The Federal Budget

Does the federal government budget and spend your tax dollars wisely?

14.2 Who Controls the Budget Process?

The state of our Union is getting stronger. And we’ve come too far to turn back now. As long as I’m President, I will work with anyone in this chamber to build on this momentum. ... No, we will not go back to an economy weakened by outsourcing, bad debt, and phony financial profits. Tonight, I want to speak about how we move forward ...

Obama went on to outline an ambitious agenda that included increasing manufacturing in the United States, building skills for American workers, reforming education and immigration policy, cutting taxes for small businesses and the middle class, removing tax cuts for the wealthy, developing clean energy, and improving infrastructure. These plans were part of Obama’s vision to balance the budget and reduce the federal deficit. He continued,

When it comes to the deficit, we’ve already agreed to more than $2 trillion in cuts and savings. But we need to do more, and that means making choices.

The following month, on February 13, Obama presented the choices he made to reduce the deficit in the federal budget he submitted to Congress. Submitting a budget for the federal government to Congress is one of the president’s most important responsibilities each year. This chapter explores how the process of creating that budget works, both before and after the president delivers the annual State of the Union address.

 The president proposes, Congress disposes.” This is how an old Washington saying sums up the process of creating a federal budget. As is true of the legislative process, however, the reality is 0r more complex. During some periods of our history, Congress dominated budget making. At other times, the president was clearly in charge. Today control is shared as the two branches work together to shape a budget that reflects their priorities.

Congressional Control of Federal Spending: 1789- 1921

The federal budget is an estimate of the money the government will take in and spend on programs over the next fiscal year. A fiscal year is the period of time an organization uses for its budgeting, record keeping, and financial reporting. The U.S. government’s fiscal year begins October 1 and ends September 30.

The Constitution talks about levying taxes and spending money, but it does not mention budgets. At the time the Constitution was written, the idea of trying to estimate revenues and expenditures a year in advance was new. In general, governments simply collected taxes and then spent money as needed. In times of crisis or a shortfall in income, taxes were raised to bring in extra money.

For more than a century, Congress dominated this simple method of raising and spending money.

As the Constitution requires, all proposals for the spending of federal funds originated in the House of Representatives. These requests were then combined into a single spending bill. Once the House approved the spending bill, it went to the Senate for approval. The president’s role in this process was limited to signing the spending bill into law or vetoing it.

This system worked fairly well during the 1800s. Usually revenues and expenditures came out about even, creating a balanced budget. During some years, the country even had a small budget surplus, with extra funds left over. The only time the country experienced a federal deficit, or a shortfall of revenue, was during wartime.

In times of war, the government raised taxes and borrowed money to fund the military campaign. The money borrowed created a national debt. When the war ended, Congress worked to retire, or payoff, the national debt as quickly as possible.

Presidential Dominance of Budget Making: 1921-1974

The rapid growth of government spending during World War I overwhelmed Congress’s old way of appropriating funds. By the end of 1919, federal expenditures were more than 26 times what they had been just five years earlier. Moreover, the national debt had soared to a record $26 billion.

Faced with a huge war debt and with what looked to many like runaway spending, Congress enacted the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921. This act set up the Bureau of the Budget in the executive branch to oversee a new budget-making process. The bureau was renamed the Office of Management and Budget in 1970. The act also set up the General Accounting Office to improve congressional oversight of federal spending.

Under this new budget process, the president was required to submit a proposed budget to Congress each year. The intent of this requirement was to give Congress better information with which to make spending decisions. The effect, however, was to concentrate budget power in the executive branch.

Beginning with Franklin Roosevelt, presidents used their new budget power to promote their own policy agendas. They decided which agencies and programs should be funded and which should not. Congress could override those decisions, but generally it went along with the president’s budget.

By 1970, however, it was clear that the budget process put in place in 1921 had not led to a new era of balanced budgets. Year after year, presidents sent budgets to Congress that included costly new programs that lawmakers wanted to support. But few in either branch wanted to raise taxes to fund those new projects. The result was year after year of deficit spending – or spending financed by borrowing rather than by tax revenues. As the deficits piled up, the national debt began to rise to levels that alarmed many national leaders.

Nixon and Congress Clash

Concern over the budget process mounted during Richard Nixon’s presidency. Already facing disapproval over the Watergate scandal, Nixon enraged many legislators by using the president’s power of impoundment to nullify congressional spending decisions. Impoundment involves the refusal of a chief executive to spend funds that have been appropriated by the legislature.

Impoundment was not new. Presidents before Nixon had used this power to make small spending cuts in programs that they viewed as unwise or unnecessary. Members of Congress might grumble when their favorite projects were canceled, but they did not rebel against the occasional decision to impound federal funds.

President Nixon, however, used his power to impound funds on a scale never seen before. In an effort to reduce deficit spending, he refused to spend billions of dollars already appropriated by Congress. He also used impoundment to “defund” programs he did not approve of. When asked by reporters about his use of this power, Nixon declared,

The constitutional right for the President of the United States to impound funds ... is absolutely clear ... I will not spend money if the Congress overspends, and I will not be for programs that will raise the taxes and put a bigger burden on the already overburdened American taxpayer.
– Richard Nixon, Jan. 31, 1973

Members of Congress saw Nixon’s use of impoundment as an assault on their constitutional power of the purse. In 1974, Congress responded by enacting legislation that both increased its role in shaping the federal budget and limited the president’s powers of impoundment.

Shared Control of Budget Making: 1974 to the Present

The Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 created the budget process that is still in use today. This process gives the legislative ·and executive branches shared control over budget making.

The main change brought about by this legislation was the creation of new budget committees in both the House and Senate, These committees are responsible for drafting Congress’s own spending priorities, known as the budget resolution, The act also created the Congressional Budget Office to assist Congress in this process, The CBO provides nonpartisan estimates of revenue and spending, It also “scores” proposed tax and spending bills to indicate their impact on future budgets,

Many of the lawmakers who supported the new budget process laid out in the 1974 act hoped it would reduce conflict between the executive and legislative branches, In this they were disappointed, Even with responsibility more evenly shared, the budget process frequently leads to power struggles between the two branches, At the center of these struggles are deep disagreements over how revenue should be raised and how the tax dollars collected each year should be budgeted and spent,

Next Section: 14.3 (The Federal Budget Cycle)