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The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990: The Path to No Fault Budgeting
Authors:Richard Doyle  Jerry McCaffery
Affiliation:Professor Richard Doyle is a former Senior Analyst for Defense for the Senate Budget Committee, now teaching federal budgeting at the Naval Postgraduate School.;Professor Jerry McCaffery teaches federal budgeting at the Naval Postgraduate School.
Abstract:
The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990, included in the controversial and comprehensive budget legislation passed by Congress in October, makes a number of significant changes in federal budgeting. It shifts the focus of the budget process from deficit reduction to spending control, provides five-year spending totals and mini-sequesters for defense, international and domestic appropriations, and puts entitlements and revenue expenditures on a pay-as-you-go basis. The Gramm-Rudman-Hollings deficit targets have been raised substantially, Social Security surpluses taken out of the deficit calculation and allowance made for further adjustments for inflation, Operation Desert Shield, and other emergency spending, minimizing the prospect for general sequestration. OMB has been given important new estimating authority and the roles of the congressional committees involved in budgeting have been altered.
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