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H.R. 6365, National Security and Job Protection Act 1 (September 12, 2012)

handle is hein.congrec/cbo10901 and id is 1 raw text is: CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE
COST ESTIMATE
September 12, 2012
H.R. 6365
National Security and Job Protection Act
As posted on the Web site of the House Committee on Rules on September 7, 2012
H.R. 6365 would eliminate certain automatic spending reductions scheduled to take effect
in January 2013, as well as reduce the overall limit on discretionary budget authority for
fiscal year 2013. Because the provisions of the bill are contingent on enactment of
reconciliation legislation as specified in section 201 of H. Con. Res. 112, the budget
resolution for fiscal year 2013 as passed by the House, or similar legislation that achieves
commensurate outlay reductions, CBO estimates that enacting H.R. 6365, by itself, would
have no impact on the federal budget.
However, if the contingency in H.R. 6365 is met, CBO estimates that enacting the bill
would increase direct spending by about $72 billion over the 2013-2022 period, relative to
CBO's March 2012 baseline projections, which reflect the assumption that automatic
spending reductions under the Budget Control Act of 2011 will go into effect as currently
scheduled. That total only reflects the cost of avoiding sequestration (cancellation of
budgetary resources) of unobligated balances for defense programs and of advance
appropriations for 2013 for nondefense programs other than those under the Department of
Veterans Affairs. At this point in time, no other appropriations have been provided for
fiscal year 2013. If additional discretionary appropriations are enacted for 2013, more
resources would be available to be sequestered, and reversing the specified automatic
reductions would result in an increase of up to $97 billion in direct spending over the
2013-2022 period, CBO estimates (instead of the $72 billion figure cited above).
Those estimates reflect the proposed elimination of the scheduled January 2013 reductions
under the Budget Control Act in spending for discretionary programs and in mandatory
defense spending. Under H.R. 6365, the scheduled reductions in mandatory nondefense
spending would remain in effect.
H.R. 6365 would also remove the separate limits on defense and nondefense discretionary
budget authority for 2013. Furthermore, the act would specify a cap on total discretionary
budget authority that is $19.1 billion lower than the total funding level of $1,047 billion
that could be provided under current law; however, because any effect of that adjustment
would be subject to future appropriation actions, that change in the cap on 2013 funding

would have no impact on direct spending.

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