With the help of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), the
President draws up budget guidelines with spending and taxation
targets. Federal departments and agencies prepare funding plans
and submit them to OMB which, together with senior department
and agency officials, negotiate final budget plans which are sent
to the White House. The President presents his budget to Congress
each January, usually conveying his priorities for the next fiscal
year to Congress and the American people through the State of
the Union Address.
Congressional Budget Review
The Congressional Budget and Impoundment Act of 1974 strengthened
the legislative branch’s capacity to control the federal
budget. Institutionally, Congress created three new entities:
the Senate Budget Committee, the House Budget Committee, and the
Congressional Budget Office.
The Act permits Congress to review the federal budget as a whole,
to relate taxing and spending to decisions, and to determine priorities
among competing national programs. The Senate and House Budget
Committees accomplish the following:
- Receive budget proposals from the President
as well as budget requests from authorization and appropriations
committees.
- Study these proposals, amend them, and develop
budget resolutions.
- Set a spending limit on
each budget category, through budget resolutions.
There are 17 major government functions for which the budget
committees recommend appropriate levels of budget authority (i.e.,
set spending ceilings).
Learn more about Congress:
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