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1 Barry Blom, et al., An Analysis of the Discretionary Spending Proposals in the President's 2024 Budget 1 (May 18, 2023)

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     The Administration submitted its latest   annual
          set of budgetary proposals to the Congress
          on March  9, 2023.1 In this report, the
          Congressional Budget  Office examines how  the
discretionary spending proposals in that budget compare
with CBO's  most  recent baseline budget projections,
which  span 2023 to 2033.2

In analyzing the President's budget, CBO compares
outcomes  under the discretionary funding requested by
the Administration for each year from 2024 through
2033  with outcomes  under the funding levels in CBO's
baseline, which incorporate the assumption that funding
will grow with inflation after 2023 (or, in the case of
advance appropriations, from the amount  of the final
enacted advance appropriation). The main  differences
between  the two sets of projections are as follows:
=  Under  the President's budget, CBO estimates
   that funding would  be $70 billion (or 4 percent)
   below  baseline amounts in 2024 and  $2.5 trillion
   (or 12 percent) below baseline amounts over the
   2024-2033   period.
   The  President's budget contains less funding designated
   as an emergency requirement  than CBO's baseline
   does, accounting for roughly two-thirds of the total
   difference between the estimates over the next decade.
   For all other funding-that is, funding not designated
   as an emergency  requirement-amounts in the


1. This analysis does not include the budgetary effects of the
    amendments to the proposed budget that the Administration
    submitted to the Congress on May 9, 2023.
2.  Discretionary spending is controlled by appropriation acts that
    provide funding or otherwise specify how much money can be
    obligated for certain government programs in specific years. Such
    appropriations fund a broad array of government activities.


   President's budget are $28 billion (or 2 percent)
   higher in 2024 and  $819 billion (or 4 percent) lower
   over the 2024-2033   period than baseline amounts,
   growing  at an average of 1.3 percent annually during
   that period. Under CBO's  baseline, such funding
   grows  at 2.4 percent per year, on average.

As a result of those differences in funding, outlays under
the President's budget would be lower than those in the
baseline by $16 billion (or 1 percent) in 2024, CBO
estimates, and by $1.5 trillion (or 7 percent) from 2024
to 2033. (Unless otherwise noted, amounts in this report
do not include the effects of proposed changes in man-
datory programs  that would be enacted in appropriation
bills.) Outlays stemming from funding designated as an
emergency  requirement would  account for three-quarters
of the total difference over the next decade. As a share of
gross domestic product (GDP),  discretionary outlays in
2033  would be 2.5 percent for defense and 2.8 percent
for nondefense-the  two  subcategories of discretionary
outlays. Both amounts would  be lower than their values
in any of the past 50 years.

CBO's  baseline, which reflects the assumption that cur-
rent laws governing federal spending and revenues will
generally remain in place, is intended to provide a bench-
mark  that policymakers can use to assess the potential
effects of future policy decisions on federal spending and
revenues and, thus, on deficits and debt. Both CBO's
baseline and its analysis of the Administration's budget
are based on the agency's most recent economic forecast.3

3.  For CBO's most recent baseline budget projections, see
    Congressional Budget Office, An Update to the Budget Outlook:
    2023 to 2033 (May 2023) www.cbo.gov/publication/59096.
    For CBO's most recent economic projections, see Congressional
    Budget Office, The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2023 to 2033
    (February 2023), www.cbo.gov/publication/58848.


Notes: All years referred to in this report are federal fiscal years, which run from October 1 to September 30 and are designated by the calendar year in which
they end. Numbers in the text and tables may not add up to totals because of rounding.

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