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- Cost Estimate
As passed by the U.S. House of Representatives on November 15, 2017
- Report
When the Congress considers legislation that would authorize a nonfederal entity to carry out certain duties, CBO must decide whether to treat the associated cash flows as federal transactions when estimating the bill’s budgetary effects.
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on May 17, 2017
- Presentation
Presentation by Megan Carroll, an analyst for CBO’s Budget Analysis Division, at the Department of Commerce Resource Management Conference.
- Cost Estimate
As ordered reported by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs on March 15, 2017
- Report
The Senate Budget Committee convened a hearing at which Director Keith Hall testified about CBO’s report The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2017 to 2027. This document provides CBO’s answers to questions submitted for the record.
- Report
On an annualized basis, the funding provided by the continuing resolution would exceed the statutory caps by $19 billion. Defense funding would exceed its cap by about $20 billion; nondefense funding would be about $1 billion below its cap.
- Presentation
Presentation to the National Association for Business Economics by Jeffrey Holland, Projections Unit Chief, Budget Analysis Division.
- Report
CBO considers most leases of medical facilities by the Department of Veterans Affairs akin to government purchases and concludes—as it does in like cases—that the full costs should be recorded in the budget when VA enters into the leases.
- Blog Post
Past experience indicates that CBO will receive lots of questions about the House’s and Senate’s proposed budget resolutions and about CBO’s “estimates” of their impact. This blog post explains a bit about them.