[A Citizen's Guide to the Federal Budget]
[Glossary]
[From the U.S. Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]


Appropriation
An appropriation is an act of Congress that enables Federal agencies
to spend money for specific purposes.

Authorization
An authorization is an act of Congress that establishes or continues a
Federal program or agency, and sets forth the guidelines to which it
must adhere.

Balanced Budget
A balanced budget occurs when total revenues equal total outlays for a
fiscal year.

Budget Authority (BA)
Budget authority is what the law authorizes, or allows, the Federal
Government to spend for programs, projects, or activities.

Budget Enforcement Act (BEA) of 1990
The BEA is the law that was designed to limit discretionary spending
while ensuring that any new entitlement program or tax cuts did not
make the deficit worse. It set annual limits on total discretionary
spending and created ``pay-as-you-go'' rules for any changes in
entitlements and taxes. (See ``pay-as-you-go.'')

Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985
(Gramm-Rudman-Hollings, or GRH)
The Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985 was
designed to end deficit spending. It set annual deficit targets for
five years, declining to a balanced budget in 1991. If necessary, it
required across-the-board cuts in programs to comply with the deficit
targets. It was never fully implemented.

Budget Resolution
The budget resolution is the annual framework within which Congress
makes its decisions about spending and taxes. This framework includes
targets for total spending, total revenues, and the deficit, as well
as allocations, within the spending target, for discretionary and 
mandatory spending.



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``Cap''
A ``cap'' is a legal limit on total annual discretionary spending.

Deficit
The deficit is the difference produced when spending exceeds revenues 
in a fiscal year.

Discretionary Spending
Discretionary spending is what the President and Congress must decide
to spend for the next fiscal year through 13 annual appropriations
bills. Examples include money for such activities as the FBI and the
Coast Guard, housing and education, space exploration and highway
construction, and defense and foreign aid.

Entitlement
An entitlement is a program that legally obligates the Federal
Government to make payments to any person who meets the legal criteria
for eligibility. Examples include Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

Excise Taxes
Excise taxes apply to various products, including alcohol, tobacco,
transportation fuels, and telephone service.

Federal Debt
The gross Federal debt is divided into two categories: debt held by
the public, and debt the Government owes itself. Another category is
debt subject to legal limit.

Debt Held by the Public
Debt held by the public is the total of all Federal deficits, minus
surpluses, over the years. This is the cumulative amount of money the
Federal Government has borrowed from the public, through the sale of
notes and bonds of varying sizes and time periods.

Debt the Government Owes Itself
Debt the Government owes itself is the total of all trust fund
surpluses over the years, like the Social Security surpluses, that the
law says must be invested in Federal securities.

Debt Subject to Legal Limit
Debt subject to legal limit, which is roughly the same as gross
Federal debt, is the maximum amount of Federal securities that may
be legally



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outstanding at any time. When the limit is reached, the President and
Congress must enact a law to increase it.

Fiscal Year
The fiscal year is the Government's accounting period. It begins
October 1 and ends on September 30. For example, fiscal 1998 ends
September 30, 1998.

Gramm-Rudman-Hollings
See Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
GDP is the standard measurement of the size of the economy. It is the
total production of goods and services within the United States.

Mandatory Spending
Mandatory spending is authorized by permanent law. An example is
Social Security. The President and Congress can change the law to
change the level of spending on mandatory programs--but they don't have to.

``Off-Budget''
By law, the Government must distinguish ``off-budget'' programs separate
from the budget totals. Social Security and the Postal Service are
``off-budget.''

Outlays
Outlays are the amount of money the Government actually spends in a
given fiscal year.

``Pay-As-You-Go''
Set forth by the BEA, ``pay-as-you-go'' refers to requirements that new
spending proposals on entitlements or tax cuts must be offset by cuts
in other entitlements or by other tax increases, to ensure that the
deficit does not rise. (See BEA.)

Revenue
Revenue is money collected by the Government.

Social Insurance Payroll Taxes
This tax category includes Social Security taxes, Medicare taxes,
unemployment insurance taxes, and Federal employee retirement payments.



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Surplus
A surplus is the amount by which revenues exceed outlays.

Trust Funds
Trust funds are Government accounts, set forth by law as trust funds,
for revenues and spending designated for specific purposes.

Unified Federal Budget
The unified budget, the most useful display of the Government's 
finances, is the presentation of the Federal budget in which revenues
from all sources and outlays to all activities are consolidated.