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- Report
Spending on the Social Security program will exceed its dedicated tax revenues, on average, by about 12 percent over the next decade, CBO projects. The gap will grow larger in the 2020s and will exceed 30 percent of revenues by 2030.
- Report
Households in the top quintile (including the top percentile) paid 68.8 percent of all federal taxes, households in the middle quintile paid 9.1 percent, and those in the bottom quintile paid 0.4 percent.
- Presentation
Presentation by Molly Dahl and Kevin Perese, CBO Analysts, at the Urban Institute
- Report
CBO analyzes the distribution of most federal spending—including transfers such as Social Security benefits—and almost all federal revenues among U.S. households in 2006. Results are provided by type of household and by income group.
- 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.
- Report
In 2013, the benefits of 10 of the largest tax expenditures will equal 11.7 percent of income for households in the lowest income quintile, 9.4 percent for the highest quintile, and under 8 percent for the middle quintiles, CBO estimates.
- 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.