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- Report
CBO is required to report its assessment of whether enacted appropriations for the current fiscal year exceed caps on discretionary spending. In CBO's estimation, they do not, and hence a sequestration will not be required for 2016.
- Presentation
Presentation by Ben Page, CBO's Fiscal Policy Studies Unit Chief, at the National Tax Association 108th Annual Conference on Taxation
- Presentation
Presentation by Wendy Edelberg, CBO’s Assistant Director for Macroeconomic Analysis, and Teri Gullo, CBO's Assistant Director for Budget Analysis, to Congressional Staff
- Presentation
Presentation by Wendy Edelberg, CBO’s Assistant Director for Macroeconomic Analysis, and Teri Gullo, CBO's Assistant Director for Budget Analysis, at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
- Presentation
Presentation by Wendy Edelberg, CBO’s Assistant Director for Macroeconomic Analysis, at the American Enterprise Institute, describing how CBO will incorporate macroeconomic effects into certain cost 10-year estimates.
- Presentation
Presentation by Meredith Decker, an Associate Analyst in CBO’s Budget Analysis Division, to Congressional staff, explaining the federal debt limit and the “extraordinary” measures the Treasury takes when the debt reaches that limit.
- Presentation
Presentation by Wendy Edelberg, CBO’s Assistant Director for Macroeconomic Analysis, at the Brookings Institution
- Presentation
Presentation by Keith Hall, CBO Director, to the Society of Government Economists.
- Report
In a report required by law, CBO provides estimates of the caps on discretionary funding for each fiscal year through 2021. CBO concludes that the discretionary appropriations provided to date for 2015 do not exceed the caps for this year.
- Report
CBO has analyzed the macroeconomic effects of eliminating automatic reductions in discretionary spending caps established under the Budget Control Act of 2011 for fiscal years 2016 and 2017.