Order Code RS21316
September 23, 2002
CRS Report for Congress
Received through the CRS Web
Budget Enforcement Procedures:
Senate Pay-As-You-Go (PAYGO) Rule
Bill Heniff Jr.
Analyst in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Summary
The Senate “pay-as-you-go,” or PAYGO, rule generally requires that any
legislation increasing direct spending or reducing revenues be offset. A motion to waive
the rule requires an affirmative vote of three-fifths of the membership (i.e., 60 Senators
if no seats are vacant). The rule is scheduled to expire on September 30, 2002.
Beginning in 1993, six points of order under the PAYGO rule have been raised
against an entire bill or an amendment. Of these six points of order, four were sustained
and two fell upon the adoption of a waiver motion.
This report will be updated as developments warrant.
Introduction
The Senate “pay-as-you-go,” or PAYGO, rule generally requires direct spending and
revenue legislation to be budget neutral over a 10-year period. Any increase in direct
spending or reduction in revenues resulting from such legislation must be offset by an
equivalent amount of direct spending cuts, tax increases, or a combination of the two.
Without an offset, such legislation would require the approval of at least 60 Senators to
waive the rule and be considered on the Senate floor.
Direct spending is provided in substantive law, and funds such mandatory items as
Medicare, unemployment compensation, and retirement programs. It is distinguished
from discretionary spending, which is controlled through the annual appropriations
process.
The Senate PAYGO rule does not apply to direct spending or revenues generated
under existing law; it applies only to legislation considered by the Senate. Consequently,
direct spending may increase and revenues may decline in any fiscal year due to factors
beyond the control of the PAYGO rule.
A statutory PAYGO requirement, as well as limits on discretionary spending, was
established by the Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA, Title XIII of P.L. 101-508, the
Congressional Research Service ˜ The Library of Congress

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Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990) and has been extended twice, in 1993 and
1997.1 Under the statutory PAYGO requirement, the net effect of new direct spending
and revenue legislation enacted for a fiscal year may not cause a positive balance
(reflecting an increase in the on-budget deficit or a reduction in the on-budget surplus) on
a multiyear PAYGO “scorecard.” For each fiscal year, this scorecard maintains the
balances of the accumulated budgetary effects of laws enacted during the session and
prior years. The statutory PAYGO requirement is enforced by sequestration, which
involves automatic, largely across-the-board spending cuts in non-exempt programs.2
The Senate PAYGO rule differs from the statutory PAYGO requirement in that it is
enforced by a point of order during consideration of legislation instead of by sequestration
after legislation is enacted into law. In addition, the Senate PAYGO rule has a 10-year
time frame whereas the statutory PAYGO requirement covers, through FY2006, the
effects of legislation enacted before the end of FY2002.
The Senate PAYGO rule, like many other budget enforcement procedures, is
scheduled to expire on September 30, 2002.3 Consequently, some Senators have indicated
an interest in extending this rule beyond the current expiration date.4
This report describes the legislative history of the Senate PAYGO rule, explains its
current features, and reviews Senate actions under the rule.
Legislative History of the Senate PAYGO Rule
1 The BEA amended the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act (Title II of P.L.
99-177), commonly known as the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Act. The 1993 and 1997 extensions
were included in Title XIV of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993 (P.L. 103-66) and
the Budget Enforcement Act of 1997 (Title X of P.L. 105-33), respectively.
2 For further information on the statutory PAYGO requirement, see CRS Report 98-721,
Introduction to the Federal Budget Process, by Robert Keith and Allen Schick; and CRS Report
RL31194, Pay-As-You-Go Requirement for FY2002: A Procedural Assessment, by Robert Keith.
3 The statutory limits on discretionary spending and the statutory PAYGO requirement for direct
spending and revenue legislation, first established by the BEA, are scheduled to expire on Sept.
30, 2002, as well. For additional information on the extension of these budget enforcement
mechanisms, see the applicable section in CRS Report RL31478, Federal Budget Process
Reform: Analysis of Five Reform Issues
, by James V. Saturno and Bill Heniff Jr. In addition, the
three-fifths vote requirements in the Senate to waive certain points of order under the
Congressional Budget Act of 1974 (CBA, Titles I-IX of P.L. 93-344), as amended, and to sustain
an appeal of a ruling of the chair on a point of order under the CBA, are scheduled to expire on
Sept. 30, 2002.
4 See, for example, Bud Newman, “Daschle Says Senate May Soon Debate Measure to Extend
Enforcement Provisions,” BNA Daily Report for Executives, no. 176 (Sept. 11, 2002), p. G-3,
and Bud Newman, “Lott Says He Will Back Senate Resolution To Extend Expiring Budget
Disciplines,” BNA Daily Report for Executives, no. 182 (Sept. 19, 2002), p. G-3.

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The Senate PAYGO rule originated in a budget resolution in 1993 and has been
modified and extended in subsequent budget resolutions over the years.5
In 1993, the Senate created the PAYGO rule as a provision in the FY1994 budget
resolution (H.Con.Res. 64) for the purpose of preventing the deficit reduction expected
to be achieved in a subsequent reconciliation bill from being used to offset the costs of
any new direct spending or revenue legislation.6 Section 12(c) of H.Con.Res. 64
prohibited the consideration of any direct spending and revenue legislation that would
increase the deficit in the FY1994 budget resolution for any fiscal year through FY1998
or would increase the deficit for any other fiscal year through FY2003. In this initial
form, the Senate PAYGO rule had no expiration date.
The Senate has modified and extended the Senate PAYGO rule three times in
subsequent budget resolutions. First, Section 23 of H.Con.Res. 218, the FY1995 budget
resolution, modified the PAYGO rule to require direct spending and revenue legislation
to be deficit neutral for any one of the three time periods contained in the current PAYGO
rule (explained below) and added an expiration date of September 30, 1998. Second,
Section 202 of H.Con.Res. 67, the FY1996 budget resolution, restated the existing
PAYGO rule language and extended its expiration date to September 30, 2002. Lastly,
Section 207 of H.Con.Res. 68, the FY2000 budget resolution, modified the PAYGO rule
to allow on-budget surpluses to be used to offset tax reductions or spending increases.
After decades of on-budget deficits, the federal government recorded a small on-budget
surplus for FY1999 and an on-budget surplus of $87 billion for FY2000.
During the 107th Congress, several attempts have been made on the Senate floor to
extend the PAYGO rule, but they were unsuccessful. On June 5, 2002, Senators Judd
Gregg and Russell Feingold offered an amendment (S.Amdt. 3687) that would have
extended expiring budget enforcement procedures, including the Senate PAYGO rule, to
H.R. 4775, the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2002. The amendment fell on a point
of order.7 The next day, June 6, Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle offered an
amendment (S.Amdt. 3764) that would have extended the Senate PAYGO rule, among
other budget enforcement procedures, through FY2007 to H.R. 4775, but that amendment
5 Such procedural provisions may be included in a budget resolution under the authority provided
by Section 301(b)(4), the so-called “elastic clause,” of the CBA. This section gives Congress the
option to include in a budget resolution other matters and procedures consistent with the purposes
of the Budget Act.
6 See U.S. Congress, Conference Committee, FY1994 Budget Resolution, conference report to
accompany H.Con.Res. 64, 103rd Cong., 1st sess., (Washington: GPO, 1993), p. 47. The
reconciliation bill enacted later that session, P.L. 103-66 (the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1993), was estimated at the time as reducing the deficit by about $500 billion over
FY1994-FY1998.
7 The amendment was subject to a point of order under Section 306 of the CBA, which prohibits
consideration of any measure within the jurisdiction of the Budget Committee unless it is
reported by the Budget Committee, discharged from the committee, or is an amendment to such
a measure. A motion to waive the point of order requires a three-fifths vote in the Senate. A
motion to waive the point of order raised against the amendment was rejected by a 49-49 vote.
See Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (June 5, 2002), pp. S5004-S5015.

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also fell on a point of order.8 Another attempt was made on June 20, 2002, during
consideration of S. 2514, the Defense Authorization Act for FY2003. Senator Feingold
offered an amendment (S.Amdt. 3915), which was modified by an amendment (S.Amdt.
3916) offered by Senators Harry Reid and Kent Conrad, that also would have extended
the expiration date of the Senate PAYGO rule, among other things, through FY2007.
This amendment also fell on a point of order.9
The Senate is expected to consider another proposal to extend expiring budget
enforcement provisions, including the Senate PAYGO rule, before October 1.
Current Senate PAYGO Rule
The current Senate PAYGO rule prohibits the consideration of direct spending or
revenue legislation that would increase or cause an on-budget deficit in any one of three
time periods: the first year, the first 5 years, and the second 5 years, covered by the most
recently adopted budget resolution. Legislation increasing or causing an on-budget deficit
is not considered as violating the rule if it is offset by direct spending and revenue
legislation enacted since the beginning of the calendar year that was not assumed in the
most recently adopted budget resolution.
A motion to waive the PAYGO rule, or to sustain an appeal of the ruling of the chair
on a point of order raised under the rule, requires an affirmative vote of three-fifths of the
membership, duly chosen and sworn (i.e., 60 Senators if no seats are vacant).
As noted above, the current Senate PAYGO rule is scheduled to expire on September
30, 2002.
Points of Order and Waiver Motions Under the Senate PAYGO
Rule

Beginning in 1993, six points of order have been raised under the Senate PAYGO
rule (see Table 1). Of these six points of order, two were raised against entire bills and
the remaining four were raised against amendments. The two points of order against
entire bills fell upon the adoption of a waiver motion, thus allowing consideration of the
bills to proceed. All four points of order against amendments were sustained and thus the
amendments fell.
A total of seven waiver motions under the PAYGO rule have been made in relation
to the six points of order. Two waiver motions were successful, while five were rejected.
8 On June 6, 2002, cloture was invoked on H.R. 4775. Under cloture, a point of order may be
raised against nongermane amendments. The chair ruled that Senator Daschle’s amendment was
not germane to the FY2002 supplemental appropriations act and the amendment fell. See
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (June 5, 2002), pp. S5015-S5018; and
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (June 6, 2002), pp. S5114-S5120.
9 The amendment was subject to a point of order under Section 306 of the CBA. A motion to
waive the point of order raised against the amendment was rejected by a 59-40 vote. See
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (June 19, 2002), pp. S5762-S5767; and
Congressional Record, daily edition, vol. 148 (June 20, 2002), pp. S5808-S5821.

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Two separate waiver motions were made relating to the point of order raised against H.R.
3167 (103rd Congress). As indicated in Table 1, the first waiver was rejected on a 59-38
vote on October 26, 1993. The next day, however, the Senate agreed to a motion to
reconsider the vote on this waiver motion by voice vote. The Senate, subsequently,
approved the waiver motion by a 61-39 vote and the point of order against H.R. 3167 fell.
Like any other Senate rule, the Senate PAYGO rule is not self-enforcing. A Senator
must raise a point of order under the rule in order to prevent the consideration of
legislation that violates the rule. During the period that the rule has been in effect, the
Senate has at times considered legislation significantly increasing direct spending or
decreasing revenues without interference from the Senate PAYGO rule, either because
a point of order was not raised or, following the change in the FY2002 budget resolution,
because the legislation fit within the available on-budget surpluses. In the past 2 years
especially, such legislation has incurred sizeable balances on the statutory PAYGO
scorecard, but PAYGO sequesters have been averted by directed scoring.10
10 See CRS Report RL31155, Techniques for Preventing a Budget Sequester, by Robert Keith.

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Table 1. Actions Under the Senate PAYGO Rule, Calendar Years 1993-2002
Disposition of
Date
Object of Point of Order
Waiver Motion
Point of Order
10/26/1993
Emergency Unemployment Compensation (H.R. 3167)
Rejected, 59-38
Fell on reconsidered
To extend the emergency unemployment compensation program, and to establish a system
vote on waiver motion
of worker profiling.
(see next item)
10/27/1993
Emergency Unemployment Compensation (H.R. 3167)
Approved, 61-39
Fell
To extend the emergency unemployment compensation program, and to establish a system
of worker profiling.
10/27/1993
Emergency Unemployment Compensation (H.R. 3167)
Rejected, 36-61
Sustained
Bumpers modified amendment no. 1084, to repeal the retroactive income, estate, and gift
tax increase and compensate for the lost revenue by terminating the Space Station program.
12/01/1994
GATT (H.R. 5110)
Approved, 68-32
Fell
To approve and implement the trade agreements concluded in the Uruguay Round of
multilateral trade negotiations.
09/11/1996
Treasury/Postal Service Appropriations, 1997 (H.R. 3756)
Rejected, 51-48
Sustained
Wyden-Kennedy amendment no. 5206 (to committee amendment beginning on page 16,
line 16, through page 17, line 2), to prohibit the restriction of certain types of medical
communications between a health care provider and a patient.
05/07/1998
IRS Reform (H.R. 2676)
Rejected, 37-60
Sustained
Coverdell amendment no. 2353, to prohibit the use of random audits.
07/28/1998
Treasury/Postal Service Appropriations, 1999 (S. 2312)
Rejected, 49-49
Sustained
Hutchinson amendment no. 3249, to terminate the Internal Revenue Code of 1986.
Source: Congressional Record, various years, especially the Daily Digest section, searched through the Legislative Information System [http://www.congress.gov].