

Order Code RS20752
Updated September 15, 2008
Submission of the President’s Budget
in Transition Years
Robert Keith
Specialist in American National Government
Government and Finance Division
Summary
At the time of a presidential transition, one question commonly asked is whether
the outgoing or incoming President submits the budget for the upcoming fiscal year.
Under past practices, outgoing Presidents in transition years submitted a budget to
Congress just prior to leaving office and incoming Presidents usually revised them. Six
incoming presidents — Eisenhower, Kennedy, Nixon, Ford, Carter, and Reagan —
revised their predecessor’s budget shortly after taking office, while only two Presidents
during this period, Johnson and George H. W. Bush, chose not to do so.
The deadline for submission of the President’s budget, which has been changed
several times over the years, was set in 1990 as the first Monday in February. The
change made it possible for an outgoing President to leave the annual budget submission
to his successor.
The two outgoing Presidents since the 1990 change — George H. W. Bush and
Clinton — exercised this option. Accordingly, the budget was submitted by the two
incoming Presidents (Clinton for FY1994 and George W. Bush for FY2002).
The last three incoming Presidents that submitted a budget or revised their
predecessor’s budget (Reagan, Clinton, and George W. Bush) did not submit detailed
budget proposals during their transitions until early April; however, each of them
advised Congress regarding the general contours of their economic and budgetary
policies in a special message submitted to Congress in February concurrently with a
presentation made to a joint session of Congress.
President George W. Bush has indicated that he will not submit a budget for
FY2010, which is subject to a deadline of Monday, February 2, 2009. The Office of
Management and Budget will prepare a current services baseline from which the
incoming Administration can develop its budget proposals.
This report will be updated as developments warrant.
When a new Congress convenes in January, one of its first orders of business is to
receive the annual budget submission of the President. Following receipt of the
CRS-2
President’s budget, Congress begins the consideration of the budget resolution and other
budgetary legislation for the upcoming fiscal year, which starts on October 1.
The transition from one presidential administration to another raises special issues
regarding the annual budget submission. Which President — the outgoing President or
the incoming one — is required to submit the budget, and how will the transition affect
the timing and form of the submission? The purpose of this report is to provide
background information that addresses these questions.
Is the Outgoing or Incoming President Required to Submit the
Budget?
The Budget and Accounting Act of 1921,1 as amended, requires the President to
submit a budget annually to Congress toward the beginning of each regular session. This
requirement first applied to President Harding for FY1923.
The deadline for submission of the budget, first set in 1921 as “on the first day of
each regular session,” has changed several times over the years:
! in 1950, to “during the first 15 days of each regular session”;
! in 1985, to “on or before the first Monday after January 3 of each year (or
on or before February 5 in 1986)”; and
! in 1990, to “on or after the first Monday in January but not later than the
first Monday in February of each year.”
The 20th Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in 1933, requires each new
Congress to convene on January 3 (unless the date is changed by the enactment of a law)
and provides a January 20 beginning date for a new President’s four-year term of office.
Therefore, under the legal framework for the beginning of a new Congress, the beginning
of a new President’s term, and the deadline for the submission of the budget, all outgoing
Presidents prior to the 1990 change were obligated to submit a budget.2
The 1990 change in the deadline made it possible for an outgoing President to leave
the annual budget submission to his successor, an option which the two outgoing
Presidents since then (George H. W. Bush and Clinton) took.
Incoming Presidents, except for Harding, Clinton, and George W. Bush, assumed
their position with a budget of their predecessor in place. Under the 1921 act, Presidents
may submit budget revisions to Congress at any time. Six incoming Presidents chose to
modify their predecessor’s policies by submitting budget revisions shortly after taking
1 The 1921 act was P.L. 67-13 (June 10, 1921); 42 Stat. 20; 31 U.S.C. 1105.
2 For more detailed information on this matter, see U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional
Research Service, Budget Submissions of Outgoing Presidents, by Robert Keith, CRS Report 93-
672 GOV (Washington: July 21, 1993), 6 pages. (The report is archived and may be obtained
from the author.) The 1990 change was made by Section 13112(c)(1) of the Budget Enforcement
Act of 1990 (104 Stat. 1388-608 and 609), which was included in the Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-508).
CRS-3
office: Eisenhower, Kennedy, Nixon, Ford, Carter, and Reagan.3 Four Presidents —
Roosevelt, Truman, Johnson, and George H. W. Bush — chose not to submit budget
revisions.
Because President George H. W. Bush chose not to submit a budget for FY1994 (and
was not obligated to do so), President Clinton submitted the original budget for FY1994
rather than budget revisions. Similarly, the budget for FY2002 was submitted by the
incoming President George W. Bush, rather than by outgoing President Clinton. The
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) provided considerable advance notice of the
plan for FY2002.4
President George W. Bush indicated early on that he will not submit a budget for
FY2010, which is subject to a deadline of Monday, February 2, 2009. In announcing the
decision, OMB Director Jim Nussle stated:
The FY2010 budget will be submitted by the next President. In order to lay the
groundwork for the next Administration, we intend to prepare a budget database that
includes a complete current services baseline and to gather information to develop
current services program estimates for FY2010 from which the incoming
Administration can develop its budget proposals.5
Transition Budgets in Recent Years: Timing and Form
During the period beginning with the full implementation of the congressional
budget process (in FY1977), five transitions of presidential administration have occurred.
As Table 1 shows, the three outgoing Presidents required to submit a budget during this
period (Ford, Carter, and Reagan) did so on or before the statutory deadline.
Once the original budget for a fiscal year has been submitted, a President or his
successor may submit revisions at any time. Two of the incoming Presidents during this
period (Carter and Reagan) submitted budget revisions and one (George H. W. Bush) did
not. The FY1978 revisions by President Carter (a 101-page document) were submitted
on February 22 and the FY1982 revisions by President Reagan (an initial 159-page
document and a subsequent 435-page document) were submitted on March 10 and April
7, respectively.
3 U.S. Library of Congress, Congressional Research Service, The President’s Budget
Submission: Format, Deadlines, and Transition Years, by Virginia A. McMurtry and James V.
Saturno, CRS Report 88-661 GOV (Washington: October 7, 1988), pages 17-26. (The report
is archived and may be obtained from the authors.)
4 See OMB Memorandum M-00-12, Requirements for Development of the FY2002 Transition
Budget, June 2, 2000, 3 pages.
5 Office of Management and Budget, OMB Memorandum 08-17, Requirements for the FY 2010
Budget Process, April 7, 2008, p. 1, available at:
[http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/memoranda/fy2008/m08-17.pdf].
CRS-4
Table 1. Timing and Form of Presidential Budget Submissions in Transition Years:
Carter, Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Clinton, and George W. Bush Administrations
Outgoing Presidenta
Incoming Presidenta
Fiscal
Submitted a
Date of
Submitted a Budget
Date of
Year
President
Budget?
Deadlineb
Submission
President
or Budget Revisions?
Submission
1978
Ford
Yes
01-19-77
01-17-77
Carter
Yes (budget revisions)c
02-22-77
1982
Carter
Yes
01-20-81
01-15-81
Reagan
Yes (budget revisions and further
03-10-81
details)d
04-07-81
1990
Reagan
Yes
01-09-89
01-09-89
Bush
Noe
—
1994
Bush
No
02-01-93
—
Clinton
Yes (budget)
04-08-93
2002
Clinton
No
02-05-01
—
Bush
Yes (budget)
04-09-01
Source: Prepared by the Congressional Research Service.
a. The incoming President replaced the outgoing President on January 20 of the applicable year.
b. The budgets for FY1978 and FY1982 were required to be submitted within 15 days after Congress convened; the budget for FY1990 was required to be submitted
by the first Monday in January after Congress convened; and the budgets for FY1994 and FY2002 were required to be submitted by the first Monday in February.
c. The FY1978 budget revisions submitted by President Carter were printed as a 101-page document.
d. Prior to submitting FY1982 budget revisions, President Reagan submitted a document containing an economic plan and initial budget proposals (America’s New
Beginning: A Program for Economic Recovery) in conjunction with an address to a joint session of Congress on February 18, 1981. With regard to the budget
revisions, a 159-page budget document, Fiscal Year 1982 Budget Revisions, was submitted to Congress on March 10, and a 435-page budget document, Fiscal
Year 1982 Budget Revisions: Additional Details on Budget Savings, was submitted to Congress on April 7.
e. Although President Bush did not submit a revision of President Reagan’s FY1990 budget, he submitted a 193-page message to Congress (Building a Better America)
in conjunction with a joint address to Congress on February 9, 1989. The message included revised budget proposals.
CRS-5
As stated previously, Presidents Clinton and George W. Bush submitted the original
budgets for FY1994 and FY2002 as incoming Presidents (on April 8, 1993 and April 9,
2001, respectively).
In past years, Congress authorized the submission of a budget for a fiscal year after
the statutory deadline by enacting a deadline extension in law. For example, the deadlines
for submission of the budgets for FY1981, FY1984, and FY1986 were extended from
mid-January to late-January or early-February by P.L. 96-186, P.L. 97-469, and P.L. 99-1,
respectively. Beginning in the late 1980s, however, several original budgets have been
submitted late without authorization. For FY1991, the budget was submitted a week after
a deadline that already had been extended by law (P.L. 101-228); for FY1989 and the
transition-year budget for FY1994, the budget was submitted after the deadline (by 45 and
66 days, respectively) without the consideration of any measure granting a deadline
extension.
The experience with transition budgets during the period that the congressional
budget process has been in operation is roughly comparable, in terms of timing, with the
experience of earlier years. Presidents Eisenhower, Kennedy, and Nixon submitted their
revised budget messages to Congress on April 30, March 24, and April 12, respectively.6
Like the budget itself, the revisions may take whatever form the President desires.
They have ranged from piecemeal submissions in the earlier instances to consolidated
budget messages beginning with President Ford.
Although Presidents Reagan, Clinton, and George W. Bush did not submit detailed
budget proposals during their transitions until early April, each of them advised Congress
regarding the general contours of their economic and budgetary policies in special
messages submitted to Congress in February concurrently with a presentation made to a
joint session of Congress.
On February 18, 1981, President Reagan submitted a document containing an
economic plan and initial budget proposals for FY1982, America’s New Beginning: A
Program for Economic Recovery, in conjunction with an address to a joint session of
Congress.
On February 17, 1993, President Clinton submitted to Congress a budgetary
document, A Vision of Change for America, to accompany his address to a joint session
of Congress. The 145-page document outlined the President’s economic plan and
provided initial budget proposals in key areas.
On February 28, 2001, President George W. Bush submitted a 207-page budget
summary to Congress, A Blueprint for New Beginnings: A Responsible Budget for
America’s Priorities, the day after his address to a joint session of Congress.
To facilitate the development of the budget for the incoming Clinton Administration,
President George H. W. Bush submitted to Congress, on January 6, 1993, a 573-page,
single-volume budgetary document to Congress, Budget Baselines, Historical Data, and
6 The President’s Budget Submission, ibid., page 17.
CRS-6
Alternatives for the Future. Instead of constituting a budget in the usual sense, this
document provided historical data, baseline budget projections under the status quo, and
illustrations of budget projections using alternative economic assumptions and different
broad policy outlines. Similarly, President Clinton prepared a “transition budget”
incoming President George W. Bush for FY2002 (FY2002 Economic Outlook, Highlights
From FY1994 To FY2001, FY2002 Baseline Projections, January 16, 2001). The volume
was comparable in scope to the one issued for FY1994 by President George H. W. Bush
just before he left office, providing revised budget projections and an economic and
programmatic update.
Although President George H. W. Bush did not submit a revision of President
Reagan’s FY1990 budget, he submitted a 193-page message to Congress (Building a
Better America) in conjunction with a joint address to Congress on February 9, 1989. The
message included revised budget proposals.