The Federal Budget: Issues for FY2011, FY2012, and Beyond


The Federal Budget: Issues for FY2011,
FY2012, and Beyond

Mindy R. Levit
Analyst in Public Finance
October 13, 2011
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
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The Federal Budget: Issues for FY2011, FY2012, and Beyond

Summary
The federal budget is central to Congress’s ability to exercise its “power of the purse.” Over the
last several fiscal years the imbalance between spending and revenues has grown as a result of the
economic downturn and policies enacted in response to financial turmoil. In FY2010, the U.S.
government spent $3,456 billion (23.8% of GDP) and collected $2,162 billion in revenue (14.9%
of GDP), resulting in a budget deficit of $1,294 billion (8.9% of GDP). In October 2011, CBO
estimated the FY2011 deficit at $1,298 billion, nearly equal to the FY2010 deficit in dollar terms
but slightly lower as a percentage of GDP (8.6%).
Congress enacted and the President signed, on April 15, 2011, the Department of Defense and
Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 (P.L. 112-10), which completed action on the
FY2011 regular appropriations acts. Prior to the enactment of this legislation, the federal
government had been operating on a series of seven continuing resolutions (CRs) since the
beginning of the fiscal year.
The Obama Administration released its FY2012 budget on February 14, 2011. In FY2012, the
President’s Budget projects that the deficit will reach $1,101 billion. Budget deficits are projected
throughout the 10-year budget window. On the spending side, the FY2012 budget largely focused
on a proposal to freeze non-security discretionary spending through FY2015 and increasing
investments in various sectors. The budget proposal also included various tax proposals including
the permanent extension of the 2001/2003/2010 tax cuts for families making less than $250,000,
changes in the estate tax parameters, a three-year proposal to pay for the indexation of the AMT
“patch” for inflation, and some details on corporate tax reforms. The President also proposes a fee
on the financial services industry over at least the next 10 years to recoup the cost of TARP.
Separately, on April 6, 2011, the House Budget Committee reported its budget resolution
(H.Con.Res. 34, 112th Congress) by a vote of 22-16. The resolution provided for revenue levels of
$2,533 billion and outlays of $3,529 billion in FY2012 for a deficit of $995 billion, or
approximately 6.3% of GDP. By FY2021, the deficit is projected to fall to $385 billion or 1.6% of
GDP. The budget resolution was agreed to by the House on April 15, 2011, by a vote of 235-193.
Along with Congress, CBO, GAO, and the Administration agree that the current mix of federal
fiscal policies is unsustainable in the long-term. The nation’s aging population, combined with
rising health care costs per beneficiary, seems likely to keep federal health costs rising faster than
per capita GDP. Keeping future federal outlays at 20% of GDP, or approximately at its historical
average, and leaving fiscal policies unchanged, according to CBO projections, would require
drastic reductions in all spending other than that for Medicare, Social Security, and Medicaid, or
reigning in the costs of these programs. As the economic recovery continues, Congress may focus
more effort on balancing the budget and reining in the debt. This would require less spending,
increases in revenue collections, faster-than-average economic growth, or a combination of these
things.
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The Federal Budget: Issues for FY2011, FY2012, and Beyond

Contents
Overview.......................................................................................................................................... 1
Budget Cycle ............................................................................................................................. 1
Budget Baseline Projections...................................................................................................... 2
Spending and Revenue Trends .................................................................................................. 3
Federal Spending................................................................................................................. 4
Federal Revenue.................................................................................................................. 6
Deficits, Debt, and Interest........................................................................................................ 7
Budget Deficits.................................................................................................................... 8
Federal Debt and Debt Limit............................................................................................... 8
Net Interest .......................................................................................................................... 9
Budgeting in Tough Economic Times.............................................................................................. 9
Federal Response to Economic and Financial Market Turmoil................................................. 9
Budget Deficit Estimates for FY2011 ..................................................................................... 11
Appropriations in FY2011................................................................................................. 12
Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of
2010................................................................................................................................ 12
Congressional Action in FY2011 to Reduce the Budget Deficit....................................... 12
Budget for FY2012.................................................................................................................. 13
Obama Administration FY2012 Budget............................................................................ 13
Congressional Consideration of the FY2012 Budget Resolution...................................... 15
Considerations for Congress.......................................................................................................... 17
Short-Term Considerations...................................................................................................... 17
General Budget Issues ............................................................................................................. 17
Budget Transparency......................................................................................................... 17
Long-Term Considerations ...................................................................................................... 18

Figures
Figure 1. Total Outlays and Revenues, FY1970-FY2010................................................................ 3
Figure 2. Outlays by Type, FY2000-FY2021 .................................................................................. 5
Figure 3. Revenue by Type, FY2000-FY2021................................................................................. 7

Appendixes
Appendix. Budget Documents....................................................................................................... 20

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 21

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The Federal Budget: Issues for FY2011, FY2012, and Beyond

he federal budget is central to Congress’s ability to exercise its “power of the purse.”
Federal budget decisions express Congress’s priorities and reinforce Congress’s influence
T on federal policies. Making budgetary decisions for the federal government is a complex
process and requires balancing competing goals.1 Recent economic turmoil has strained the
federal budget as a result of declining revenues and increasing spending levels. As the economic
recovery continues, the budget process will allow the President and Congress to negotiate
priorities and refine spending plans.
The federal government faces very large budget deficits, rising costs of entitlement programs,
significant spending on overseas military operations, and low revenue levels. The enactment of
financial intervention and fiscal stimulus legislation in FY2008 and FY2009 may have helped to
bolster the economy, though they increased the budget deficit. While GDP growth has returned in
recent quarters,2 unemployment remains elevated and government spending on “automatic
stabilizer” programs, such as unemployment insurance and income support, remains higher than
historical averages.3 This suggests that the recession’s effects on the budget will likely linger for
several more fiscal years.
In addition to the current challenges, concerns remain about the federal government’s long-term
fiscal situation. The rising costs of federal health care programs and the effects of the baby boom
generation’s retirement present serious challenges to future fiscal stability. Operating these
programs in their current form may pass on substantial economic burdens to future generations.
To avoid this would require significant government action and public sacrifice at levels greater
than those needed to counteract the recent economic downturn.
Overview
Budget Cycle
A single year’s budget cycle takes roughly three calendar years from initial formation by the
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) until final audit.4 The executive agencies begin the
budget process by compiling detailed budget requests in the calendar year before the President’s
budget submission. Many agencies start working on their budgets during the spring and
summer—about a year and a half before the fiscal year begins. OMB oversees the development of
these agency requests. The President is required to submit a budget to Congress, which is based
on OMB’s work, by the first Monday in February.5

1 For more information, see CRS Report 98-721, Introduction to the Federal Budget Process, coordinated by Bill
Heniff Jr.
2 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, “Economy Picks Up in Fourth Quarter – Second
Estimate of GDP,” press release BEA 11-07, February 25, 2011, available at http://www.bea.gov/newsreleases/
national/gdp/gdphighlights.pdf.
3 Unless stated otherwise, data used in this report are from U.S. Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and
Economic Outlook: An Update
, August 2011, available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/123xx/doc12316/08-24-
BudgetEconUpdate.pdf.
4 CRS Report 98-325, The Federal Fiscal Year, by Bill Heniff Jr.
5 The contents of the Presidential budget submission are governed by 31 U.S.C. §1105. For reasons why the budget
may be delayed, see CRS Report RS20179, The Role of the President in Budget Development, by Bill Heniff Jr.
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Congress typically begins formal consideration of the budget resolution once the President
submits his budget request. The budget resolution sets out a plan, agreed to by the House and
Senate, that establishes the framework for subsequent budget legislation. Because the budget
resolution is a concurrent resolution, it is not sent to the President for approval.6
House and Senate Appropriations Committees and their subcommittees typically begin reporting
discretionary spending bills after the budget resolution is agreed upon. Appropriations
Committees review agency funding requests and propose levels of budget authority (BA).
Appropriations acts passed by Congress set the amount of BA available for specific programs and
activities. Authorizing committees, which control mandatory spending, and committees with
jurisdiction over revenues also play important roles in budget decision making.
During the fiscal year, which begins on October 1, Congress and OMB oversee the execution of
the budget. Once the fiscal year ends on the following September 30, the Treasury Department
and the Government Accountability Office (GAO) begin year-end audits.
Budget Baseline Projections
Budget baseline projections are used to measure what impact future legislation would have on the
budget picture. They are not meant to be predictions of the future budget outlook. These future
projections of budget deficit levels are garnering even greater attention due to the increasing calls
for attention on the country’s fiscal health. Due to the nature of projections, slight changes in
assumptions can lead to large effects in outyear totals. Therefore, it is important to understand
what projections include and the assumptions on which they are based.
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) computes current law baseline projections using
assumptions set out in budget enforcement legislation.7 Forecasts based on these assumptions
typically yield higher revenue estimates and understate discretionary spending levels. More
specifically, CBO baseline projections incorporate certain assumptions: that the 2001/2003/2010
tax cuts fully expire after 2012 (as current law specifies), that one-year “patches” to the
alternative minimum tax (AMT) will lapse even though past Congresses have extended AMT
patches year after year, that sharp reductions in Medicare’s payment rates for physicians’ services
will take effect at the end of 2011 as scheduled, and that extensions of unemployment
compensation will expire as scheduled on December 31, 2011. Discretionary spending levels are
based on the caps on this spending currently in law, with adjustments for war funding at current
levels, adjusted for inflation in the out years. In addition to these legislative assumptions,
macroeconomic assumptions, namely the point at which CBO expects the recession to end and
the speed of the recovery, will also affect the baseline estimates and projections, especially given
the current economic climate.

6 Congress does not always complete action on a budget resolution. In years when Congress is late in adopting, or does
not adopt, a budget resolution, the House and Senate independently may adopt “deeming resolution” provisions for the
purpose of enforcing certain budget levels. For more information, see CRS Report RL30297, Congressional Budget
Resolutions: Historical Information
, by Bill Heniff Jr. and Justin Murray and CRS Report RL31443, The “Deeming
Resolution”: A Budget Enforcement Tool
, by Megan Suzanne Lynch.
7 Many of the rules governing the baseline, contained in Section 257 of the Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit
Control Act, as amended, were extended or modified as part of the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25).
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Baseline projections showed substantial growth in receipts after 2012, when most of the tax cuts
from 2001/2003/2010 expire. However, federal deficits are expected to grow rapidly beyond the
10-year forecast window unless major policy changes are made, largely because of increased
outlays due to rapidly growing health care costs and baby boomer retirements.
Spending and Revenue Trends
Over the last four decades, on average, federal spending accounted for approximately 21% of the
economy (as measured by gross domestic product—GDP), while federal revenues averaged
roughly 18% of GDP. Since FY2001, spending has exceeded revenues, resulting in budget
deficits. Over the last several fiscal years the imbalance between spending and revenues has
grown as a result of the economic downturn and policies enacted in response to financial turmoil.
In FY2010, the U.S. government spent almost $3.5 trillion and collected $2.2 trillion in revenue.8
Between FY2008 and FY2010, outlays increased by $473 billion while revenues decreased by
$362 billion (in nominal terms). The trends in revenues and outlays between FY1970 and
FY2010 are shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1. Total Outlays and Revenues, FY1970-FY2010
(as a percentage of GDP)
25%
Outlays
20%
Revenues
15%
FY1970-FY2010
Avg Revenue Levels = 18.0%
Avg Outlay Levels = 20.8%
10%
5%
0%
0
72
4
6
8
0
2
4
6
8
0
2
4
6
8
0
2
4
6
8
0
197 19
197 197 197 198 198 198 198 198 199 199 199 199 199 200 200 200 200 200 201

Source: CRS figure using data from CBO, Historical Tables, available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/120xx/
doc12039/HistoricalTables%5B1%5D.pdf.

8 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Historical Tables, available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/120xx/doc12039/
HistoricalTables%5B1%5D.pdf.
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Federal Spending
Federal outlays are often divided into the broad categories of discretionary and mandatory
spending, and net interest. Discretionary spending is controlled by annual congressional
appropriations acts. Mandatory spending encompasses spending on entitlement programs and
spending controlled by laws other than annual appropriation acts.9 Entitlement programs such as
Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid make up the bulk of mandatory spending. Congress sets
eligibility requirements and benefits for entitlement programs, rather than appropriating a fixed
sum each year. Therefore, if the eligibility requirements are met for a specific mandatory
program, outlays are made automatically. Net interest comprises the government’s interest
payments on the debt held by the public, offset by small amounts of interest income the
government receives from certain loans and investments.10
In FY2000, total outlays equaled 18.2% of GDP. By FY2010, total outlays reached 23.8% of
GDP. Under the CBO baseline, totals outlays are projected to be 22.7% of GDP in FY2021.
Figure 2 shows the level of federal spending as a percentage of GDP, broken into the
discretionary, mandatory, and net interest categories, from FY2000-FY2021.

9 For more information on trends in discretionary and mandatory spending, see CRS Report RL34424, Trends in
Discretionary Spending
, by D. Andrew Austin and Mindy R. Levit and CRS Report RL33074, Mandatory Spending
Since 1962
, by D. Andrew Austin and Mindy R. Levit.
10 Net interest is discussed in further detail below in the section “Deficits, Debt, and Interest.”
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Figure 2. Outlays by Type, FY2000-FY2021
(as a percentage of GDP)
30%
Net Interest
Discretionary Spending
25%
Mandatory Spending
20%
15%
10%
5%
0%
00
01
02
03
4
5
6
7
8
18
19
20
21
20
20
20
20
200
200
200
200
200
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
20
20
20
20

Source: CRS figure using data from CBO, Historical Tables, January 2011 and The Budget and Economic Outlook: An
Update
, August 2011.
Notes: Data for FY2011 are estimates and data for FY2012-FY2021 are projections. Baseline assumes additional
savings as a result of the work of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, allocated evenly over the
FY2013-FY2021 period.
In FY2010, discretionary spending totaled 9.3% of GDP. Since FY2000, discretionary spending
as a share of GDP has increased 8.2% a year, on average, in nominal terms. Increases in
discretionary spending over this period have largely been a result of military operations in Iraq
and Afghanistan and, most recently, the funding provided in the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act (ARRA; P.L. 111-5). On average, from FY2000 to FY2010, defense
discretionary outlays grew 8.9% per year in nominal terms, while non-defense discretionary
outlays grew 7.5% per year in nominal terms. By FY2021, according to CBO’s baseline
projections, discretionary spending will fall to 6.1% of GDP, its lowest level ever.11
Mandatory spending totaled 13.2% of GDP in FY2010, up from 9.7% of GDP in FY2000, as
shown in Figure 2. Mandatory spending levels have been elevated since FY2009 as a result of
increases in outlays in income security programs and federal conservatorship of Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac. Though the economic recovery is expected to lower mandatory spending on certain
programs over the next few fiscal years, the growth in mandatory spending due to increases in
certain entitlement programs will begin by the end of the decade. As a result, under current law,

11 The division between discretionary and mandatory spending was first put into place in FY1962.
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CBO projects that FY2021 mandatory spending will total 13.8% of GDP, higher than the FY2010
level.
In FY2010, mandatory spending totaled 55.3% of total outlays, discretionary spending totaled
39.0% of total outlays, and net interest comprised 5.7% of total outlays. Social Security,
Medicare, and the federal share of Medicaid alone constitute 43% of all federal spending.
Because discretionary spending represents slightly more than one-third of total federal outlays,
some budget experts contend that any significant reductions in federal spending must include
mandatory spending cuts. Other budget and social policy experts contend that cuts in mandatory
spending would cause substantial disruption to many households, because mandatory spending
funds important parts of the social safety net. Nevertheless, there is widespread agreement that
action is needed to bring down anticipated high debt and deficit levels to restore long-term fiscal
health.12
Federal Revenue
In FY2000, revenues equaled 20.6% of GDP. In FY2010, federal revenue collection totaled
14.9% of GDP or its lowest level since FY1950. Revenue collection has remained depressed over
the last few fiscal years as the result of the economic downturn and the tax relief provision in
ARRA. Revenues remained depressed in FY2011. The longer term revenue outlook depends on
the speed of economic recovery and the legislative actions of Congress on certain expiring tax
provisions and potential tax reform. Under the CBO baseline, revenues are projected to total
20.9% of GDP in FY2021. The increase in revenue levels in the baseline is largely due to the
assumptions that certain tax provisions expire as scheduled under current law, resulting in
increases in tax rates and higher revenue collection.13
Individual income taxes have long been the largest source of federal revenues, followed by social
insurance (payroll) and corporate income taxes.14 In FY2010, individual income tax revenues
totaled 6.2% of GDP. Payroll tax revenue accounted for 6.0% of GDP and corporate income tax
revenues equaled 1.3% of GDP in FY2010. Overall, federal revenues increased very slightly
relative to their FY2009 levels. Figure 3 shows revenue collections between FY2000 and
FY2021.

12 In various reports, the Congressional Budget Office, the Government Accountability Office, and the Administration
agree that the federal government’s budget is on an unsustainable path. For more information, see the section of this
report titled, “Long-Term Considerations.”
13 For more information, see CRS Report R41591, Tax Reform: An Overview of Proposals in the 112th Congress, by
James M. Bickley.
14 For more information, see CRS Report RL32808, Overview of the Federal Tax System, by Molly F. Sherlock and
Donald J. Marples.
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Figure 3. Revenue by Type, FY2000-FY2021
(percentage of GDP)
25%
All Other
Social Insurance Tax
Corp Income Tax
20%
Indiv Income Tax
15%
10%
5%
0%
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021

Source: CRS figure using data from CBO, Historical Tables, January 2011 and The Budget and Economic Outlook: An
Update
, August 2011.
Notes: Data for FY2011 are estimates and data for FY2012-FY2021 are projections. Baseline assumes additional
savings as a result of the work of the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, allocated evenly over the
FY2013-FY2021 period.
Deficits, Debt, and Interest
The annual differences between revenue (i.e., taxes and fees) that the government collects and
outlays (i.e., spending) result in the budget deficit (or surplus).15 Annual budget deficits or
surpluses determine, over time, the level of federal debt and affect the growth of interest
payments to finance the debt.
Beginning with FY2009, annual budget deficits as a percentage of GDP have been sharply higher
than deficits in any period since FY1945. The total deficit in FY2010 was $1,294 billion, or 8.9%
of gross domestic product (GDP). The total deficit, according to some budget experts, gives an
incomplete view of the government’s fiscal condition because it includes Social Security
surpluses (which are held in Treasury trust funds until used to pay future benefits).16 Excluding

15 Most economists use data on federal outlays to track larger budget trends, while most program analysts use budget
authority to track changes in specific program areas.
16 From an overall budget perspective, these surpluses are used to offset other federal spending, thereby decreasing the
current budget deficit while increasing the amount of Treasury securities held in the Trust Fund.
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off-budget items (Social Security benefits paid net of Social Security payroll taxes collected and
the U.S. Postal Service’s net balance) the on-budget FY2010 federal deficit was $1,530 billion.
Budget Deficits
The deficit reached its peak in FY1943 at 30.3% of GDP. The FY2010 total deficit was $1,294
billion (8.9% of GDP), slightly lower than the FY2009 deficit of 10.0% of GDP. Recent budget
deficits have been the largest in proportion to GDP since FY1945.17
Occasional deficits, in and of themselves, are not necessarily problematic. Deficit spending can
allow governments to smooth outlays and taxes to shield taxpayers and program beneficiaries
from abrupt economic shocks in the short-term. Persistent deficits, however, lead to growing
levels of federal debt that may lead to higher interest payments and may also have adverse
macroeconomic consequences in the long-term, including slowing investment and lowering
economic growth.18 Since the debt cannot grow faster than GDP forever, large deficits will
eventually need to be reduced through increases in taxes, reductions in spending, or both.
Federal Debt and Debt Limit
Gross federal debt is composed of debt held by the public and intragovernmental debt.19
Intragovernmental debt is the amount owed by the federal government to other federal agencies,
to be paid by the Department of the Treasury. This amount largely consists of money contained in
trust funds, such as Social Security, that has been invested in federal securities as required by
law.20 Debt held by the public is the total amount the federal government has borrowed from the
public and remains outstanding. This measure is generally considered to be the most relevant in
macroeconomic terms because it is the debt sold in credit markets.
Changes in debt held by the public generally track the movements of the annual on-budget
deficits and surpluses. Whether or not the movements of gross federal debt will follow those of
debt held by the public depends on how intragovernmental debt changes.21
Congress sets a ceiling on federal debt through a legislatively established limit that helps
Congress assert its constitutional prerogative to control spending. The debt limit also imposes a
form of fiscal accountability that compels Congress, in the form of a vote authorizing a debt limit
increase, and the President, by signing the legislation, to take visible action to allow further
federal borrowing when nearing the statutory limit. The debt limit, however, can hinder the
Treasury’s ability to manage the federal government’s finances when the amount of federal debt
approaches this ceiling. In those instances, the Treasury has had to take unusual and extraordinary

17 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, Historical Tables, Table 1-3, available at
http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/Historicals/.
18 Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, Good Deficit / Bad Deficit, April 2009.
19 Gross federal debt is also referred to as total debt or total public debt outstanding. Intragovernmental debt is also
referred to as intragovernmental holdings or debt held by federal government accounts.
20 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget of the U.S. Government, Fiscal Year 2009, Analytical Perspectives,
Feb. 2008, p. 408.
21 In FY2009 and FY2010, the increase in the deficit was larger than that of debt held by the public due to the nature of
the obligations incurred as a result of the government conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the TARP
program.
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measures to meet federal obligations, leading to inconvenience and uncertainty in Treasury
operations at times.22
At the end of FY2010, federal debt subject to limit was approximately $13,511 billion, of which
$9,019 billion was held by the public.23 The debt limit currently stands at $15,194 billion, as a
result of the provisions of the Budget Control Act of 2011 (P.L. 112-25).24
Net Interest
In FY2010, the United States spent $197 billion or 1.4% of GDP on net interest payments on the
debt. What the government pays in interest depends on market interest rates as well as on the size
and composition of the federal debt. Currently, low interest rates have held net interest payments
as a percentage of GDP below the historical average despite increases in borrowing to finance the
deficit.25 Some economists, however, have expressed concern that federal interest costs could rise
sharply once the economy recovers, resulting in future strain on the budget.26 Net interest
payments, under the CBO baseline, are projected to rise to $663 billion or 2.8% of GDP in
FY2021.
Budgeting in Tough Economic Times
The current economic climate poses a major challenge to policymakers shaping the federal
budget. The economic downturn increased the deficit as a result of elevated levels of spending
related to “automatic stabilizer” programs, like Unemployment Compensation and the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), and subsequent policy actions taken by the
federal government to address the recession. Federal spending tied to means-tested social
programs has also been increasing due to rising unemployment, while federal revenues have
fallen as individuals’ incomes and corporate profits dropped. The pace of the economic recovery
could continue to affect deficit levels.
Federal Response to Economic and Financial Market Turmoil
The federal government responded to financial turmoil with an extraordinary set of measures in
2008 and 2009, including two major economic stimulus measures and a variety of programs
within the Federal Reserve, Treasury, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). In
February 2008, Congress enacted a $152 billion package (P.L. 110-185, Economic Stimulus Act

22 General Accountability Office, Delays Create Debt Management Challenges and Increase Uncertainty in the
Treasury Market
, GAO-11-203, February 2011.
23 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, Historical Tables, Tables 7-1 and 7-2.
24 For further details, see CRS Report RL31967, The Debt Limit: History and Recent Increases, by D. Andrew Austin
and Mindy R. Levit.
25 Since FY1970, the U.S. spent an average of 2.2% of GDP on interest payments.
26 Carmen M. Reinhart and Kenneth S. Rogoff, “The Aftermath of Financial Crises,” American Economic Review, vol.
99 (2009), no. 2; Alan Auerbach and William Gale, “The Economic Crisis and the Fiscal Crisis: 2009 and Beyond An
Update,” Tax Policy Center, September 2009, available at http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/UploadedPDF/
1001284_economic_crisis.pdf.
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of 2008) to stimulate consumption by sending refunds to taxpayers and letting firms depreciate
capital investments more quickly.
Another effort to jump-start economic growth came in the form of a second stimulus package
signed into law by President Obama on February 17, 2009. The American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA; P.L. 111-5) included provisions that are now estimated to total
$821 billion in increased discretionary and mandatory spending and reduced tax revenue over the
FY2009-FY2019 period. CBO estimates that over 88% of ARRA’s direct impact on the deficit
will have occurred by the end of FY2011.27 ARRA contains support for state and local
governments in the form of increased transportation project, Medicaid, and school funding;
funding for health care information technology; extended unemployment benefits; as well as tax
cuts and rebates among other provisions.28
In addition to these stimulus efforts, various governmental bodies, through legislative and
existing authority, engaged in numerous financial stability programs. The federal government
placed government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship in
September 2008, thereby gaining temporary authority to provide unlimited funds if necessary to
help them remain solvent. In October 2008, Congress passed the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008 (EESA; P.L. 110-343), which authorized the Treasury Secretary to use
$700 billion (subject to certain congressional restrictions and notifications) to purchase troubled
assets through the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP). As part of this program, Treasury
purchased preferred shares from banks, assisted AIG and the domestic automakers, and provided
other assistance to financial institutions. The Federal Reserve created a panoply of lending
facilities, to provide financial institutions with loans in exchange for various types of collateral.
The FDIC has used its standing authority to resolve failed banks and administer the federal
guarantees on individual deposits, in addition to carrying out a broad guarantee program on debt
issued by banks and supporting joint interventions in large banks.29
The size, variety, and complexity of federal responses to financial and economic turmoil present
many challenges to budget analysis. The ultimate costs of these responses will depend on how the
economy performs, how well firms with federal credit guarantees weather future financial shocks,
and whether government funds are ultimately repaid. Estimating how much these responses will
cost the federal government is difficult, for both conceptual and operational reasons. As a result,
estimates of the costs of some of these programs have already changed significantly.
Estimating the precise budgetary impact of programs like TARP and the government’s
conservatorship of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (also known as government sponsored
enterprises or GSEs) is difficult. Improved market conditions have lowered the estimates of the
amount of TARP authority needed, and bank repurchases of stock sold to the government have
decreased the impact of the program on the budget deficit. Assumptions about default rates and
market borrowing rates have also become much more favorable. As a result, the expected cost of
TARP has fallen considerably from initial estimates. For example, CBO has reduced its estimate

27 The cost estimate for ARRA has changed since it was originally projected due to revised economic and technical
assumptions and certain legislative changes. See source for additional notes. U.S. Congressional Budget Office, The
Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2011 to 2021
, January 2011, Box 1-2.
28 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 Clinton T. Brass et al.
29 For further details on these actions, see CRS Report R41073, Government Interventions in Response to Financial
Turmoil
, by Baird Webel and Marc Labonte.
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for the lifetime cost of TARP from $356 billion to $19 billion.30 Because of budgetary
conventions, TARP increased the deficit significantly in FY2009, but reduced the deficit in
FY2010 and FY2011.
Estimating the cost of the aid given to the GSEs, in budgetary terms, is also complex. Unlike
TARP, no legislation stipulated the precise methodology with which to use when accounting for
the budgetary impact of these interventions. Because of this, OMB and CBO have used different
accounting methodologies to calculate the budgetary impact of GSE assistance, leading to
divergent effects on the budget. CBO recorded a subsidy cost of $291 billion in FY2009 and $25
billion in FY2010. OMB placed the budgetary cost for the GSE intervention in FY2009 at $96
billion and in FY2010 of $40 billion in cash outlays.31 OMB has faced criticism for its
methodology, as some argue that they do not account for the full budgetary cost of the program.32
Once the fiscal year ends, CBO uses the figures recorded by OMB.
Budget Deficit Estimates for FY2011
The January 2011 CBO baseline estimated the FY2011 budget deficit at $1,399 billion or 9.3% of
GDP, higher than the FY2010 (8.9% of GDP) deficit, but lower than the FY2009 deficit (10.0%
of GDP).33 Spending remains several percentage points above the historical average, while
receipts remain well below their historical average (see Figure 1). In October 2011, CBO
estimated the FY2011 deficit at $1,298 billion, nearly equal to the FY2010 deficit in dollar terms
but slightly lower as a percentage of GDP (8.6%).34 This reduction in the deficit relative to the
January 2011 estimate is mainly attributable to higher than expected revenues due to better than
anticipated economic performance.
Under the President’s Budget, deficit estimates for FY2011 amount to $1,645 billion or 10.9% of
GDP. This is larger than CBO’s baseline deficit estimate primarily due to differences in economic
assumptions used. In addition, the Obama Administration assumes a level of discretionary
spending in FY2011 that is higher than the level that CBO estimated.35 In the Mid-Session
Review, OMB estimated the budget deficit for FY2011 at $1,316 billion. This level differs from
their estimate in the President’s Budget submission largely due to higher revenues and lower
spending than had been anticipated. This reduction in spending was due in part to the provisions

30 For specifics on these figures and the source documentation, see ibid, Table 2 and U.S. Congressional Budget Office,
Report on the Troubled Asset Relief Program—March 2011.
31 For more information on these accounting methodologies, see U.S. Congressional Budget Office, CBO’s Budgetary
Treatment of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
, January 2010, available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/108xx/doc10878/
01-13-FannieFreddie.pdf and The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2011 to 2021, January 2011, Table 3-3;
U.S. Office of Management and Budget, The Budget for Fiscal Year 2011, Analytical Perspectives, pp. 346-358,
available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2011/assets/topics.pdf.
32 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Director’s Blog, The Budgetary Impact of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac,
September 16, 2010, available at http://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=1422.
33 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2011 to 2021, January 2011,
Table 1-4.
34 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Monthly Budget Review Fiscal Year 2011, October 7, 2011.
35 At the time these projections were made, full-year appropriations for FY2011 had yet to be enacted. CBO assumed
full-year funding for FY2011 based on amounts provided under the continuing resolution that provided funding
through March 18, 2011 (P.L. 112-4). U.S. Congressional Budget Office, An Analysis of the President’s Budgetary
Proposals for Fiscal Year 2012
, March 2011, p. 13; U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year
2012
, The Budget, Tables S-2 and S-7 and Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, Analytical Perspectives, Table 2-2.
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of the final FY2011 appropriations bill (see below) and slower than expected spending across a
variety of programs relative to what had been assumed when the President’s Budget was
submitted.
Appropriations in FY2011
Congress enacted and the President signed, on April 15, 2011, the Department of Defense and
Full-Year Continuing Appropriations Act, 2011 (P.L. 112-10), which completed action on the
FY2011 regular appropriations acts. This legislation was estimated by CBO to provide an
annualized discretionary outlay level of $1,365 billion.36 Prior to the enactment of this legislation,
the federal government had been operating on a series of seven continuing resolutions (CRs)
since the beginning of the fiscal year (P.L. 111-242; P.L. 111-290; P.L. 111-317; P.L. 111-322; P.L.
112-4; P.L. 112-6; P.L. 112-8). Funding under the CRs was generally provided for at FY2010
levels, with some exceptions in certain programs.37
Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of
2010

On December 17, 2010, the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job
Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312) was signed into law. This legislation had numerous
provisions, including the extension of the 2001 and 2003 ("Bush”) tax cuts until the end of 2012,
reinstating the estate tax until the end of 2012, and “patching” the alternative minimum tax until
the end of 2011. Under the law, emergency unemployment benefits were also extended and the
employee portion of the payroll tax was cut by two percentage points until the end of 2011.
Relative to current law, CBO estimated that the spending and revenue measures in the bill would
increase the deficit by $390 billion in FY2011 and by $468 billion over the FY2012-FY2020
period, with nearly all the impact on the deficit occurring between FY2011 and FY2013.38
Congressional Action in FY2011 to Reduce the Budget Deficit
On August 2, 2011, the President signed into law the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA; P.L. 112-
25).39 The BCA contained a variety of measures intended to reduce the deficit by at least $2.1
trillion over the FY2012-FY2021 period, along with a mechanism to increase the debt limit. The
deficit reduction provisions included $917 billion in savings from statutory caps on discretionary
spending and the establishment of a Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction (Joint

36 Appropriations acts provide budget authority; the outlays for a fiscal year result from the budget authority provided
in that fiscal year as well as budget authority provided in previous fiscal years. The corresponding annualized level of
total budget authority provided is $1,208 billion. The total outlays indicated here include both non-emergency and
contingency operations funding. U.S. Congressional Budget Office, Continuing Resolutions for 2011 in the 112th
Session
, available at http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/121xx/doc12109/ContinuingResolutions.pdf and An Analysis of the
President’s Budgetary Proposals for Fiscal Year 2012
, March 2011, Table 1-5.
37 For more information, see CRS Report RL30343, Continuing Resolutions: Latest Action and Brief Overview of
Recent Practices
, by Sandy Streeter.
38 Between FY2014 and FY2020, the legislation is estimated to reduce the deficit by $59 billion. U.S. Congressional
Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2011 to 2021, January 2011, Box 1-1.
39 For more information on the Budget Control Act of 2011, see CRS Report R41965, The Budget Control Act of 2011,
by Bill Heniff Jr., Elizabeth Rybicki, and Shannon M. Mahan and CRS Report R42013, The Budget Control Act of
2011: Effects on Spending Levels and the Budget Deficit
, by Marc Labonte and Mindy R. Levit.
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Committee) to identify further budgetary savings of at least $1.2 trillion over 10 years. If the Joint
Committee cannot agree to deficit reduction legislation or it is not enacted, then an automatic
spending reduction process would be triggered beginning in January 2013, with cuts divided
evenly between defense and non-defense spending. While the BCA is projected to reduce the
deficit, it does not eliminate budget deficits or growth in the federal debt over the 10-year budget
window.
Budget for FY2012
The Obama Administration released its FY2012 budget on February 14, 2011. Congress began its
consideration of the FY2012 budget after receiving the President’s budget request.
Obama Administration FY2012 Budget
Consistent with the presentation of the FY2010 and FY2011 budgets, the Obama Administration
provided three separate deficit projections.40 First, OMB projected a Budget Enforcement Act
(BEA) baseline, using methods that mirror those CBO uses to project its current-law baseline.
The BEA baseline assumes that discretionary spending remains constant in real (i.e., inflation-
adjusted) terms, the 2001/2003/2010 tax cuts expire at the end of calendar year 2012, and that the
alternative minimum tax (AMT) will not be “patched.”41 Many budget analysts believe such
projections offer an overly rosy scenario of the long-term budget picture. Under this scenario, the
FY2012 deficit is projected to total $1,036 billion.
The Obama Administration also projected an Adjusted Baseline, which in its view, provides a
more transparent and realistic reflection of the federal government’s current fiscal situation.42
They use this methodology as a base for understanding how new policy choices affect the fiscal
outlook, essentially replacing the current BEA baseline. The Administration’s Adjusted Baseline
assumes that the 2001/2003/2010 tax cuts will be extended for middle income taxpayers, that the
alternative minimum tax (AMT) will be “patched,” effectively adjusting the exemption level for
inflation, and that the estate taxes will be extended at 2009 levels. This baseline also includes an
incremental cost adjustment to fund the maximum Pell Grant award and a funding placeholder to
reflect the costs of possible emergencies. The deficit under this scenario is projected to reach
$1,090 billion in FY2012.
The final deficit projection, the Proposed Budget, illustrates the impact on the budget outlook if
all of the policies of the Obama Administration are implemented. In FY2012, the Administration
projects that the deficit will reach $1,101 billion. Both the Adjusted Baseline and the Proposed
Budget project deficits throughout the 10-year budget window, with deficits peaking in FY2011.
Under the Proposed Budget, the deficit would fall from 7.0% of GDP in FY2012 to 2.9% of GDP

40 For details of these projections, see U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, The
Budget
, Tables S-1 (Proposed Budget) and S-7 (BEA Baseline and Adjusted Baseline).
41 The tax cuts were enacted in the Economic Growth and Taxpayer Relief Act of 2001 (EGTRRA; P.L. 107-16) and
the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 (JGTRRA; P.L. 108-27) and extended as part of The Tax
Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act of 2010 (P.L. 111-312). For more information
on the tax proposals in the President’s Budget, see CRS Report R41699, An Overview of Major Tax Proposals in the
President’s FY2012 Budget
, coordinated by Mark P. Keightley.
42 In prior years, this scenario had been known as the Current Policy Baseline.
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by FY2018, before rising to 3.1% of GDP in FY2021.43 Generally, the deficit levels in the
Proposed Budget scenario fall between the lower BEA baseline and the higher Adjusted Baseline
figures. Critics argue that the President’s budget makes the deficit worse in the short-term and
takes credit for deficit reduction over 10 years that would happen automatically under the
baseline.
What Do these Baselines Reflect?
As stated above, the Adjusted Baseline assumes that certain policies due to expire will be
continued. The President’s Budget views the Adjusted Baseline as the most realistic projection of
the budget deficit and it is used as their benchmark to measure the impact of their budget
proposals. The Proposed Budget, however, is the one that illustrates the resulting budget outlook
if all of the policies proposed by the President were implemented. Whether or not a certain policy
proposal increases or decreases the deficit, depends on which baseline is being used as the
starting point.
There are no real limits on what assumptions can be used to construct the Adjusted Baseline as
opposed to the BEA baseline whose parameters were set by legislation. The Adjusted Baseline in
the FY2012 budget assumes, for example, costly increases to “patch” the AMT and continue the
2001 and 2003 tax cuts for the middle class. Because these policies serve to increase the deficit,
the Administration can show decreases in the deficit by measuring its Proposed Policy against this
constructed Adjusted Baseline, rather than against the BEA baseline. For example, because the
Administration includes a “patch” for the AMT in its Adjusted Baseline, at a cost of $1,550
billion between FY2012 and FY2021, their proposal included in the Proposed Policy to pay for
three years of the AMT “patch” by reducing the value of certain tax expenditures, results in a
“savings” of $321 billion over the same period. However, relative to the BEA baseline, the AMT
“patch” results in an increase in the deficit of $1,229 billion.
A similar methodology can be used in understanding how the tax cuts are being accounted for in
each baseline. The Adjusted Policy baseline incorporates a permanent extension to the tax cuts for
middle class taxpayers, which increases the deficit by $1,250 billion over the FY2012-FY2021
period relative to the BEA Baseline. Because this proposal is included in the Adjusted Baseline, it
does not have any additional deficit impact on the Proposed Policy.
Major FY2012 Budget Proposals
In his budget for FY2012, President Obama presented his policy agenda, largely focused on cuts
to the discretionary side of the federal budget and increasing investment in various sectors. The
main policy initiatives he emphasized include various spending and tax proposals, as well as
some broad outlines geared towards longer term deficit reduction. The budget also emphasizes
continued investment in and reform of education and job training programs as well as a continued
push for research and development incentives and infrastructure improvements, with the goal of
continued economic growth and job creation. Overall, the proposed budget cuts the deficit in half,
in dollar terms (and as a percentage of GDP) by the middle part of the decade. However, the
deficit begins to rise again in the second half of the decade.

43 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, The Budget, Tables S-1.
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On the spending side of the budget, the President proposed to freeze non-security discretionary
spending through FY2015, including a two-year freeze on federal civilian pay. Additional savings
are projected on the security side of the discretionary budget by reducing the amount of spending
on Overseas Contingency Operations and achieving zero real growth in the defense budget for the
next five years. According to the projections in the budget, the non-security discretionary
spending freeze will save $406 billion over the next 10 years, relative to the adjusted baseline.
Security savings amount to roughly $900 billion, relative to the adjusted baseline, over the same
period.44 In addition, the President has also proposed terminations and reductions in over 200
programs, which could save approximately $30 billion in FY2012 if enacted.45
The budget proposal also included various tax proposals including the permanent extension of the
2001/2003/2010 tax cuts for families making less than $250,000, changes in the estate tax
parameters, and a three-year proposal to pay for the indexation of the AMT “patch” for inflation.
Details are also provided on ways to begin reforming the corporate tax by eliminating certain tax
expenditures. Like the FY2011 budget proposal, the President also proposes a fee to be imposed
on the financial services industry over at least the next 10 years to recoup the cost of TARP.
Under the proposal, this fee would generate $30 billion by FY2021.
Longer term budgetary challenges remain the biggest driver of fiscal challenges. These challenges
are partially addressed by a variety of budget proposals. The President’s budget proposes to
address the unfunded liabilities in the unemployment insurance system and the Pension Benefit
Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) by providing additional funding mechanisms. It also provides
three broad options to gradually reduce the role of the federal government in providing assistance
to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and eventually ending conservatorship of these entities and the
federal role in the mortgage market. The Administration also remains committed to implementing
the provisions of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA; P.L. 111-148) and the
Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 (HCERA; P.L. 111-152).46 The budget also
includes a two-year offset to pay for the cost of fixing Medicare’s sustainable growth rate (SGR),
but lacks a plan to pay for this during the remaining eight years of the budget window. If the SGR
were not fixed, doctors would face large cuts in Medicare reimbursements.47 Further
programmatic reforms, beyond those laid out in the budget proposal, will likely be needed to fully
address these long-term deficit drivers.
Congressional Consideration of the FY2012 Budget Resolution
The House and Senate Budget Committees are responsible for formulating and reporting an
annual budget resolution. The budget committees typically develop the budget resolution as they
receive information and testimony from various sources, such as the Administration, CBO, and

44 These savings are exclusive of the related reductions in debt service costs. U.S. Office of Management and Budget,
Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, The Budget, Table S-2.
45 Cuts in both mandatory and discretionary programs are included. Some of these cuts are included as part of the five-
year non-security discretionary spending freeze. Savings are calculated relative to FY2010 levels. U.S. Office of
Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2012, Terminations, Reductions, and Savings, p. 1.
46 PPACA and HCERA were signed into law on March 23 and March 30, 2010, respectively. Among other provisions,
this legislation established a mandate for most U.S. residents to obtain health insurance, set up insurance exchanges,
expanded Medicaid, and imposed various tax code changes.
47 For more information, see CRS Report R40907, Medicare Physician Payment Updates and the Sustainable Growth
Rate (SGR) System
, by Jim Hahn.
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congressional committees with jurisdiction over spending and revenues. The timetable
established in the Congressional Budget Act directs the Senate Budget Committee to report a
budget resolution by April 1, and for the House and Senate to reach final agreement on a budget
resolution by April 15.48
On April 6, 2011, the House Budget Committee reported the budget resolution (H.Con.Res. 34,
112th Congress) by a vote of 22-16. The resolution provided for revenue levels of $2,533 billion
and outlays of $3,529 billion in FY2012 for a deficit of $995 billion, or approximately 6.3% of
GDP. By FY2021, the deficit is projected to fall to $385 billion or 1.6% of GDP. Debt held by the
public is projected to rise from $11,418 billion in FY2012 to $16,071 billion by FY2021 and the
debt subject to limit is projected to rise from $16,204 billion to $23,105 over the same period.49
The budget resolution was agreed to by the House on April 15, 2011, by a vote of 235-193. On
May 25, 2011, the Senate rejected a motion to proceed to H.Con.Res. 34 by a vote of 40-57.
The budget proposal contains changes to both spending and revenue. Spending would be reduced
through a five-year freeze on non-security discretionary spending, restraining growth in defense
spending, and the implementation of enforceable spending caps on discretionary and total
spending. Other spending reductions, including changes to the Medicare and Medicaid programs
via the implementation of a Medicare “premium-support” program beginning in FY2022 and a
Medicaid block grant program in FY2013, are also included.50 Under this proposal, overall
government spending would be reduced to the historical average of roughly 20% of GDP by
FY2015. On the revenue side, the budget resolution proposes a consolidation of individual
income tax brackets, with the top tax rate reduced from 35% to 25%. The corporate tax rate
would also be reduced from 35% to 25%. To offset the reduction in tax rates, certain tax
expenditures would also be eliminated in order to broaden the base of taxable income. Revenue
collection would average roughly 18% of GDP between FY2012 and FY2021 under this
proposal.
Because the budget resolution does not become law, separate legislation would have to be enacted
in order to make some of the policy changes that are relied upon in the proposal. The budget
proposal does not contain specifics on how some of the revenue and spending proposals would be
achieved and does not contain any reconciliation directives instructing committees to report such
legislative changes. Therefore, if some of the policy proposals do not become law, the spending,
revenue, and deficit projections could change significantly. Further affecting deficit levels are the
economic assumptions used in making any budget projections. Under the House budget
resolution, GDP growth is assumed at a rate of 4% to 5% each fiscal year, which is roughly the
same as the CBO baseline and lower than under the President’s budget assumptions. However, if
economic growth is higher or lower, the deficit levels and related components in the budget
resolution would be affected.
The Senate Budget Committee has not yet considered a budget resolution for FY2012.

48 For more information on the congressional budget process, see CRS Report RS20368, Overview of the
Congressional Budget Process
, by Bill Heniff Jr.
49 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Budget, The Path to Prosperity, Table S-1, available at
http://budget.house.gov/UploadedFiles/PathToProsperityFY2012.pdf.
50 The majority of the savings related to the Medicare programmatic changes would occur outside the 10-year budget
window.
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Considerations for Congress
Congress faces ongoing budgetary challenges in FY2012 with both short-run and long-run budget
priorities that may conflict in critical ways. In the short term, economic issues may dominate
policy debates, creating pressure for higher deficit spending to stimulate the economy. In the long
term, increasing federal health care costs are expected to keep mandatory spending rising.
Short-Term Considerations
The economy is still recovering from the most recent recession, which lasted from December
2007 to June 2009. Conditions remain weak, in part, due to budget challenges facing state and
local governments, high levels of consumer debt, and continuing weakness in many real estate
markets. Most economists expect unemployment rates to remain elevated for the medium term.
During this period, the budget deficit grew largely as a result of government actions taken to
combat the economic downturn as well as significantly lower revenue and higher spending levels
directly attributable to the economic conditions.
As the economy continues to recover, revenue should increase as unemployment falls and
spending should decrease due to less reliance on federal programs meant to provide assistance
during economic downturns. This should lead to decreases in the budget deficit relative to current
levels in the short term. Though many argue that fiscal stimulus and other actions were needed to
help the economy recover, the resulting large budget deficits and high debt levels will have an
effect for many years.
Many budget analysts are concerned about future levels of federal debt and acknowledge that the
current spending and revenue collection cannot continue at current or projected future levels.
However, making significant changes to spending or revenue policies at this time may be harmful
to the ongoing economic recovery. On the other hand, the longer that the country continues
without a plan to stabilize its fiscal future, the more costly reform may be. In addition, the
likelihood of a severe fiscal crisis may increase, and if that occurs, reforms may be forced by
events, rather than being well planned.
General Budget Issues
Congress may wish to consider some general budgeting issues beyond these short-term
considerations.
Budget Transparency
The budget, reflecting the size and complexity of the federal government, is complicated and
detailed. The budget books that OMB compiles provide an enormous amount of information, and
other budget data reported by federal agencies provide even more detail on federal spending
plans. The Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-282) included
several measures to increase the accessibility of budget information. For example, as a result of
that act, OMB now runs the USAspending.gov website, which provides detailed information on
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federal spending. Some, however, have raised concerns about the quality of those data.51
Moreover, it is not clear that those data are thoroughly coordinated with other federal budgeting
data systems.
Congress and the President have undertaken additional efforts in an attempt to improve
transparency in light of the large amounts of spending currently occurring as a result of economic
stabilization efforts and federal financial interventions. Websites, such as Recovery.gov, were
launched to track stimulus spending. The Congressional Oversight Panel was established in the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act to oversee TARP spending. Despite this, criticisms
remain and requests for greater transparency continue.
In certain cases, despite the large amount of data provided by OMB and other government
agencies, it can be difficult to answer relatively simple budget questions. Critics maintain that the
federal government in general and OMB in particular should take steps to make data on federal
spending even more transparent to taxpayers and more useful to policymakers. Even as the
President’s budget mentions “a new tracking tool” to provide daily updates on spending by
agency, Congress may wish to consider requiring these changes to provide more organized and
transparent budget data to citizens and to itself.52
Long-Term Considerations
Annual budget deficits or surpluses are not always the best indication of long-term fiscal stability.
Most economists agree that, under certain conditions, running a budget deficit may be necessary
to provide economic stimulus or pull an economy out of recession. A large budget deficit in a
single year, in itself, does not necessarily indicate a longer term problem. The federal
government, however, does face serious long-term budget challenges. Some measures of fiscal
solvency in the long term indicate that, under current policy, the U.S. may face a major future
crisis, specifically as it relates to rising health care costs and the likely impact on government-
financed health care spending.
CBO, GAO, and the Administration agree that the current mix of federal fiscal policies is
unsustainable in the long term. The nation’s aging population, combined with rising health care
costs per beneficiary, seems likely to keep federal health costs rising faster than per capita GDP.
CBO projected in June 2010 that under current policy, federal spending on Medicare and
Medicaid would grow from 5.5% of GDP today to about 10% of GDP in 2035, and to more than
17% by 2080.53 The 2010 Economic Report of the President also called the trajectory of future
federal spending on Medicare and Medicaid unsustainable.54 GAO’s recent long-term fiscal
simulations, under an alternative policy scenario, projected debt held by the public as a share of
GDP to exceed the post World War II historical high in about 10 years.55

51 For more information, see CRS Report RL34718, The Federal Funding Accountability and Transparency Act:
Implementation and Proposed Amendments
, by Garrett Hatch.
52 U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Budget for Fiscal Year 2011, The Budget, p. 44.
53 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, The Long-Term Budget Outlook, June 2010, p. 7 and “Supplemental Material.”
54 Council of Economic Advisors, Economic Report of the President, February 2010, p. 140.
55 Government Accountability Office, The Federal Government’s Long-Term Fiscal Outlook: Fall 2009 Update (GAO-
10-137SP), October 15, 2009, p. 1.
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Keeping future federal outlays at 20% of GDP, or approximately at its historical average, and
leaving fiscal policies unchanged, according to CBO projections, would require drastic reductions
in all spending other than that for Medicare, Social Security, and Medicaid, or reining in the costs
of these programs. Under the extension of current policy, CBO estimates that the nation’s current
fiscal gap, a present-value measure of fiscal imbalance for a given time period, would reach 0.7%
of GDP over the next 75 years. This means that an immediate and permanent reduction in
spending, increase in revenues, or a combination of spending cuts and revenue increases
amounting to 0.7% of GDP would be needed to make the government’s debt the same size
(relative to the size of the economy) at the end of that period as it was at the beginning. Under an
alternative fiscal scenario, which incorporates some policy changes that are widely expected to
occur and that policymakers have regularly made in the past, the fiscal gap reaches 8.7% of
GDP.56 This indicates that an immediate and permanent reduction in spending, increase in
revenues, or a combination of spending cuts and revenue increases amounting to 8.7% of GDP
would be needed to make the government’s debt the same size (relative to the size of the
economy) at the end of that period as it was at the beginning.57 Enacting policies to close the
fiscal gap under either scenario would likely require changes in major entitlement programs as
these programs are projected to be responsible for the majority of the long-term growth in federal
spending.58
As the economic recovery continues, Congress may focus more effort on balancing the budget
and reining in the debt. This would require less spending, increases in revenue collections, faster-
than-average economic growth, or a combination of these things. Debt requires interest payments
that can strain budgets if debt levels and interest rates are high. High debt levels could limit the
government’s flexibility in meeting its obligations or in responding to emerging needs of its
citizens. Ultimately, failing to take action to reduce the projected growth in the debt potentially
might lead to future insolvency or government default.59

56 The alternative fiscal scenario includes things like the extension of certain expiring tax provisions, the continued
indexation of AMT to inflation, and Medicare physician payment rates growing with the Medicare economic index. For
a complete description of the assumptions included in the extended baseline and alternative fiscal scenarios, see U.S.
Congressional Budget Office, The Long-Term Budget Outlook, June 2010, Table 1-1.
57 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, The Long-Term Budget Outlook, June 2010, Table 1-3.
58 U.S. Congressional Budget Office, The Long-Term Budget Outlook, June 2010, p. 8.
59 See Alan Auerbach and William Gale, “The Economic Crisis and the Fiscal Crisis: 2009 and Beyond: An Update,”
Tax Policy Center working paper, September 2009, available at http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/Files/rc/papers/
2009/06_fiscal_crisis_gale/06_fiscal_crisis_gale_update.pdf.
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Appendix. Budget Documents
CBO Documents
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) provides data and analysis to Congress throughout the
budget and appropriations process. Each January, CBO issues a Budget and Economic Outlook
that contains current-law baseline estimates of outlays and revenues. In March, CBO typically
issues an analysis of the President’s budget submission with revised baseline estimates and
projections. In late summer, CBO issues an updated Budget and Economic Outlook with new
baseline projections.
In these documents, CBO sets a current-law baseline as a benchmark to evaluate whether
legislative proposals would increase or decrease outlays and revenue collection. Baseline
estimates are not intended to predict likely future outcomes, but to show what spending and
revenues would be if current law remained in effect. CBO typically evaluates the budgetary
consequences of legislative proposals and the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) evaluates the
consequences of revenue proposals.
CBO also releases other periodic publications focusing on the future fiscal health of the United
States. In their publication, The Long-Term Budget Outlook, CBO makes projections on the state
of the federal budget to FY2083. They discuss spending and revenue levels and the related issues
that they expect will arise under different policy assumptions. In their Budget Options volumes,
they provide specific policy options and the impact they will have on spending and revenues over
a 10-year budget window. They also provide arguments for and against enacting each policy.
OMB Documents
The President’s Budget typically contains six volumes: (1) The Budget; (2) Historical Tables; (3)
Analytical Perspectives
; (4) Appendix; (5) Terminations, Reductions, and Savings; and (6)
Supplemental Materials.60 These documents lay out the Administration’s projections of the fiscal
outlook for the country, along with spending levels proposed for each of the federal government’s
departments and programs. The Historical Tables volume also provides significant amounts of
budget data, much of which extends back to 1962 or earlier. Along with the Administration’s
budget documents, the Department of the Treasury also releases the Green Book, which provides
further detail on the revenue proposals that are contained in the budget.61


60 The President’s budget proposals can be found on the OMB website at http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/. The
Supplemental Materials include the Federal Credit Supplement, the Object Class Analysis, the Balances of Budget
Authority, and the Public Budget Database.
61 The Green Book is available at http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/tax-policy/Pages/Greenbook.aspx.
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The Federal Budget: Issues for FY2011, FY2012, and Beyond

Author Contact Information

Mindy R. Levit

Analyst in Public Finance
mlevit@crs.loc.gov, 7-7792


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