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- Sequestration - Congressional Budget Office
CBO provides estimates of the statutory caps on discretionary funding and an assessment of whether sequestration might be necessary under current budgetary rules, but the Administration's Office of Management and Budget makes the ultimate determination of whether a sequestration is necessary and, if so, how big it should be
- Sequestration Update Report: August 2023 - Congressional Budget Office
CBO also must estimate whether any appropriations enacted for the current fiscal year have exceeded the caps and thus would trigger a cancellation of budgetary resources, known as a sequestration The authority to determine whether the caps have been breached rests solely with the Office of Management and Budget
- Sequestration Update Report: August 2024 - Congressional Budget Office
In CBO’s estimation, a sequestration will not be required for 2024 However, the authority to make that determination—and, if so, how to cut budgetary resources—rests with the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), which reported in April that appropriations for 2024 had not exceeded the caps 3
- Final Sequestration Report for Fiscal Year 2025
2 FINAL SEQUESTRATION REPORT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2025 MARCh 2025 appropriation legislation for 2025, CBO estimates that the adjustments to the caps for 2025 amount to $157 7 bil-lion Those adjustments include $11 8 billion for defense (entirely for emergency requirements) and $145 9 billion for nondefense ($117 8 billion for emergency requirements,
- Final Sequestration Report for Fiscal Year 2025
In CBO's estimation, a sequestration will not be required for 2025 However, the authority to make that determination—and, if so, how to cut budgetary resources—rests with the Administration's Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Those determinations are based on OMB's own estimates of federal spending and the caps
- Sequestration Update for August 2021 - Congressional Budget Office
In CBO’s Final Sequestration Report for Fiscal Year 2021, the agency found that appropriations had not exceeded the caps and that no sequestration would be required Since the publication of that report in January, an additional $2 1 billion has been appropriated, bringing the total to $1,592 billion; however, all of that additional funding
- Washington, DC 20515 - Congressional Budget Office
whether sequestration is required Within 15 days of the enactment of the last full-year appropriation act, OMB will use the section 101 caps to determine whether sequestration is required Additional sequestration orders might be required if more base funding is provided after enactment of all full-year appropriations
- Potential Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Effects of a Bill to Provide . . .
CBO responds to questions concerning the sequestration (cancellation of budgetary resources) that would occur under the Statutory Pay-As-You-Go Act of 2010 if an enacted bill raised deficits by $2 3 trillion over 10 years
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