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On February 5, President Bush released his proposed budget for fiscal year (FY)
2008. The AAAS Preliminary Analysis of R&D in the FY
2008 Budget offers details of the President's budget for FY 2008 and R&D
funding in the budget.
The AAAS R&D Budget and Policy Program offers
an online tutorial on the U.S. federal budget process. This tutorial is adapted
from an "Introduction to the Federal Budget" seminar presented by Kei
Koizumi, Director of the R&D Budget and Policy Program, to various audiences.
The tutorial is designed to introduce audiences to the U.S. federal budget process,
especially as it relates to federal R&D funding. The tutorial will be updated
soon with the latest FY 2008 budget information Click
here to begin the budget tutorial - February 7, 2007 
August 22 - Online Tutorial on the U.S. Federal Budget
Process (will be revised soon) Budget Highlights: President
Bush released his proposed fiscal year (FY) 2008 budget on February 5. This budget
goes to Congress for approval. Below are selected tables and charts based on data
from the FY 2008 budget documents. (FY 2008 begins on October 1, 2006.) The
data below are for the proposed budget only, and do not reflect congressional
action. The complete set of budget documents is available on-line
from the Office of Management and Budget in the Executive Office of the President,
or in printed form from the Government Printing Office. This page presents data
only for the overall federal budget. Please see our FY 2008
R&D page for our analyses of R&D funding proposals contained within the
federal budget. For information specifically on R&D in the federal budget,
please go to the next section of the Guide.
The first table presents an overview of the FY 2008 budget by broad
category of spending (discretionary, Social Security, Medicare, etc.), including
comparisons of the FY 2008 budget with the most recent estimates for FY 2007.
It shows that two-thirds of the budget is for mandatory programs (net interest
and entitlement programs), leaving just one-third of the budget for discretionary
spending (annually appropriated programs) out of which nearly all federal R&D
is funded. -Table I-2. The President's FY 2008
Budget (2/07) The chart below displays the same information in pie
chart form. -Chart. The President's FY 2008 Budget
by Category (2/07) The chart below shows that the majority of federal
revenues come from individuals through payroll taxes and income taxes. Revenues
do not cover all spending, so the government will run a deficit and borrow money.
-Chart. The President's FY 2008 Budget by Source
of Funds (2/07) The FY 2008 budget also contains projections for spending
in budget categories out to FY 2012. Growth in entitlements is expected to continue
mostly unchecked, while discretionary spending would decline in real terms. Interest
on the national debt, once expected to disappear, would continue to be a large
expense because the government will continue to run deficits. -Chart.
Federal Budget by Category, FY 2006-2012 (2/07) The budget proposes
to cut overall discretionary spending in FY 2008, in sharp contrast to rapid
growth in recent years. The Bush Administration proposes to restrain spending
growth in future years, also. -Chart. Trends in
Discretionary Spending, FY 1976-2012 (2/07) Historical data
in the budget show that mandatory programs have grown steadily as a share of the
federal budget, and discretionary spending declined until recent years, but the
discretionary share of the federal budget is now increasing (especially defense)
and is expected to continue to increase moderately to FY 2012. Table
I-3. Historical Trends in R&D and Federal Outlays (2/07) Chart.
Distribution of Federal Outlays by Category, 1970-2012 (2/07) Other
historical data in the charts below highlight budget deficits or surpluses,
the national debt in dollars and as a share of GDP, and federal spending
and revenues as a share of the economy. In the past several years, budgets
have gone from deficits to surpluses, but because of the recession, tax cuts,
homeland security costs, and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the federal budget
deficit has hit all-time highs in recent years. Future projections exclude
many costs, such as future costs of the occupation of Iraq and Afghanistan, extensions
of expiring tax cuts, and fixes for the growing reach of the Alternative Minimum
Tax (AMT). The government had begun to pay down the national debt to the public
in the late 1990s, but with the return of deficits the government is adding to
the national debt again. The government will continue to accumulate government-held
debt, mainly debt held by the Social Security trust fund. At the same
time, federal spending as a share of the economy has increased in recent years,
while federal revenues have declined as a share of the U.S. economy because of
increased spending on one side and proposed and enacted tax cuts on the other.
Cuts in personal income taxes have contributed the most to recent declines in
federal revenues. -Chart. Federal Budget Surplus or
Deficit, 1960-2012 (2/07) -Chart. The National Debt,
1960-2012 (2/07) -Chart. The National Debt as Percent
of GDP, 1960-2012 (2/07) -Chart. Federal Spending
and Revenues as Percent of GDP, 1960-2012 (2/07) -Chart.
Trends in Federal Receipts, 1976-2012 (2/07) The discretionary portion
of the budget funds programs with a variety of missions, though the largest
single mission remains national defense. Discretionary spending is appropriated
each year through 12 appropriations bills of varying sizes. The chart below
shows discretionary spending by appropriations bill. -Chart.
Discretionary Spending by Appropriations Bill, Proposed FY 2008 (5/07)
R&D
is a significant but declining part of the federal budget. Nearly all federal
R&D is funded through the discretionary portion of the budget, and although R&D
has remained relatively constant as a share of all discretionary spending, R&D
has declined as a proportion of the total budget as the discretionary share of
the budget has declined. (For more information on R&D in the federal budget,
please go to the next section of this Guide.)
-Chart. R&D as Percent of the Federal Budget: FY 1962-2008
(2/07) -Chart. R&D as Percent of Discretionary
Spending: FY 1962-2008 (2/07) Back
to Main Guide to R&D Funding Data Page

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