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- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on September 20, 2012 S. 65 would reauthorize the Native Hawaiian Housing Block Grant and Loan Guarantee programs and would authorize the appropriation of such sums as necessary for those programs for each fiscal year through 2015. In addition, the bill would authorize loans provided under title VI of the Native American Housing Assistance and Self- Determination Act of 1996 for each fiscal year through 2015 and would expand eligibility for that program to include the Department of Hawaiian Home Lands (DHHL).
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on September 21, 2012
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations on September 19, 2012 S. 3331 would expand the accreditation standards in the Intercountry Adoption Act of 2000 to cover all international adoptions. Currently, those standards apply only to adoptions from countries that are parties to the Convention on Protection of Children and Cooperation in Respect of Intercountry Adoption (Hague Convention).
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on September 20, 2012 S. 3546 would authorize through 2017 a grant program to preserve Native American languages. CBO estimates that implementing the legislation would cost about $60 million over the 2013-2017 period, assuming appropriation of the necessary amounts. Pay-as-you-go procedures do not apply to this legislation because it would not affect direct spending or revenues.
- Presentation
Senior Advisor for Microeconomic Studies Division Perry Beider's presentation to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs on September 20, 2012
- Cost Estimate
As passed by the Senate on September 22, 2012
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on September 20, 2012
- Blog Post
Today CBO released the latest in a series of statutory reports on transactions undertaken as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)—the program established in October 2008, during the financial crisis, to enable the Department of the Treasury to promote stability in financial markets through the purchase and guarantee of "troubled assets."
- Report
Congress created the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) in 2008 to stabilize financial markets.