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1 (April 27, 2005)

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                                                                Order Code  RS22128
                                                                        April 27, 2005



 CRS Report for Congress

               Received through the CRS Web



                 Discretionary Spending:

                   Prospects and History

                             Philip D. Winters
                     Analyst in Government   Finance
                     Government  and  Finance Division

Summary


     Federal spending has changed, both in size and composition over the last 40 years.
 Total federal spending is now a larger percentage of the economy (as measured by gross
 domestic product - GDP) than it was in 1965 (19.8% of GDP vs 17.2% of GDP).
 Mandatory spending (generally spending that result from laws other than appropriations
 acts, such as Social Security and Medicare), has grown substantially, both as a
 percentage of GDP and as a percentage of total spending to become, today, the largest
 component of federal spending. Mandatory spending, without significant changes to the
 programs composing it, will continue growing as a percentage of GDP and as a
 percentage of total outlays into the future.

     Discretionary spending (generally outlays that result from the budget authority
 provided in appropriations acts, such as defense, education, and transportation), and in
 particular its defense spending component, has shrunk over the last 40 years. Defense
 spending in 1965 dominated the budget, making up 43.2% of total spending. Total
 discretionary spending was 65.8% of total outlays. In 1965, defense spending was 7.4%
 of GDP  and total discretionary spending was 11.3% of GDP. By 2004, defense
 spending had fallen to 19.8% of total spending and 3.9% of GDP. Total discretionary
 spending had fallen to 39.1% of total spending and 7.8% of GDP.

     Under President Bush's FY2006 budget proposals (February 2005) discretionary
 spending will continue falling as shares of total spending and of GDP over the next five
 years (if not longer). This report will not be updated.

    The size and nature of federal spending has changed dramatically over the last 40
years.' In 1965, measured as percentages of gross domestic product (GDP), total outlays
were 17.2% of GDP and discretionary spending was 11.3% of GDP (defense spending
was 7.4% of GDP). Mandatory spending was 4.6% of GDP and net interest was 1.3% of
GDP.  Measured as shares of total outlays, discretionary spending was 65.8% of total
spending and defense spending was two-thirds of that, 43.2% of total outlays. Mandatory


Congressional  Research   Service x The Library of Congress


1 Unless otherwise noted, all years referred to in this report are fiscal years.

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