[Analytical Perspectives]
[Other Technical Presentations]
[20. Relationship of Budget Authority to Outlays]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]
20. RELATIONSHIP OF BUDGET AUTHORITY TO OUTLAYS
Budget authority is the authority for Federal agencies to enter into
obligations that will result in immediate or future outlays.\1\ Budget
authority is provided in laws, and Federal agencies cannot obligate the
Government to make outlays until budget authority is provided. New
budget authority for most Federal programs is provided in 13 annually
enacted appropriations acts.\2\ However, new budget authority for more
than half of all outlays is made available through permanent
appropriations under existing laws, mainly budget authority for trust
funds. For most trust funds budget authority is automatically
appropriated under existing law from the available balance of their
receipts and equals the estimated annual obligations of the funds.
Automatic appropriations also cover interest on the public debt, for
which budget authority is automatically provided under a permanent
appropriation enacted in 1847 and equals interest outlays; and the
authority to spend offsetting collections credited to appropriation or
fund accounts.
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\1\ For most budget accounts, the relationship of budget authority,
obligations, and outlays is shown in a ``program and financing''
schedule in the budget Appendix volume.
\2\ This year, for the first time, the President has the authority to
cancel portions of the budget authority contained in appropriation bills
through the exercise of a line-item veto.
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Not all of the new budget authority for 1999 will be obligated or
spent in 1999: \3\
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\3\ This subject is also discussed in a separate OMB report,
``Balances of Budget Authority,'' which can be purchased from the
National Technical Information Service shortly after the budget is
transmitted and is made available, with the other Budget documents, on
the internet.
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Budget authority for most trust funds comes from the
authority of these funds to spend their receipts (limited, in
most cases, by the estimated obligations). Any unexpended
balances remain available to these trust funds indefinitely in
order to finance benefits and other purposes specified by law.
Budget authority for most major construction and procurement
projects covers the entire cost estimated when the projects
are initiated, even though work will take place and outlays
will be made over a period extending beyond the year for which
the budget authority is enacted.
Until recent years, budget authority for large portions of
the subsidized housing programs was equal to the Government's
estimated obligation to pay subsidies under contracts, which
extended for periods of up to 40 years. These contracts are
now for one year only and the budget authority requirements
are therefore now appropriated year-by-year.
New budget authority for most other long-term contracts
covers the estimated maximum obligation of the Government.
Budget authority for most education and job training
activity is appropriated for school or program years that
begin in the fourth quarter of the fiscal year. Most of these
funds result in outlays in the year after the year of
appropriation.
Government enterprises are occasionally given budget
authority for standby reserves that will be used only in
special circumstances.
As a result of these factors, a substantial amount of budget authority
carries over from one year to the next. Most of this is earmarked for
specific uses and is not available for new programs. A small part may
never be obligated or spent, primarily the amount for contingencies that
do not occur or reserves that never have to be used. Also, some budget
authority results in an exchange of assets for which no corresponding
net outlays are scored; budget authority backing the transfer of certain
U.S. subscriptions to the International Monetary Fund is one example.
As shown in the following chart, $368 billion of the outlays in 1999
(21 percent of the total) will be made from budget authority enacted in
previous years. At the same time, $386 billion of the new budget
authority proposed for for 1999 (21 percent of the total amount
proposed) will not lead to outlays until future years. Although outlays
in 1999 are, coincidentally, very nearly equal to budget authority for
that year (99 percent), this coincidence only occurs because the prior-
year authority that will produce 1999 outlays ($368 billion) nearly
equals the new 1999 authority that will not be spent until future years
($386 billion). Thus, in general, the total budget authority for a
particular year is not directly indicative of that year's outlays, since
it combines various types of budget authority that have different short-
term and long-term implications for budget obligations and outlays.
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