Discretionary Budget Authority by Subfunction: An Overview

December 16, 2016 (R41726)
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Contents

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Tables

Summary

This report provides a graphical overview of historical trends in discretionary budget authority (BA) from FY1977 through FY2016, preliminary estimates for FY2016 spending, and the levels reflecting the President's proposals for FY2016 through FY2021 using data from the FY2017 budget submission released on February 9, 2016. This report, by illustrating trends in broad budgetary categories, provides a starting point for discussions about fiscal priorities. Other CRS products analyze spending trends in specific functional areas. Functional categories (e.g., national defense, agriculture, etc.) provide a means to compare federal funding for activities within broad policy areas that often cut across several federal agencies. Subfunction categories provide a finer division of funding levels within narrower policy areas. Budget function categories are used within the budget resolution and for other purposes, such as estimates of tax expenditures.

Discretionary spending is provided and controlled through appropriations acts, which provide budget authority to federal agencies to fund many of the activities commonly associated with such federal government functions as running executive branch agencies, congressional offices and agencies, and international operations of the government. Essentially all spending on federal wages and salaries is discretionary. Administrative costs for entitlement programs such as Social Security are generally funded by discretionary spending, while mandatory spending—not shown in figures presented in this report—generally funds the benefits provided through those programs. For some federal programs, such as surface transportation, the division of expenditures into discretionary and mandatory categories can be complex.

Spending in this report is measured and illustrated in terms of discretionary budget authority as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP). Measuring spending as a percentage of GDP in effect controls for inflation and population increases. A flat line on such graphs indicates that spending has increased at the same rate as overall economic growth. In some cases, rescissions, offsetting receipts, or budgetary scorekeeping adjustments can result in negative budget authority.

Spending caps and budget enforcement mechanisms established in the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25; BCA) strongly affected recent budgets. The BCA set discretionary spending caps on defense (budget function 050) and non-defense funding and created a formula to lower those caps to achieve a portion of spending cuts called for in the BCA. Congress modified BCA caps several times, first for FY2013 as part of the fiscal cliff deal at the start of January 2013 (American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012; P.L. 112-240), then through the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013 (BBA2013; P.L. 113-67), and more recently through the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (P.L. 114-74), thus avoiding decreases in levels of discretionary funding. The Obama Administration, in its FY2017 budget submission, proposed raising caps further to allow higher spending on domestic and military priorities.

A first continuing resolution (P.L. 114-223) was enacted on September 29, 2016, which provides discretionary funding through December 9, 2016. A second continuing resolution (P.L. 114-254) was enacted on December 10, 2016, that extends funding through April 28, 2017. As the 115th Congress prepares to begin the FY2018 budget cycle, past spending trends may help frame policy discussions. For example, rapid growth in national defense and other security spending during the past decade, along with the fiscal consequences and responses to the 2007-2009 Great Recession, has played an important role in fiscal discussions. Since FY2010, base defense discretionary spending has essentially been held flat and non-defense discretionary spending has been reduced significantly. The base defense budget excludes war funding (Overseas Contingency Operations/Global War on Terror). While war funding levels are well below those of the last decade, they still represent significant commitments of federal resources.


Discretionary Budget Authority by Subfunction: An Overview

Introduction

This report presents figures showing trends in discretionary budget authority as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) by subfunction within each of 17 budget function categories, using data from President Obama's FY2017 budget submission.1 This report provides a graphical overview of historical trends in discretionary budget authority from FY1977 through FY2015, estimates for FY2016 spending, and the levels consistent with the President's proposals for FY2017 through FY2021.2 Spending in this report is shown as a percentage of GDP to control for the effects of inflation, population growth, and growth in per capita income.3

Discretionary spending is provided and controlled through appropriations acts. These acts fund many of the activities commonly associated with federal government functions, such as running executive branch agencies, congressional offices and agencies, and international operations of the government.4 Thus, the figures showing trends in discretionary budget authority (BA) presented below do not reflect the much larger expenditures on program benefits supported by mandatory spending. For some program areas, such as surface transportation, the division of expenditures into discretionary and mandatory categories can be complex.

Discretionary spending in this report is measured in terms of BA. Budget authority for an agency has been compared to having funds in a checking account. Funds are available, subject to congressional restrictions, and can be used to enter into obligations such as contracts or hiring personnel. Outlays occur when the U.S. Treasury disburses funds to honor those obligations. Thus, outlays follow BA with a lag. For personnel costs, lags are generally short and outlays mostly occur in the same year that BA is provided. For large and complex projects, outlays may be spread over several years. Nearly all budget authority eventually results in outlays, although some major federal initiatives were later curtailed or cancelled, resulting in the rescission of BA. For instance, most funding for the Carter Administration's synthetic fuels program and the Obama Administration's plans for high-speed rail did not result in outlays.

In some cases, changes in funding levels recorded in historical budget data reflect changes in budgetary concepts or the budgetary treatment of some types of spending. For example, the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (P.L. 101-508) changed the budgetary treatment of federal loan and other credit programs starting in FY1992.

Discussions about the appropriate levels of spending for various policy objectives of the federal government have played an important role in congressional deliberations over funding measures in the last several years. For example, rapid growth in national defense and other security spending in the past decade has played an important role in fiscal discussions. In particular, concerns about the trajectory of fiscal policy led to the reestablishment of statutory caps on discretionary funding in the 2011 Budget Control Act (P.L. 112-25).

A first continuing resolution (P.L. 114-223), enacted on September 29, 2016, which provided discretionary funding through December 9, 2016, included a 0.496% across-the-board reduction relative to the previous fiscal year's levels for most federal programs. A second continuing resolution (P.L. 114-254) was enacted on December 10, 2016, that extends funding through April 28, 2017. Past spending trends may prove useful in framing policy discussions as the 115th Congress prepares to confront a new set of challenges as it considers a federal budget for FY2018.

Overview of Recent Discretionary Spending

Spending caps and associated budget enforcement mechanisms, along with modifications of BCA provisions, framed policy discussions during recent budget cycles. Fiscal policy became a central concern of Congress in the wake of the 2007-2009 Great Recession. Government deficits and debt typically rise after serious financial crises and economic downturns for two main reasons. First, tax revenues typically drop during economic downturns. Second, as recession reduces incomes for many households, spending increases due to the effect of "automatic stabilizers"—that is, programs that provide benefits linked to income levels or unemployment. In addition, Congress passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA; P.L. 111-5), which combined a package of increased federal funding on education, energy, and other areas; greater support for state and local governments; and tax reductions.

The Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25; BCA) was enacted in August 2011 in part due to concerns over rising deficits and debt levels.5 The BCA reinstated statutory caps on discretionary spending, similar to those that had lapsed in 2002, and set up budget enforcement mechanisms designed to achieve $2.1 trillion in savings over the period FY2012-FY2021. Imposition of an initial set of discretionary caps was estimated to save about $900 billion over 10 years. A bipartisan Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, popularly known as the "Super Committee," was charged with developing a plan to reduce deficits by $1.2 trillion or more.

When that committee did not report a plan by a November 2011 deadline, backup budget enforcement measures were triggered, including a January 2013 sequester (cancellation of budgetary resources), and a revised set of discretionary caps on funding for defense (defined as the national defense budget function 050) and non-defense programs (all other) for FY2013-FY2021.6 Those revised caps were to be lowered in each year by an amount calculated by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) according to a formula designed to achieve a pro-rated share of the $1.2 trillion that a Joint Select Committee plan did not achieve. An annual sequester of non-exempt mandatory spending accounts also contributes to those savings.

The spending trajectory implied by those backup enforcement measures implied discretionary base defense spending would revert to a level slightly above its FY2007 level in real dollar terms (i.e., adjusting for inflation but not for growth in population or the economy), while non-defense discretionary spending would revert to a level near its 2003 level.7 Discretionary spending as a share of GDP, if BCA caps remain in place, would decline to levels well below those seen in recent decades. Congressional Budget Office (CBO) current-law baseline projections suggest that discretionary spending would account for 5.3% of GDP in FY2026, two percentage points below its level in FY2007 (7.3%), just before the start of the Great Recession.

Congress Has Modified BCA Caps to Mitigate Fiscal Stringency

The stringency of BCA discretionary spending caps and backup enforcement measures prompted Congress and the President to adjust those limits to avoid dislocations of federal operations. The Bipartisan Budget Act (BBA; H.J.Res. 59; P.L. 113-67), enacted in December 2013, modified BCA limits for FY2014 and FY2015. The Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (BBA2015; P.L. 114-74) raised FY2016 and FY2017 cap levels on both categories by $25 billion and FY2017 cap levels by $15 billion. BCA caps for FY2018 through FY2021, however, have not been changed.8 Absent new legislative modifications, those caps will constrain budgetary decisions for FY2016. The Obama Administration had proposed raising BCA caps to allow more spending for non-defense and defense priorities.9

Some types of spending are not subject to caps, such as war spending, certain amounts of disaster relief assistance, and program integrity initiatives. In particular, war-designated funding has been seen as a "relief valve" that has taken budgetary pressure off priority military and international programs.10 Actual discretionary budget authority totals will therefore differ from BCA discretionary caps.11 In addition, scorekeeping adjustments typically lead to differences between scored totals of budget authority used to check conformity to BCA spending limits and other budget totals that do not include those adjustments.

Federal Budget Data and Concepts

Figures in this report are based on the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Public Budget Database accompanying the FY2017 budget release.12 Table 5.1 in the Historical Tables volume of the FY2017 budget reports budget authority by function and subfunction, but does not provide a breakdown by discretionary and mandatory subcomponents.13

OMB Budget Data

OMB's public budget data generally do not reflect budgetary categories used in the congressional budget process such as emergency-designated funding, the appropriations subcommittee responsible for an account, or distinctions between war and base funding. OMB maintains more detailed budget data for its internal work.

Budget data in OMB documents may differ from other budget data for various reasons, although differences in historical data are typically small. For example, appropriations budget documents often reflect scorekeeping adjustments. Budget data issued at a later date may include revisions. In some cases, detailed appropriations data may differ from OMB data, which sometimes do not reflect certain relatively small zero-balance transfers among funds. Differences may also reflect technical differences or different interpretations of federal budget concepts.

Negative Budget Authority

Within the federal budget concepts, certain inflows, such as offsetting receipts, offsetting collections, some user fees, and "profits" from federal loan programs, are treated as negative budget authority.14

Provisions in appropriations acts that affect mandatory spending programs, known as CHIMPs (changes in mandatory programs) can be counted as negative discretionary spending according to federal budgetary scorekeeping guidelines. For example, a sharp downward spike in proposed spending for subfunction 754 (criminal justice assistance), shown in Figure 17, reflects a CHIMP affecting the Crime Victims Fund. That CHIMP, however, has had little effect on programmatic spending levels. Similarly, a CHIMP affecting the State Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) explains a dip in subfunction 551 (health care services) shown in Figure 6.

Federal Credit Programs

Disbursements for federal loan and loan guarantee programs do not appear directly in federal spending data. The federal government has used a form of accrual accounting for loan and loan guarantee programs since passage of the Federal Credit Reform Act (FCRA; Title V of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990; P.L. 101-508) as well as for certain federal retirement programs.15 OMB calculates net subsidy rates according to FCRA rules for loan and loan guarantee programs. The net subsidy cost is then reflected in federal spending data. In general, FCRA adjustments affect mandatory spending more than discretionary spending because the largest sources of federal credit are mandatory programs.16

Comparisons of estimates of federal credit program costs before and after FY1991 should be treated with caution because FCRA changed the budgetary treatment of federal credit programs. For instance, the budgetary costs of loan guarantee programs before FCRA rules came into effect were typically understated because they required no upfront federal disbursements, unlike loan programs. Conversely, the budgetary costs of federal loan programs, which required upfront federal disbursements, did not reflect future repayments. FCRA changes in budgetary treatment of credit programs made loan and loan guarantee programs more comparable. Loan or loan guarantee program cost estimates calculated before FCRA implementation are unlikely to be comparable to estimates calculated afterward.

FCRA calculations sometimes yield negative net subsidy levels, implying that the federal government appears to make a profit on those loans.17 FCRA subsidy calculations, however, omit risk adjustments.18 The true economic cost of federal credit guarantees can be substantially underestimated when risk adjustments are omitted.19

Background on Functional Categories

Functional categories provide a means to compare federal funding for activities within broad policy areas that often cut across several federal agencies.20 Various federal agencies may have closely related or overlapping responsibilities and many agencies have responsibilities in diverse policy areas. Budget data divided along functional categories therefore provide a useful view of federal activities supporting specific national purposes. Superfunction categories, which provide a higher level division of federal activities, are

Budget function categories, grouped by superfunctions, are shown in Table 1. Net Interest, Allowances, and Undistributed Offsetting Receipts could also be considered as separate categories. Superfunction categories for National Defense, Net Interest, Allowances, and Undistributed Offsetting Receipts coincide with function categories. Trends in net interest are excluded, as federal interest expenditures have been automatically appropriated since 1847. Allowances, which contain items reflecting technical budget adjustments, and undistributed offsetting receipts are also excluded. Allowances in FY2017 include a placeholder amount for immigration reform, adjustments to BCA non-defense caps, future disaster funding costs, an adjustment for certain benefit payments, and war funding (Overseas Contingency Operations/OCO; Global War on Terror/GWOT) for years after FY2017.21 In this report, the International Affairs function, which OMB includes in the Other Functions superfunction, is listed after National Defense because similar influences affect both.

Table 1. Budget Function Categories by Superfunction

Superfunction

Code

Function / Subfunction

National Defense

 

 

 

50

National defense

 

51

Dept. of Defense-Military

 

53

Atomic energy defense activities

 

54

Defense-related activities

International Affairs

150

International affairs

 

151

Intl. dev. and humanitarian assistance

 

152

Intl. security assistance

 

153

Conduct of foreign affairs

 

154

Foreign information & exchange activities

 

155

Intl. financial programs

Human Resources

 

 

 

500

Education, training, employment, and social services

 

501

Elementary, secondary, and vocational education

 

502

Higher education

 

503

Research and general education aids

 

504

Training and employment

 

505

Other labor services

 

506

Social services

 

550

Health

 

551

Health care services

 

552

Health research and training

 

554

Consumer and occupational health and safety

 

570

Medicare

 

571

Medicare

 

600

Income security

 

601

Gen. retirement & disability insurance (exc. Soc. Sec.)

 

602

Federal employee retirement and disability

 

603

Unemployment compensation

 

604

Housing assistance

 

605

Food and nutrition assistance

 

609

Other income security

 

650

Social security

 

651

Social security

 

700

Veterans benefits and services

 

701

Income security for veterans

 

702

Veterans education, training, & rehabilitation

 

703

Hospital and medical care for veterans

 

704

Veterans housing

 

705

Other veterans benefits and services

Physical Resources

 

 

 

270

Energy

 

271

Energy supply

 

272

Energy conservation

 

274

Emergency energy preparedness

 

276

Energy information, policy, and regulation

 

300

Natural resources and environment

 

301

Water resources

 

302

Conservation and land management

 

303

Recreational resources

 

304

Pollution control and abatement

 

306

Other natural resources

 

370

Commerce and housing credit

 

371

Mortgage credit

 

372

Postal service

 

373

Deposit insurance

 

376

Other advancement of commerce

 

400

Transportation

 

401

Ground transportation

 

402

Air transportation

 

403

Water transportation

 

407

Other transportation

 

450

Community and regional development

 

451

Community development

 

452

Area and regional development

 

453

Disaster relief and insurance

Other Functions

 

 

 

250

General science, space, and technology

 

251

General science and basic research

 

252

Space flight, research & supporting activities

 

350

Agriculture

 

351

Farm income stabilization

 

352

Agricultural research and services

 

750

Administration of justice

 

751

Federal law enforcement activities

 

752

Federal litigative and judicial activities

 

753

Federal correctional activities

 

754

Criminal justice assistance

 

800

General government

 

801

Legislative functions

 

802

Executive direction and mgmt.

 

803

Central fiscal operations

 

804

General property and records mgmt.

 

805

Central personnel mgmt.

 

806

General purpose fiscal assistance

 

808

Other general government

 

809

Deductions for offsetting receipts

Net Interest

 

 

 

900

Net interest

 

901

Interest on Treasury debt securities (gross)

 

902

Interest received by on-budget trust funds

 

903

Interest received by off-budget trust funds

 

908

Other interest

 

909

Other Investment and income

Allowances

 

 

 

920

Allowances

 

923

Immigration Reform

 

924

Adjustment for BCA Cap on Non-Security Spending

 

925

Future Disaster Costs

 

928

Adjustment to Benefit Payment Timing

 

929

Plug for Outyear War Costs

Undistributed Offsetting Receipts

 

 

 

950

Undistributed offsetting receipts

 

951

Employer share, employee retirement (on-budget)

 

952

Employer share, employee retirement (off-budget)

 

953

Rents & royalties on the Outer Continental Shelf

 

954

Sale of major assets

 

959

Other undistributed offsetting receipts

Source: CRS, based on OMB data.

Note: Allowances subfunctions can change from one year to the next.

Subfunction categories provide a finer division of funding levels within narrower policy areas.22 Budget functions do not play a role in budget enforcement, although budget legislation mandates that budget resolutions list preferred spending levels by budget function, thus highlighting broad fiscal priorities.23

Historical Spending Trends

Federal spending trends in functional areas are affected by changing assessments of national priorities, evolving international challenges, and economic conditions, as well as changing social characteristics and demographics of the U.S. population. Some of the trends and events that have had dramatic effects on federal spending are outlined below. Other CRS products provide background on more specific policy areas. The discussion of budgetary trends is broken up into three broad categories: defense and international affairs, domestic social programs, and other federal programs.

Spending in the following figures, as noted above, is shown as a percentage of GDP, which controls for the effects of inflation, population growth, and real income growth. A flat line on such graphs indicates that spending in that category is increasing at the same rate as overall economic growth.

Defense and International Affairs

The National Defense (050) and International Affairs (150) budget functions have been the categories most affected by larger changes in the geopolitical role of the United States.

Cold War, Peace Dividend, and the Global War on Terror

The allocation of discretionary spending between defense and non-defense programs is one reflection of changing federal priorities over time. Figure 1 shows defense and non-defense discretionary funding as a percentage of GDP.

Figure 1. Discretionary Defense and Non-Defense Spending

Budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: Defense is defined as funding for the National Defense (050) budget function; non-defense is the remainder. FY1976-FY2015 are historical data; FY2016 is estimated; FY2017-FY2021 reflect the President's FY2017 budget proposals. The spike in non-defense funding in FY2009 reflects enactment of the Recovery Act (ARRA), which is discussed in a later section.

Relations between the United States and its allies on one hand, and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and its allies on the other were the dominant security concern in the half century following the Second World War. In the early 1970s, U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War wound down, while the United States and the USSR moved toward detente, permitting a thaw in Cold War relations between the two superpowers and a reduction in defense spending relative to the size of the economy.24

Following intervention by the USSR in Afghanistan in 1979, military spending increased sharply.25 Defense spending continued to increase until 1986, as concern shifted to domestic priorities and the desire to reduce large budget deficits. The collapse in 1989 of most of the Warsaw Pact governments in Central and Eastern Europe and the 1990-1991 disintegration of the Soviet Union was followed by a reduction in federal defense spending, allowing a "peace dividend" that relaxed fiscal pressures.26

The attacks of September 11, 2001, were followed by sharp increases in homeland security spending. Defense spending also increased significantly with the start of the Afghanistan war in October 2001 and the Iraq war in March 2003.27 U.S. combat troops were withdrawn from Iraq in December 2011, and President Obama had announced that most U.S. troops would be withdrawn from Afghanistan by the end of 2014.28 In November 2014, however, the President announced an extension of operations in Afghanistan.29

The Obama Administration has also noted challenges posed by Russia, which annexed the Crimean peninsula and sponsored military operations in eastern Ukraine; by the so-called Islamic State (IS; also known as ISIL, ISIS, or Da'esh); and by cyber attacks—hostile incursions of computer networks.30

Defense Funding Outside of the Department of Defense

Figure 2 shows subfunctions within the National Defense (050) budget function. The Department of Defense (DOD)-Military (051) subfunction accounts for over 95% of that funding. Almost all of the atomic energy defense activities (053) subfunction supports operations within the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE). About two-thirds of that funding supports the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and the remainder funds environmental clean-up of weapons production and research sites, along with other related activities. Much smaller amounts support the Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board and site remediation activities of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

The defense-related activities (54) subfunction comprises a variety of activities outside of DOD. In recent years, funding for counterterrorism activities within the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has accounted for almost two-thirds of all funding within this subfunction and about half of the FBI's total discretionary funding.

Figure 2. National Defense (050) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

International Affairs

Figure 3 shows levels of budget authority allocated to international affairs (budget function 150) as a share of GDP. Spending for activities within the international affairs budget function has fluctuated in response to changes in foreign relations and federal priorities. International security assistance rose sharply in the late 1970s and early 1980s, in large part due to foreign military financing support provided to Israel and Egypt following the 1979 Camp David Accords.31 The Economic Support Fund (ESF), which provides financial support to promote political and socioeconomic stability within a range of countries of strategic importance to the United States, also grew rapidly in the same time period.32 Funding for security assistance fell after the collapse of the Warsaw Pact governments in 1989 and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991.

Figure 3. International Affairs (150) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

The level of funding for international development and humanitarian assistance fell from about 0.2% of GDP in the late 1970s to less than 0.1% of GDP in the 1990s. The George W. Bush Administration increased funding for international development and humanitarian assistance in the early 2000s through initiatives such as the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which has supported programs to stem the spread of AIDS and HIV in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia, and the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), which sought to use financial incentives to spur economic development and reform.33 While funding for the MCC was curtailed during the Barack Obama Administration, funding for international development and humanitarian assistance hovered around 0.15% of GDP, about midway between levels seen in the 1970s and in the 1990s.

Fluctuations in the level of funding for international financial programs have been dominated by occasional quota payments by the United States in the International Monetary Fund (IMF).34 The U.S. government receives special drawing rights (SDRs), which contribute to the capital base of the IMF, in exchange for those quota payments. The budgetary treatment of IMF quota payments has not been consistent. Since 2009, the budgetary costs of IMF quota payments have been calculated by an evaluation of the risks that non-payment of loans made by the IMF could reduce the value of U.S. investments in the IMF.35 Thus, the spikes in funding for international financial programs seen in Figure 3 reflect changes in budgetary concepts rather than changes in policy or funding levels.

Costs of conducting foreign affairs, relative to GDP, rose during the first decade of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, but have been declining since FY2012. Heightened concerns over security of diplomatic facilities and personnel have also contributed to higher funding levels since 2001.

Domestic Social Programs

This section discusses budgetary trends among domestic social programs. In the past two decades, federal responses to the attacks of September 11, 2001, and the Great Recession have had the most prominent effects of spending trends for most categories of federal domestic spending.

Non-Defense Security and Non-Security Spending Diverge After 9/11

Domestic spending (i.e., non-defense spending excluding international affairs) increased after the attacks of September 11, 2001, after having fallen for much of the 1990s. Most of that increase in domestic spending occurred in areas related to non-defense security spending, as the federal government overhauled airport security procedures, and then established the Department of Homeland Security. Since 2001, several definitions of "security spending" have been used, most recently in the 2011 Budget Control Act (BCA).36 Figure 4 shows funding trends divided by BCA security and non-security categories.

The Recovery Act

After the financial crisis of 2007-2008 plunged the United States into the deepest economic recession in decades, Congress passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-5; ARRA), often known as the Recovery Act. ARRA includes support for state and local governments, as well as tax cuts and rebates among other provisions.37 According to initial CBO estimates, ARRA provisions were expected to total $787.2 billion in increased spending and reduced taxes over the FY2009-FY2019 period or just over 5% of GDP in 2008, while a more recent CBO estimate put the total at $814 billion.38 The effects of Recovery Act spending can be seen in most of the figures shown below.

Figure 4. Security and Non-Security Funding Trends

Budget Authority as a Percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: BCA security and non-security categories used. Non-defense security is BCA security spending apart from National Defense budget function 050. FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Since 2010, however, total non-defense discretionary spending has declined in real (i.e., inflation-adjusted) terms.39 Non-defense discretionary spending as a share of the economy been has declining more rapidly. Although economic growth has been relatively sluggish, most components of federal spending have grown even more slowly. Funding trends for most budget categories since FY2010 have been less volatile than in past decades.

Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services

Figure 5 shows spending trends for subfunctions within the Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services budget function.

Federal training and employment programs designed to address unemployment following the first oil shock of 1973, such as the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA, P.L. 93-203), accounted for the largest share of spending within that budget function. The successor program, the Job Training Partnership Act of 1982 (JTPA; P.L. 97-300), was enacted during the 1981-1982 recession. Later jobs and training programs, such as the Workforce Investment Act of 1998 (WIA; P.L. 105-220), operated on lower funding levels.

Figure 5. Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services (500) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Federal support for elementary and secondary education increased sharply following the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESSA) by the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB; P.L. 107-110). Funding for most subfunctions within the budget function rose sharply with enactment of ARRA and other legislative responses to the Great Recession of 2007-2009. Since 2010, however, funding levels—measured as a percentage of GDP—have tapered off.

Federal Health Programs

Costs of federal health programs continue to play a central role in budgetary discussions. Total federal costs of the largest federal health care programs such as Medicare and Medicaid, however, are nearly all supported by mandatory spending and are thus not discussed here. Administrative costs for those programs, which account for a small portion of those costs, are generally funded by discretionary spending. Many other federal health programs, such as federal support for health research, public health programs, and veterans' health care, are mostly funded through discretionary spending. Figure 6 shows trends in discretionary funding within the Health (550) and Medicare (570) budget functions since FY1977.

Figure 6. Federal Health Care

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections.

The trajectory of funding for the hospital and medical care for veterans subfunction, which falls under another budget function and is also shown in Figure 9, is included for the sake of comparison. While discretionary funding for federal health programs has decreased as a share of GDP since FY2009, funding for veterans' health care has continued to increase in recent years.

Discretionary funding within the health care services (551) subfunction supports activities and programs administered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Health Resources and Services Administration, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSA), and the Indian Health Service (IHS), among other health-related agencies. From the mid-1980s through FY2001, funding within the health care services subfunction doubled. Since then, funding trends have been more volatile. The spike in funding for the health care services subfunction in FY2009, evident in Figure 6, reflects funding for responses to an anticipated influenza pandemic,40 as well as funding in ARRA for health information technology investments and bioterrorism countermeasures. The downward spike in FY2017 reflects a CHIMP (Change in Mandatory Spending Program) affecting the State Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP).41

The National Institutes of Health (NIH) accounts for most of the health research and training (552) subfunction. Discretionary funding within the health research and training subfunction has consistently exceeded discretionary funding for the health care services subfunction. After funding in the health research and training subfunction failed to keep up with the rate of GDP growth in the late 1970s and early 1980s, funding grew steadily as a percentage of GDP for the next 20 years. In the late 1990s, policymakers decided to double the NIH budget within a five-year period, from FY1999 to FY2003.42 After FY2003, however, funding as a percentage of GDP has generally fallen, with the exception of increased funding provided through ARRA in FY2009.43

Discretionary funding for Medicare (subfunction 571), which as noted above, mostly funds administrative costs, and the consumer and occupational health and safety (554) subfunction, has been relatively stable over time. Each has remained at about 0.03% to 0.04% of GDP over the period.

Income Security

The bulk of federal funding for income security programs is provided through mandatory spending. In general, discretionary spending—outside of housing assistance—funds administrative costs of those programs. Housing assistance programs, unlike most other income security programs, are largely supported by discretionary funding. Figure 7 shows trends in the Income Security (600) budget function.

The largest changes within the Income Security budget function reflect shifts in the structure and funding levels for programs within the housing assistance (604) subfunction in the 1970s and early 1980s.44 Federal support for affordable housing shifted from supporting up-front long-term funding for construction of publicly subsidized units toward annual funding for rent subsidies for low-income households to use in existing housing and block grants to local governments over the time period in question.45 Since the late 1970s, the share of funding for housing assistance has fluctuated, driven by the creation of new programs and activities, as well as rescissions of recaptured unobligated balances. Housing assistance's share of GDP, however, has remained at less than a quarter of what it was at its peak. Legislative responses to the Great Recession led to increased funding for various housing programs in FY2009. Discretionary funding for other income security subfunctions has generally remained below 0.1% of GDP throughout the period.

Figure 7. Income Security (600) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: Most income security benefits, aside from housing assistance, are generally funded by mandatory spending, which is not shown here. FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Social Security

Discretionary funding for Social Security, depicted in Figure 8, supports program administration. Social Security benefits are generally funded by mandatory spending. Program administration costs supported by discretionary funding are a small fraction of mandatory benefit amounts. Those costs, which increased in nominal dollar terms in most years, grew more slowly than the rate of economic growth. Over time, the composition of those costs evolved. In the 1970s, costs of administrating Old-Age and Survivors Insurance (OASI) benefits were nearly three times as large as those for Disability Insurance (DI) benefits. Since FY2012, costs of administering DI benefits, however, have exceeded costs of administering OASI benefits.

Figure 8. Social Security (650) Subfunction

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Veterans' Benefits and Services

Health care provided through the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) within the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) accounts for the bulk of discretionary funding within the Veterans' Benefits and Services (700) budget function. Departmental administration, information technology, and smaller discretionary benefit programs account for the remainder.46 Veterans' income security programs, such as disability compensation, pensions, and readjustment benefits, are generally supported by mandatory spending. Essentially all discretionary spending within the veterans' benefits and services subfunction supports operations within the VA. Figure 9 shows trends in discretionary funding for the veterans' benefits and services budget function since FY1977.

The Hospital and Medical Care for Veterans (703) subfunction accounts for the bulk of funding with the veterans' benefits and services budget function. Since 2001, veterans' health care costs have been one of the fastest growing components of discretionary spending. The Veterans' Health Care Eligibility Reform Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-262) required the establishment of a national enrollment system to manage the delivery of inpatient and outpatient medical care. In FY1999, the VHA began enrolling veterans and classifying them into priority groups. Prior to the VHA enrollment system's setup, provision of care to veterans was based on available resources.47 By FY2000, just over 4.9 million eligible veterans—19% of all veterans—were enrolled in the VHA. By FY2016 that number increased by an estimated 90% to 9.4 million enrollees.48 During the same time period, the total number of veterans decreased by 14%.49 Those trends reflect enrollment in newer veterans from wars and occupations in Afghanistan (Operation Enduring Freedom/OEF) and Iraq (Operation Iraqi Freedom/OIF and Operation New Dawn/OED), growth in female veterans, and economic conditions, among other factors. The number of veterans receiving VA health care services, according to VA projections, will level off over the next 10 years.50

Figure 9. Veterans Benefits and Services (700) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from the FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Funding within the Other Veterans Benefits and Services (705) subfunction, which has accounted for roughly one-tenth of funding within the Veterans' Benefits and Services budget function, has doubled since FY2005 as a percentage of GDP.

Physical Resources

Energy

Most funding within the Energy budget function supports operations of the Department of Energy (DOE). The remainder supports rural electrification programs within the U.S. Department of Agriculture, tax credits administered by the U.S. Treasury, certain activities of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, the Tennessee Valley Authority, and a few other agencies. About half of DOE's budget funds nuclear weapons programs or efforts to clean up sites used by those programs, which fall within the atomic energy defense activities (053) subfunction.

The largest spike in funding within the energy supply (271) subfunction visible in Figure 10 reflects responses to the second oil shock of 1978-1979. Following a revolution in 1978, Iran cut its oil exports, which caused widespread disruptions through world energy markets in 1979.51 In June 1980, President Jimmy Carter signed the Energy Security Act (P.L. 96-294), which established various renewable energy initiatives and provided $88 billion for synthetic fuels production.52 The Synthetic Fuels Corporation, which the act had created, was abolished in 1985 after struggling to develop viable projects.53

A smaller downtick in the emergency energy preparedness (274) subfunction in FY1980 also reflects world oil supply disruptions that followed the Iranian revolution. The United States, in consultation with G7 partner countries, agreed to suspend oil purchases for the Strategic Petroleum Reserve in early 1979.54 In June 1980, the Energy Security Act mandated resumed oil reserve purchases, although $2 billion was rescinded from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve the following month, which is reflected in the negative value for FY1980.55 Congress required additional oil reserve purchases in December 1980.56

The smaller spike visible in Figure 10 resulted from funding in ARRA, which provided $90 billion in funding or tax credits for clean energy projects, not all of which was within the energy budget function. DOE received about $35 billion in funding, with most of the remainder supporting energy-related tax credits as well as mass transportation and high-speed rail initiatives.57

Figure 10. Energy (270) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Natural Resources and Environment

Funding within the Natural Resources and Environment budget function supports activities of a wide range of federal agencies. Much of the discretionary funding for the U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) and all of the discretionary funding for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) falls within this function, as does most of the funding for the Forest Service within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Funding within this budget function also supports operations of the U.S. Department of Commerce's National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), water projects of the U.S. Army's Corps of Engineers, and the U.S. Coast Guard's pollution control activities related to spills of oil and hazardous substances in the coastal zone.

The largest spike visible in Figure 11 reflects an increase in the 1970s in federal support for construction of local wastewater treatment plants and other water quality initiatives, which fall within the pollution control and abatement (304) subfunction.58 That funding was reduced in the early 1980s due to budgetary pressures and because policymakers judged that the aim of modernizing municipal wastewater treatment facilities had largely been met.

Figure 11. Natural Resources and Environment (300) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Federal aid for local water infrastructure projects, especially EPA assistance, has evolved over time from programs that provided grants directly to local governments to programs under which the federal government provides grants to states to capitalize state loan programs. Congress established a similar loan program for drinking water infrastructure projects in 1996 (P.L. 93-523).59 In addition to federal funding for these water infrastructure programs, subfunction 304 also includes a wide range of environmental protection activities of EPA and other federal agencies under authority of statutes such as the Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, and the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA, or Superfund).

The water resources subfunction (301) principally represents water infrastructure (e.g., dams, locks, levees) built, owned, and operated by the federal government. Discretionary funding for water resources projects has, by and large, declined as a percentage of GDP since the mid-1970s, as Figure 11 indicates. That decline has been attributed to a number of reasons. Presidents Carter and Reagan both targeted perceived excesses in federal spending on water resources projects during their terms in office and were reluctant to agree to new project authorizations and spending without corresponding alterations to federal cost-sharing policies.60 The Water Resources Development Act of 1986 (WRDA; P.L. 99-662) made changes requiring greater contributions from local governments that benefit from federal water infrastructure.61 Those changes included reductions in the federal share of project costs, and combined with the aforementioned reduced emphasis on new water resources infrastructure in general, led to a decrease in water resources spending. Overall spending on these projects has also declined as agency focus has shifted away from construction of new projects. In 1987, the Bureau of Reclamation, which built large federal dams and water projects throughout the West during the 20th century, acknowledged a shift in its focus from development and construction of water projects to management of water resources.62

Forest Service funding, including costs of responding to forest fires, along with funding for the DOI Bureau of Land Management, are the largest items within the conservation and land management (302) budget subfunction.

In FY2009, ARRA supported large supplemental increases in funding for multiple federal agencies, including EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers, for water projects within the pollution control and abatement subfunction. ARRA also supported Forest Service capital improvements, along with smaller increases in many other programs.63

Commerce and Housing Credit

The commerce and housing credit budget function supports a variety of programs within the U.S. Department of Commerce and the Department of Housing (HUD), along with several other federal agencies. Many of these programs provide credit for housing, business loans, and other purposes, and their costs are therefore calculated using methods prescribed by the Federal Credit Reform Act (FCRA; described above). Changes in estimates of the subsidy costs of those loans are sensitive to anticipated economic conditions, which can cause large fluctuations in budgetary costs, even if current cash flows are more stable.

When the present value of fees or other receipts collected through a program exceeds disbursements and default costs, estimated using FCRA methods, a negative credit subsidy results which appears as negative BA. For example, the large negative amounts shown in Figure 12 for the mortgage credit (371) subfunction in recent years largely reflect negative credit subsidy estimates for the single-family mortgage insurance program within the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).64 Expected negative credit subsidies for FHA-insured mortgages increased in the years after the housing market turmoil of the late 2000s as a result of several factors, including better credit quality of FHA-insured mortgages, increases in the fees that FHA charges to borrowers, and higher FHA loan volumes

Figure 12. Commerce and Housing Credit (370) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

The other advancements of commerce (376) subfunction includes a diverse range of activities within the Department of Commerce, the Small Business Administration (SBA), many independent federal regulatory bodies, and other entities. Funding for the decennial census falls within this subfunction and is reflected in peaks at 10-year intervals visible in Figure 12.

The U.S. Postal Service (USPS; postal service subfunction 376) operates under a mandate to cover its costs with its own revenues, and thus runs without an operating subsidy from the federal government.65 Congress does appropriate funds to offset postal revenues that were foregone by charging concessionary rates for certain postal services, although as can be seen in Figure 12, that funding has decreased over time.66

Transportation

Funding within the transportation budget function primarily supports activities of the U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), including grants and other forms of financial support provided to state and local governments. That funding also supports some operations of the U.S. Coast Guard, which was transferred from DOT to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security in 2003, as well as various boards and commissions involved in transportation issues. Figure 13 shows funding trends within the transportation budget function.

Figure 13. Transportation (400) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Some ground transportation programs have had a special budgetary status since 1988, in which BA is treated as mandatory but outlays are classified as discretionary.67 This status enables some transportation funding to sidestep budgetary restraints that affect most other federal funding. Moreover, that dual designation of surface transportation funding complicates analysis of trends in federal spending to support various forms of transit. Thus, trends in funding for ground transportation shown in Figure 13 exclude the vast majority of federal highway funding supported by the Highway Trust Fund, which is classified as mandatory, rather than discretionary, BA. Moreover, those amounts do not reflect expenditures of state governments, which are typically required to match federal funds at some level. Discretionary funding for ground transportation also does not reflect transfers from the U.S. Treasury's general fund to the Highway Trust Fund.

The ground transportation (401) subfunction includes federal support for mass transit and Amtrak, as well as funding for operations of DOT bureaus such as the Federal Railroad Administration and the Federal Highway Administration, as well as various transportation-related safety or regulatory bodies. The peak in discretionary funding for ground transportation during the late 1970s and early 1980s evident in Figure 13 reflects, in large measure, grants to local governments to expand, modernize, or operate mass transit systems.68 Through the 1980s, however, that support was reduced. A second peak reflects increased funding for road and other infrastructure projects in ARRA. The negative amount for FY2017 reflects a rescission of $2.4 billion in unobligated funds in the Transportation Trust Fund proposed by the Obama Administration.69 No legislative action has been taken on those proposals.

Funding within the air transportation (402) subfunction has varied less. Increased funding for airport security after the attacks of September 11, 2001, is visible in Figure 13. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA) was created within DOT in November 2001, but was transferred to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in March 2003. Funding within the water transportation (403) subfunction, again measured as a percentage of GDP, has been even more stable.

Community and Regional Development

The Community and Regional Development budget function (450) includes funding for various federal programs that support state and local government development initiatives in urban and rural areas, as well as funding to support responses to natural and other disasters. Figure 14 shows funding trends within that budget function.

The largest item within the Community Development (451) subfunction is the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD's) Community Development Fund, which provides resources for the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) program.70 That subfunction also includes programs administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and other federal agencies. Federal community development funding fell from almost 0.2% of GDP in the late 1970s to about half that level in the 1990s. Funding since FY2000 has fluctuated significantly, reflecting congressional responses to natural and other disaster-related events, and economic recessions.71

The Area and Regional Development (452) subfunction includes a wide range of programs, from operations of the Department of Interior's Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) and Bureau of Indian Education (BIE), to assorted USDA rural development initiatives, as well as Department of Commerce's Economic Development Administration (EDA) programs and federally chartered regional development commissions, such as the Appalachian Regional Commission, the Delta Regional Authority, the Denali Commission, and the Northern Border Regional Commission. An anti-recession measure—the Public Works Employment Act (P.L. 95-28)—increased funding for FY1977 and FY1978 with the aim of supporting local public works-focused job creation efforts.

Figure 14. Community and Regional Development (450) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

The disaster relief and insurance (453) subfunction mainly funds the Federal Emergency Management Agency, which has been part of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) since 2003. That subfunction also includes other programs within USDA, SBA, and HUD. Funding for the disaster relief and insurance subfunction has been volatile in large part because it is driven by responses to natural and manmade disasters that by definition are difficult to anticipate. The largest spike in funding reflects responses to Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma, which hit the Gulf Coast in 2005. A smaller spike at FY2013 reflects funding for responses to Hurricane Sandy, which hit the Atlantic Coast.

Other Federal Functions

General Science, Space, and Technology

Funding within the General Science, Space, and Technology budget function (250)—shown in Figure 15—has been dominated for most of the past half century by spending to support operations of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), which falls within the space flight, research and supporting activities subfunction (252). In some years during the mid-1960s, as the Apollo program was moving toward its aim of manned lunar exploration, NASA accounted for over 4% of total federal spending—well beyond the scale used in Figure 15.72 After the Apollo program ended in the early 1970s, NASA funding levels in inflation-adjusted terms and as a percentage of GDP declined in the face of budgetary pressures. The narrow spike visible in Figure 15 reflects funding for a replacement space shuttle after the January 1986 Challenger disaster. From FY1993 to FY2016, BA for NASA fell from about 0.2% of GDP to about 0.1% of GDP, as funding did not keep pace with inflation and economic growth.

Figure 15. General Science, Space, and Technology (250) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

Funding for the general science and basic research subfunction (251) mostly supports the National Science Foundation (NSF) and the basic research activities of the Office of Science within the Department of Energy (DOE). As a proportion of GDP, it rose, albeit unsteadily, from the mid-1980s to the late 2000s. In 2006, the George W. Bush Administration's American Competitiveness Initiative, established by and subsequently authorized by Congress in the America COMPETES Act (P.L. 110-69) and America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-358), set out a goal to double funding for NSF and the DOE Office of Science. That goal has not been achieved, especially when expressed as a share of GDP. In FY2009, ARRA provided a temporary boost in funding for science and basic research.

Agriculture

The Agriculture budget function (350) includes the Agricultural Research and Services (352) subfunction and the Farm Income Stabilization (351) subfunction. Nearly all funding within that budget function supports operations of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Some of the largest USDA programs, however, such as the Supplemental Nutrition Assistant Program (SNAP) and some child nutrition programs, are classified within the Income Support budget function. Most Forest Service and USDA conservation activities fall under the Natural Resources and Environment budget function, and provision of foreign food aid falls under the International Affairs budget function. Figure 16 shows trends within the Agriculture budget function.

Figure 16. Agriculture (350) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

The largest components of discretionary funding within the Agricultural Research and Services subfunction support activities of the Agricultural Research Service and the National Institute of Food and Agriculture. Funding for the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) quadrupled between FY1999 and FY2003. APHIS also received extra funds to respond to bird flu threats in FY2015, which are reflected in a spike visible in Figure 16.73 Overall, funding for Agricultural Research and Services as a percentage of GDP has declined from about 0.05% in the late 1970s to about half that level in FY2016.

The sharp funding increase within the Farm Income Stabilization subfunction for FY1992 reflects implementation of the Federal Credit Reform Act of 1990 (FCRA; P.L. 101-508), which changed the budgetary treatment of federal loan and loan guarantee programs.74 The spike in FY2008 reflects ad hoc disaster assistance. Many farm income stabilization programs are mostly funded via mandatory spending, although administrative costs are generally covered by discretionary spending.

Administration of Justice

The Administration of Justice (750) budget function includes most federal judicial, law enforcement, and correctional activities. Figure 17 shows funding trends within that budget function.

Figure 17. Administration of Justice (750) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

The Federal Law Enforcement Activities (751) subfunction includes operations of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), such as the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and the U.S. Secret Service, as well as operations of the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), and the U.S. Marshals (USMS). Counterterrorism activities, which account for roughly half of the FBI's funding, are classified under the Defense-Related Activities (054) subfunction.

Funding within the Federal Law Enforcement subfunction, measured as a percentage of GDP, more than doubled in the period FY1980 to FY2010. Funding increases for CBP and ICE account for much of that increase. In FY1977, CBP and ICE accounted for just over a third (35%) of all funding within the federal law enforcement activities subfunction, while in FY2016 they accounted for over half (54%). Since FY2010, however, funding as a percentage of GDP has fallen to a level slightly above what it was in the mid-2000s. During that time period, funding for CBP and ICE rose by 10% in nominal terms, while funding for the rest of the subfunction was essentially flat.

The Federal Litigative and Judicial Activities subfunction (752) includes operations of the judicial branch and trial-related activities such as pre-trial detention by U.S. Marshals and publicly funded legal defense services. The subfunction also covers operations of offices of U.S. Attorneys and legal activities of DOJ, as well as boards and commissions that address legal matters. Funding for this subfunction, measured as a percentage of GDP, has trended slightly upward until FY2010 and slightly downward since then.

The Federal Correctional Activities subfunction (753) includes the DOJ Federal Prison System. The small increase visible in Figure 17 reflects a one-time increase of about $1 billion for prison buildings and facilities in FY1990.

The Criminal Justice Assistance subfunction (754) includes DOJ programs that assist state and local governments combat crime, violence against women, and drug trafficking; and that strengthen local juvenile justice and other local initiatives. The increase in funding visible in Figure 17 in FY1994 reflects enactment of the Violent Crime Control and Law Enforcement Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-322), by which Congress and President Bill Clinton aimed to fund the hiring of an additional 100,000 local police officers via the community-oriented policing (COPS) program.75 After decreases in funding for COPS during the mid-2000s, additional funds were provided as part of the ARRA stimulus. Since then, the level of funding, measured as a percentage of GDP, has decreased.

The downward spike in proposed spending for FY2017 reflects a CHIMP (change in mandatory spending) affecting the Crime Victims Fund, which according to budgetary scoring rules can be used to offset discretionary spending, and does not represent a diminution of federal support for state grants.

General Government

The General Government (800) budget function includes costs of operating the legislative and executive branches, as well as administering federal personnel policy, managing federal records and property, and providing fiscal support to state and local governments. Figure 18 shows trends in funding by subfunction within that budget function.

The Legislative Functions (801) subfunction includes activities of Congress and congressional agencies, such as the Government Accountability Office (GAO), the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), and the Congressional Research Service (CRS). The subfunction also includes the Capitol Police and the Architect of the Capitol, along with various congressional commissions and boards. From FY1977 to FY2000, funding for the legislative functions subfunction, measured as a percentage of GDP, trended slightly downward. Since then, funding for that subfunction has ranged from 0.03% to 0.04% of GDP.

Figure 18. General Government (800) Subfunctions

Discretionary budget authority as a percentage of GDP, FY1977-FY2021

Source: CRS, based on OMB data from FY2017 budget submission.

Notes: FY2016 levels are estimated. FY2017-FY2021 levels reflect Administration proposals and projections. See OMB budget documents for further caveats.

The Executive Direction and Management (802) subfunction includes activities of the White House, the Executive Office of the President, agencies closely connected to the President such as the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the U.S. Trade Representative, and certain drug control activities. Various boards, commissions, councils, and offices associated with the presidency are also included. Over the FY1977-FY2016 period, funding within that subfunction has not exceeded 0.01% of GDP.

The Central Fiscal Operations (803) subfunction includes operations of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) as well as fiscal and currency operations of the U.S. Treasury. In FY2016, the IRS accounted for about 90% of the funding within that subfunction. Thus, to large extent, the decline in funding for the subfunction, measured as a percentage of GDP, reflects trends in funding for the IRS.

The General Property and Records Management (804) subfunction includes operations of the General Services Administration (GSA) and the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). Fluctuations in funding within this subfunction in large part reflect costs of GSA's Federal Buildings Fund.76 That fund operates somewhat as a revolving fund that receives rent payments from federal agencies. Proceeds, through appropriations law, are used to lease properties or to acquire and maintain federally owned properties, although it has received supplemental appropriations to fund buildings in some years. In other years, rental revenues exceeded building expenses, resulting in negative budget authority.

The Central Personnel Management (805) subfunction includes operations of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) as well as several offices concerned with federal workforce issues such as the Merit Systems Protection Board, the Office of Special Counsel, and the Office of Government Ethics. Funding for this subfunction was about 0.05% of GDP in the late 1970s, and that percentage has declined since then.

The General Purpose Fiscal Assistance (806) subfunction covers various forms of assistance to state and local government. The high levels of funding visible in Figure 18 in the 1970s reflect credit support offered to New York City.77 The subfunction also includes federal support for the District of Columbia.78 Since the early 1980s, when this subfunction funding accounted for about 0.2% of GDP, funding according to that measure has declined.

The Other General Government (808) subfunction includes a broad array of miscellaneous federal activities. The uptick visible in Figure 18 in the mid-2000s reflects federal support for electoral reform.

Author Contact Information

[author name scrubbed], Analyst in Economic Policy ([email address scrubbed], [phone number scrubbed])

Acknowledgments

Comments and conversations with many CRS colleagues were invaluable. The author wishes to thank David Bearden, [author name scrubbed], David Bradley, [author name scrubbed], Susan Epstein, [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], Bruce Lindsay, [author name scrubbed], Dan Morgan, Will Morton, [author name scrubbed], Will Painter, [author name scrubbed], Randy Peterman, Steve Redhead, Lisa Sacco, Rebecca Skinner, Charlie Stern, and Meghan Stuessy.

Footnotes

1.

The President's FY2017 budget was released on February 9, 2016, and is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/.

2.

The start of the federal fiscal year was changed from July 1 to October 1 in 1976 to accommodate changes in the congressional budget process. The figures omit data for the transition quarter (July 1 to September 30, 1976).

3.

The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) released a major revision to national income accounts in July 2013, which showed somewhat higher levels of national income and thus slightly reduced government spending as a share of GDP. See Stephanie H. McCulla, Alyssa E. Holdren, and Shelly Smith, "Improved Estimates of the National Income and Product Accounts: Results of the 2013 Comprehensive Revision," Survey of Current Business, September 2013, pp. 14-45, available at http://bea.gov/scb/pdf/2013/09%20September/0913_comprehensive_nipa_revision.pdf.

4.

For a broader analysis of discretionary spending, see CRS Report RL34424, The Budget Control Act and Trends in Discretionary Spending, by [author name scrubbed].

5.

CRS Report R41965, The Budget Control Act of 2011, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed].

6.

The procedure for lowering those revised caps is in section 251A(7) of the BCA. In FY2013, that decrease was implemented through sequestration. See CBO, Sequestration Update Report, August 2012, p. 3, available at http://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/attachments/08-09-12_SequestrationUpdate.pdf; and OMB, Sequestration Update Report to the President and Congress for Fiscal Year 2013, August 20, 2012, p. 13, available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/legislative_reports/sequestration/sequestration_update_august2012.pdf.

7.

For details, see CRS congressional distribution memorandum, "The Budget Control Act and Alternate Defense and Non-Defense Spending Paths, FY2012-FY2021," by [author name scrubbed] and Andrew Austin, November 16, 2012, available from the authors. This comparison is made in terms of budget authority. Before passage of ATRA, BCA provisions were slated to bring discretionary base defense spending to its FY2007 level and non-defense spending to near its level in FY2003 or FY2004. Inflation adjustments made using GDP price index.

8.

Some have described the unmodified BCA caps as a "return to sequestration." For example, see Amaani Lyle, "Greenert Explains Value of Presence, Danger of Cuts," DoD News, January 28, 2015, http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=128065. Sequestration, strictly speaking, refers to the reduction or cancellation of budgetary resources, usually applied across the board to non-exempt accounts. While non-exempt mandatory accounts are to be sequestered in each year until FY2025, no across-the-board cuts to discretionary spending are required so long as funding remains within BCA caps.

9.

OMB, FY2017 Budget of the U.S. Government, Analytical Perspectives, p. 97.

10.

Marcus Weisgerber, "'Magic Money': DoD's Overseas Contingency Budget Might Dry Up," Defense News, June 29, 2014, http://archive.defensenews.com/article/20140629/DEFREG02/306290011/-Magic-Money-DoD-s-Overseas-Contingency-Budget-Might-Dry-Up. Also see CRS Report RL33110, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11, by [author name scrubbed].

11.

More precisely, BCA caps are adjusted upward to reflect those spending categories.

12.

Data in the OMB Public Budget Database reconcile to information presented in the Historical Tables volume of the FY2017 budget. The Public Budget Database itself is available here: http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Supplemental. For a further description and important caveats, see the Public Budget Database User Guide, available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2017/assets/db_guide.pdf.

13.

Table 5.1 of the OMB Historical Tables is available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2017/assets/hist05z1.xls.

14.

See OMB, FY2017 Budget, Analytic Perspectives, ch. 13, "Offsetting Collections and Offsetting Receipts."

15.

See CRS Report RL30346, Federal Credit Reform: Implementation of the Changed Budgetary Treatment of Direct Loans and Loan Guarantees, by [author name scrubbed], available upon request.

16.

See OMB, FY2017 Budget, Analytic Perspectives, ch.20, "Credit and Insurance."

17.

For example, some Federal Housing Administration mortgage programs and some federal student loan programs have been estimated to yield negative net subsidies.

18.

While the FCRA calculations include estimates of default costs, they do not discount more volatile income flows, as a private firm would.

19.

U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Estimating the Value of Subsidies for Federal Loans and Loan Guarantees, August 2004, available at http://cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=5751.

20.

See CRS Report 98-280, Functional Categories of the Federal Budget, by [author name scrubbed]

21.

The allowance for future disaster costs is not included in calculations underlying graphs in order to conform to published data aggregates. Allowances that reflect enforcement of BCA discretionary spending limits are not included, as they are not disaggregated by function. Placeholder amounts are sometimes called "plug" numbers.

22.

For the most part, Table 1 follows the ordering of functions in the OMB Historical Tables volume. See OMB, FY2017 Budget, Historical Tables, Table 3.1; https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2017/assets/hist03z1.xls. The ordering of some items was changed to organize the discussion in a thematically consistent manner. The international affairs function was grouped by the national defense function, as those categories are affected by common influences.

23.

2 U.S.C. 632(a)(4).

24.

For a history of deficit finance and American wars, see Robert D. Hormats, The Price of Liberty, (New York: Times Books, 2007).

25.

For one view of budgetary politics in the early 1980s, see David Stockman, The Triumph of Politics, (New York: Harper & Row, 1986).

26.

The Warsaw Treaty Organization established in 1955, included Albania, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, and the Soviet Union.

27.

CRS Report RL33110, The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11, by [author name scrubbed]. The Afghan and Iraq wars, along with other related activities, are often called the Global War on Terror (GWOT).

28.

See CRS Report RL30588, Afghanistan: Post-Taliban Governance, Security, and U.S. Policy, by [author name scrubbed].

29.

Mark Mazzetti and Eric Schmitt, "In a Shift, Obama Extends U.S. Role in Afghan Combat," New York Times, November 21, 2014.

30.

OMB, The Budget for FY2017, p. 4 and pp. 71-80.

31.

U.S. General Accounting Office (now Government Accountability Office; GAO), Military Sales to Israel and Egypt: DOD Needs Stronger Controls Over U.S.-Financed Procurements, GAO/NSIAD-93-184, July 1993; http://www.gao.gov/assets/160/153579.pdf.

32.

For a breakdown of international assistance spending, see Max Bearak and Lazaro Gamio, "Everything You Wanted to Know About the U.S. Foreign Assistance Budget: From Building Wells to Building Armies," Washington Post, October 18, 2016; https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/world/which-countries-get-the-most-foreign-aid/.

33.

CRS Report RL32427, Millennium Challenge Corporation, by [author name scrubbed].

34.

See CRS In Focus IF10134, IMF Quota and Governance Reforms, by [author name scrubbed] and [author name scrubbed].

35.

CBO, The Budgetary Effects of the United States' Participation in the International Monetary Fund, June 2016; https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/114th-congress-2015-2016/reports/51663-IMF.pdf.

36.

The Obama Administration defined security spending in its FY2012 budget as funding for Department of Defense-Military (subfunction 051); the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration; International Affairs (function 150, which includes State Department and related agencies); the Department of Homeland Security; and the Department of Veterans Affairs. The BCA defined security similarly, except that it included all military activities within the Department of Defense excluding war funding (i.e., defined by department rather than by subfunction), and also included the Intelligence Community Management Account.

37.

For more information on the provisions of ARRA, see CRS Report R40537, American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (P.L. 111-5): Summary and Legislative History, by [author name scrubbed] et al.

38.

For initial estimates, see U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Cost Estimate For the Conference Agreement For H.R. 1, February 13, 2009, available at http://cbo.gov/ftpdocs/99xx/doc9989/hr1conference.pdf. For a later assessment, see CBO, Budget and Economic Outlook: An Update, August 2010, Box 1-2, available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/117xx/doc11705/08-18-Update.pdf.

39.

See OMB, The Budget for FY2017, Historical Tables, Table 8.2.

40.

Title VIII of the Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2009 (P.L. 111-32).

41.

A reduction in funding for a mandatory spending program, according to budget scorekeeping rules, can generate an offset to discretionary spending.

42.

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, Office of Legislative Policy and Analysis, Doubling the NIH Budget in the 107th Congress, webpage, n.d.; https://olpa.od.nih.gov/legislation/107/pendinglegislation/doubledec.asp.

43.

For information on NIH ARRA-funded health projects, see U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, NIH Grants Funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, March 20, 2013; https://report.nih.gov/recovery/ARRAFunding.aspx.

44.

See The Reagan Record, eds., John L. Palmer and Isabel V. Sawhill, (Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, 1984), Appendix C, pp. 372-373.

45.

Katherine M. O'Regan and John M. Quigley, "Federal Policy and the Rise of Nonprofit Housing Providers," Journal of Housing Research, vol. 11, no. 2, 2000, pp. 301-302. Also see Charles L. Edson, "Affordable Housing—An Intimate History," Journal of Affordable Housing and Community Development, vol. 20, no. 2, winter 2011, pp. 193-213.

46.

David I. Auerbach, William B. Weeks, and Ian Brantley, "Health Care Spending and Efficiency in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs," RAND Corporation Research Report RR-285-MTF, 2013; http://www.rand.org/content/dam/rand/pubs/research_reports/RR200/RR285/RAND_RR285.pdf.

47.

CRS Report R42747, Health Care for Veterans: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions, by [author name scrubbed].

48.

See CRS Report R44301, Veterans' Medical Care: FY2016 Appropriations, by [author name scrubbed]. Numbers for VA-Enrolled Veterans and patients using VA health care during the year were obtained from VA or VA budget submissions to Congress for FY2002-FY2016. The number for each fiscal year is taken from the budget submission two years later (e.g., the FY2000 number is from the FY2002 budget submission).

49.

Ibid., Table 1.

50.

Department of Veterans Affairs, FY2017 Budget Submission, Medical Programs and Information Technology Programs, vol. II, February 2016, p. VHA-180. For a chronology of wars involving the United States, see CRS Report RS21405, U.S. Periods of War and Dates of Recent Conflicts, by [author name scrubbed].

51.

Daniel Yergin, The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power, (New York: Free Press, 1991), ch. 33.

52.

Jimmy Carter, "Energy Security Act Remarks on Signing S. 952 Into Law," June 30, 1980; http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=44684.

53.

Robert D. Hershey Jr., "Synfuels Corp. is Running on Empty," New York Times, August 25, 1985. The Synthetic Fuels Corporation was disestablished by P.L. 99-190 and P.L. 99-272.

54.

U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, Subcommittee on Energy Resources and Materials Production, Strategic Petroleum Reserve, 96th Cong., 1st sess., December 13, 1979, S. Hrg. 96-91 (Washington: GPO, 1980). G7 members are the United States, the United Kingdom, France, the Federal Republic of Germany, Italy, Japan, Canada, and the European Union.

55.

Supplemental Appropriations and Rescission Act, 1980 (P.L. 96-304).

56.

P.L. 96-514.

57.

Center for Climate and Energy Solutions, "U.S. Department of Energy's Recovery Act Investments," issue brief, January 5, 2013; http://www.c2es.org/docUploads/arra-brief-feb-2013.pdf. See discussion in Transportation section below.

58.

CRS Report 96-647, Water Infrastructure Financing: History of EPA Appropriations, by [author name scrubbed].

59.

For more information, see CRS Report RL30478, Federally Supported Water Supply and Wastewater Treatment Programs, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].

60.

Daniel McCool, Command of the Waters: Iron Triangles, Federal Water Development, and Indian Water, (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987), pp. 196-204. Also see President Jimmy Carter, "Water Resource Projects—Statement Announcing Administration Decisions," April 18, 1977; http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=7364; as well as Paul R. Portnoy, "Natural Resources and the Environment," in The Reagan Record, eds., John L. Palmer and Isabel V. Sawhill, (Washington, D.C.: Urban Institute, 1984), pp. 160-161.

61.

See CRS Report R43910, Water Resource Issues in the 114th Congress, by [author name scrubbed] et al..

62.

United States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, Assessment '87: A New Direction for the Bureau of Reclamation, 1987. Also see Richard W. Wahl, "New Roles for the Bureau of Reclamation," Natural Resources Law Center, University of Colorado School of Law occasional paper, 1989; http://scholar.law.colorado.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1109&context=books_reports_studies; as well as Andrew H. Gahan and William D. Rowley, The Bureau of Reclamation: From Developing to Managing Water, 1945-2000, vol. 2, (U.S. Department of the Interior, Bureau of Reclamation: Denver, 2012), pp. 862-866.

63.

See CRS Report R40216, Water Infrastructure Funding in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, by [author name scrubbed], [author name scrubbed], and [author name scrubbed].

64.

See CRS Report R42875, FHA Single-Family Mortgage Insurance: Financial Status of the Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund (MMI Fund), by [author name scrubbed]. Also see Chad Chirico and Susanne Mehlman, "How FHA's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund Accounts for the Cost of Mortgage Guarantees," CBO Blog, October 22, 2013; https://www.cbo.gov/publication/44634.

65.

See CRS Report R44603, Reforming the U.S. Postal Service: Background and Issues for Congress, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].

66.

CRS Report RS21025, The Postal Revenue Forgone Appropriation: Overview and Current Issues, by [author name scrubbed].

67.

CBO, The Highway Trust Fund and the Treatment of Surface Transportation Programs in the Federal Budget, June 2014; https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/113th-congress-2013-2014/reports/45416-TransportationScoring.pdf.

68.

CBO, Public Works Infrastructure: Policy Considerations for the 1980s, April 1983, ch. 3; https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/98th-congress-1983-1984/reports/doc20-entire.pdf. Also see DOT, Urban Mass Transit Administration, FY1980 Summary of UMTA'S Transit Assistance Program, 1981; https://ia802709.us.archive.org/13/items/fy1980yearendsum00offi_0/fy1980yearendsum00offi_0.pdf.

69.

See OMB, The Budget for FY2017, Budget Appendix, p. 963.

70.

See CRS Report R43520, Community Development Block Grants and Related Programs: A Primer, by [author name scrubbed]. Also see Seth R. Marcus, "Community Development Block Grants," in Goldfield, David R. (ed.), Encyclopedia of American Urban History, (Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, 2006).

71.

See CRS Report R43394, Community Development Block Grants: Recent Funding History, by [author name scrubbed].

72.

See OMB, FY2017 Budget, Historical Tables, Table 4.2; https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/budget/fy2017/assets/hist04z2.xls. NASA spending accounted for 4.3% of federal outlays in FY1965 and 4.4% in FY1966. See also CBO, Reinventing NASA, March 1994; https://www.cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofiles/ftpdocs/48xx/doc4893/doc20.pdf.

73.

See CRS Report R44114, Update on the Highly-Pathogenic Avian Influenza Outbreak of 2014-2015, by [author name scrubbed].

74.

See CRS Report R44193, Federal Credit Programs: Comparing Fair Value and the Federal Credit Reform Act (FCRA), by [author name scrubbed].

75.

CRS Report RL33308, Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS): In Brief, by [author name scrubbed].

76.

See GAO, Federal Buildings Fund: Improved Transparency and Long-term Plan Needed to Clarify Capital Funding Priorities, GAO-12-646, July 2012; http://www.gao.gov/assets/600/592377.pdf.

77.

See archived CRS report 95-328E, Financial Control Boards for Cities in Distress, by Nona Notto and Lillian Rymarowicz, which is available upon request.

78.

See CRS Report R44099, District of Columbia: Issues in the 114th Congress, coordinated by [author name scrubbed].