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How Will the Budget Cuts Work?
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Yesterday, the House passed a massive budget bill that included a 0.38
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percent "across-the-board" budget cut. How will this cut be applied?
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Although the cut is billed as across-the-board, it affects only
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"discretionary" spending, which is less than half of the estimated $1.7
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trillion budget. Nearly $1 trillion in spending is deemed "mandatory," so it's
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exempt from the cuts. This includes Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid,
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unemployment benefits, government pensions, the earned income tax credit, and
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other programs that the government is obligated to fund. Although it is not
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considered a mandatory expense, Congress also exempted military salaries from
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the cut--as well as its own.
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To achieve the 0.38 percent reduction, cabinet secretaries will have to cut
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that amount from their departments' total discretionary spending.
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Congressional Republicans had originally proposed that the reduction be applied
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equally to each of the nearly 1,000 discretionary programs listed in the
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appropriation bills--that is, the Navy's $6 billion allocation for aircraft
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acquisitions and the $50 million budget of the Consumer Product Safety
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Commission would each have been reduced by 0.38 percent. But the final measure
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allows the cabinet secretaries to allocate the cut as they see fit. They will
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be able to reduce the spending of individual programs by up to 15 percent,
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while leaving other programs' budgets alone. The only department not granted
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this flexibility is the Pentagon, which is required to distribute the reduction
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proportionally among operations, procurement, and research programs.
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Next question?
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