NCI Fact Book


Book Description




Legislatures and the Budget Process


Book Description

What is the role of legislatures in the budget process? Do powerful assemblies give rise to pro-spending bias? This survey of legislative budgeting tackles these questions using cross-national data and case studies. It highlights the tension between legislative authority and prudent fiscal policy, exploring strategies for reconciliation.







Historical Tables


Book Description

Provides data on budget receipts, outlays, surpluses or deficits, Federal debt, and Federal employment over an extended time period.




Dynamic Energy Budget Theory for Metabolic Organisation


Book Description

The Dynamic Energy Budget theory unifies the commonalities between organisms and links different levels of biological organisation.




Updated Summary Tables, May 2009


Book Description

This volume presents the official Budget Message of the President and information on his budget proposals. The report also contains detailed information on the various appropriations and funds, and highlights significant presentations of data. Statistics are provided for the following: budget receipts; outlays; and surpluses or deficits over an extended time period.A variety of supplemental volumes are available for the Budget, along with the new Performance and Management Assessment that provides information on why certain funds were allocated as they were. 2010 is the first edition year for this Updated Summary Tables volume. Contains a set of summary tables updated and expanded from the February FY 2010 President's Budget overview.







A New Era of Responsibility


Book Description

Synopsis: This document provides a description of the Obama Administration's fiscal policies and major budgetary initiatives. This document is an overview of the full Fiscal Year 2010 Budget, expected to be released by June 30, 2009.




Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2010-2021


Book Description

The United States faces daunting economic and budgetary challenges. The economy has struggled to recover from the recent recession, which was triggered by a large decline in house prices and a financial crisis—events unlike anything this country has seen since the Great Depression. During the recovery, the pace of growth in the nation's output has been anemic compared with that during most other recoveries since World War II, and the unemployment rate has remained quite high. For the federal government, the sharply lower revenues and elevated spending deriving from the financial turmoil and severe drop in economic activity—combined with the costs of various policies implemented in response to those conditions and an imbalance between revenues and spending that predated the recession—have caused budget deficits to surge in the past two years. The deficits of $1.4 trillion in 2009 and $1.3 trillion in 2010 are, when measured as a share of gross domestic product (GDP), the largest since 1945—representing 10.0 percent and 8.9 percent of the nation's output, respectively. For 2011, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projects that if current laws remain unchanged, the federal budget will show a deficit of close to $1.5 trillion, or 9.8 percent of GDP. The deficits in CBO's baseline projections drop markedly over the next few years as a share of output and average 3.1 percent of GDP from 2014 to 2021. Those projections, however, are based on the assumption that tax and spending policies unfold as specified in current law. Consequently, they understate the budget deficits that would occur if many policies currently in place were continued, rather than allowed to expire as scheduled under current law.