 20 years of about 1 percent of GDP . That was about $ 30 billion , again , in con- stant dollars , that was an average of $ 30 44 Stephen Moore, Director, Fiscal Policy Studies, Cato Institute (prepared.
45. lappuse
... billion per year , so they have gone from $ 30 billion per year in real dollars to about $ 170 billion or about a six - fold in- crease . And in terms of the debt , at the time we passed the 1974 Budget Act , the debt was about one ...
... billion per year , so they have gone from $ 30 billion per year in real dollars to about $ 170 billion or about a six - fold in- crease . And in terms of the debt , at the time we passed the 1974 Budget Act , the debt was about one ...
47. lappuse
... billion revenue loss over 5 years . That is a total fiction , everyone knows it is a fallacy . We are using revenue analy- sis that everyone in this town and everybody in this Congress knows produces the wrong results . I believe , by ...
... billion revenue loss over 5 years . That is a total fiction , everyone knows it is a fallacy . We are using revenue analy- sis that everyone in this town and everybody in this Congress knows produces the wrong results . I believe , by ...
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1974 Budget Act accountability agree Allen Schick amendment annual appropriations bills automatic stabilizers balanced budget balanced budget amendment BEILENSON benefits biennial budget Bill Frenzel billion Budget Committee Budget Enforcement Act budget process reform budget resolution budgetary business cycle capital budget Chairman changes Congress congressional budget process continuing resolution costs cuts cyclical deficit David Dreier debt decisions deficit reduction discretionary caps discretionary spending dollars DREIER economic enacted entitlement caps entitlement programs entitlement spending Federal budget fiscal FRENZEL future going Goss growth increase inflation investment issue legislation line-item veto lockbox look mandatory spending Medicaid Medicare Medicare and Medicaid Members ment outlays PAYGO percent of GDP President President's priorities problem proposal question reconciliation bill reduce the deficit require rescission revenues SCHICK sequestration Social Security STENHOLM subcommittee talk testimony Thank things tion trust fund vote
Populāri fragmenti
88. lappuse - If men were angels, no Government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on Government would be necessary. In framing a Government which is to be administered by men over men, the great difficulty lies in this : you must first enable the Government to control the governed; and in the next place oblige it to control itself.
9. lappuse - Congress created the Bureau of the Budget (now the Office of Management and Budget) to review the morass of agency budgetary information and to approve agency budget requests.
82. lappuse - Mr. Cox. STATEMENT OF HON. CHRISTOPHER COX, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA Mr. Cox. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
25. lappuse - Mr. Chairmen and members of the subcommittees: I am pleased to be here today to discuss the budget process with you.
103. lappuse - PREPARED STATEMENT OF HON. STEVE LARGENT, A REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS FROM THE STATE OF OKLAHOMA Mr. Chairman, I want to thank you for holding the first in a number of hearings on electricity restructuring.
187. lappuse - It has been said, that more than a majority ought to have been required for a quorum ; and in particular cases, if not in all, more than a majority of a quorum for a decision.
67. lappuse - The system of bureaucratic despotism, elaborated finally under Diocletian and Constantine, produced a tragedy in the truest sense, such as history has seldom exhibited; in which, by an inexorable fate, the claims of fanciful omnipotence ended in a humiliating paralysis of administration; in which determined effort to remedy social evils only aggravated them until they became unendurable; in which the best intentions of the central power, were, generation after generation, mocked and defeated by irresistible...
26. lappuse - Congress declares that it is essential — (1) to assure effective congressional control over the budgetary process ; (2) to provide for the congressional determination each year of the appropriate level of Federal revenues and expenditures; (3) to provide a system of impoundment control ; (4:) to establish national budget priorities; and (5) to provide for the furnishing of information by the executive branch in a manner that will assist the Congress in discharging its duties. DEFINITIONS SEC. 3....
203. lappuse - The budget process has focused too much on producing a respectable number of "cuts"; if the cuts merely manipulate the baseline, the political pain, which is greater when programs are actually cut than when they are increased, is lessened. More important some of these cuts are then used to offset real spending increases or to protect other programs trom real spending restraint.
205. lappuse - the amount of new budget authority . . . [that] exceeds the discretionary spending limit . . . due to technical estimates made by the director of the Office of Management & Budget."ii Several billion dollars have been added to the caps through these allowance adjustments.