Federal fiscal programs.
Wakefield, Joseph C.
Federal Fiscal Programs THE fiscal year 1987 budget, consistent with
budgets of recent years, proposes to alter the scope and scale of
Federal fiscal programs and to change the Federal Government's
relationship with some parts of the economy, especially agriculture and
State and local governments. The budget, submitted to Congress in early
February, reflects the impact of the Balanced Budget and Emergency
Deficit Control Act of 1985, which mandates deficit limits for fiscal
years 1986-91. (See the article on page 32 for a discussion of this act
and the new timetable for the budget process.) To reduce the large
deficit, the budget proposes outlays substantially below current
services outlays--that is, outlays that would take place without policy
changes--to be implemented by program terminations and rescissions,
social service reforms, and management improvements in individual
programs. National defense outlays, while reduced from previous
estimates, continue to increase, as do outlays for Social Security
benefits.
The budget proposes minor tax changes, administrative actons, and a
variety of new or increased fees--such as loan origination fees, customs
fees, and recreation fees--to be paid by users and beneficiaries of
Federal services. These proposals increase receipts, on balance, by a
relatively small amount. The budget does not include any proposal for
tax reform and simplification.
National defense spending increases 6.2 percent in 1987; in real
terms, according to the administration, the increase is 2.4 percent. The
budget includes only a 1.3-percent increase for procurement in 1987,
compared with 7.6 percent in 1986 and 13.7 percent in 1985. A large
increase--10.2 percent--is proposed for research and development, with
emphasis on strategic weapons, especially the strategic defense
initiative, or Star Wars program. Operation and maintenance spending
increases 9.1 percent, compared with 2.5 percent in 1986.
Nondefense spending declines 0.3 percent in 1987; in real terms,
the decline in 4.2 percent. Excluding debt service and social security,
nondefense spending declines 5.4 percent. The largest proposed
reductions are in agriculture and in education, training, employment,
and social services. The largest proposed increases are in social
security and net interest.
Economic assumptions
Monetary growth, although expected to decline gradually following
an acceleration last year, is expected to provide sufficient liquidity
to sustain the expansion. Other economic assumptions underlying the
fiscal year 1987 budget are shown in table 1. According to the Council
of Economic Advisers, the assumptions "anticipate that real
business investment will continue to lead the expansion." Further,
"A substantial slowdown in inventory accumulation during 1985 left
inventory levels very low, so that continued growth in final sales would
be expected to trigger production increases."
From the fourth quarter of 1985 to the fourth quarter of 1986, GNP in constant dollars is forecast to increase 4 percent. Personal
consumption expenditures are expected to increase 2.6 percent, slightly
less than in 1985. Residential investment--with housing starts of 1.9
million--is expected to increase 8 percent, or 25 percent more than in
1985. Nonresidential fixed investment is expected to increase 5
percent, about 20 percent below the 1985 increase, but still faster than
GNP. Federal purchases of goods and services decline 4 percent,
compared with an 11.8-percent increase in 1985. This decline reflects a
sharp reduction in Federal purchases of agricultural commodities by the
fourth quarter of 1986 from the very high level in the fourth quarter of
1985. (The decline also reflects, in part, cuts made under the
sequester order implemented for fiscal 1986 in compliance with the
Balanced Budget and Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985. State and
local purchases are expected to increase at a somewhat faster pace--3.5
percent--in 1986 than in 1985.
Prices, as measured by the GNP deflator, are expected to increase
somewhat faster in 1986 than in 1985. According to the Council,
"Rapid monetary growth throughout 1985 as well as the depriciation
of the dollar are expected to place upward pressure on prices."
Prices are expected to increase 3.8 percent over the four quarters of
1986. Employment is expected to increase 1.7 million in 1986, leading
to a decline in the unemployment rate of 6.7 percent by the fourth
quarter of 1986.
Unified budget
The unified budget deficit decreases from $202.8 billion in fiscal
year 1986 to $143.6 billion in fiscal year 1987 (table 2 and chart 1).
Of the $59.2 billion decline in the deficit, $23.8 billion is the result
of an assumed decline in the current services budget deficit and $35.4
billion is the result of administration deficit-reduction proposals.
Receipts increase $73.3 billion--or 9.4 percent--in 1987, to $850.4
billion. Receipts in 1986 are $777.1 billion, up 5.9 percent from 1985.
Proposed legislation and administrative actions increase receipts, on
balance, $6.3 billion in 1987. The largest proposed increases are $1.7
billion for an extension of the temporary 16-cent cigarette excise tax (the tax reverts to 8 cents on March 15, 1986) and $1.0 billion from the
resolution of cases involving petroleum pricing and allocation
violations under the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act of 1973. The
largest reduction is $0.4 billion for a tax credit for tuition expenses
paid to private elementary and secondary schools, effective August 1,
1986.
Outlays increase $14.1 billion--or 1.4 percent--in 1987, to $994.0
billion. Outlays in 1986 are $979.9 billion, up $33.6 billion, or 3.6
percent. The 1987 increase is the net result of $37.4 billion in
increases and $23.3 billion in decreases. Table 3 shows the change in
unified budget outlays by function; four functions--national defense,
social security, medicare, and net interest--account for 95 percent of
the $37.4 billion of increases. The $23.3 billion in decreases is the
result of proposals to cut nondefense outlays except Social Security
benefits. Reductions in agriculture and in education, training,
employment, and social services account for 42 percent of the
reductions. The reduction in outlays for agriculture is largely the
result of the Food Security act of 1985, which froze target prices (used
in determining agricultural subsidies) for 1986 and 1987 and lowered the
dollar amount farmers can borrow (with the crop as collateral) for
wheat, corn, and other feed grains.
Current services estimates
Current services estimates show what receipts and outlays would be
without policy changes. They are neither recommended amounts nor
forecasts, but rather a base with which administration or congressional
proposals can be compared. The level of outlays generally is that
needed to maintain ongoing Federal programs and activities at fiscal
year 1986 levels in real terms. The major exception is for national
defense; the current services estimates reflects the fiscal year 1986
congressional budget resulution. The 1986 current services outlays have
been reduced as a result of sequestration under the Balanced Budget and
Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985.
Unified budget receipts in 1987 are $6.3 billion higher than
current services receipts, reflecting the administration's
proposals to increase receipts as previously discussed (table 4). As
mentioned, the major proposal is to extend the cigarette excise tax.
Other proposals would increase receipts by raising to 9 percent from 7
percent, the civil service retirement contribution (effective October 1,
1986) and by more effective collection of taxes under various Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) initiatives.
Unified budget outlays are $31.9 billion lower than current
services outlays; proposed program reductions $34.8 billion) exceed
proposed increases ($2.9 billion). Current services outlays for
national defense are reduced $2.7 billion, or 1 percent, and those for
nondefense programs are reduced $32.1 billion, or 4.3 percent. Medicare
outlays are reduced $4.7 billion, largely by reforming payments to
hospitals for medical education, by phasing hospital capital costs into
the calculation of prospective payment system rates for inpatient hospital care, and by increasing the supplementary medical insurance
premium to cover 27 percent of program costs in 1987. A variety of
proposals reduce education outlays $2.4 billion; they particularly
affect higher education and include increased contributions from parents
and students and reduced payments to cover interest on student loans. A
proposed increase in the voucher system for low-income households and
consolidation of programs reduces outlays for housing assistance $2.1
billion. A phaseout of crop insurance services and a greater emphasis
on guaranteed rather than direct loans contribute to the $1.7 billion
reduction in farm income stabilization outlays. The administration also
proposes to sell five power marketing administrations (such as
Bonneville), the naval petroleum reserves, and surplus property to yield
savings of $1.7 billion in 1987. Proposed user fees and credit fees
contribute $3.3 billion to the total reduction. Included in user fees
are processing fees on passengers and commercial carriers entering the
United States by land or sea ($0.5 billion) and the replacement of the
penalty for failure to pay taxes imposed by IRS with a
cost-of-collection fee ($0.3 billion).
Federal sector
BEA has prepared estimates of the Federal sector on the national
income and product account (NIPA) basis consistent with the unified
budget estimates (table 2). Estimates of the Federal sector are
integrated conceptually and statistically with the rest of the
NIPA's and differ in several respects from the unified budget.
Unlike the unified budget, they exclude financial transactions, such as
loans, and record several categories of receipts and expenditures on a
timing basis that is different from the budget. (For a more detailed
discussion of the differences, see the February 1980 SURVEY OF CURRENT
BUSINESS.) Table 5 shows the relation between unified budget receipts
and NIPA receipts, and table 6 shows the relation between unified budget
outlays and NIPA expenditures.
Federal receipts on the NIPA basis are $905.2 billion in fiscal
year 1987, up $82.0 billion from 1986 (chart 2). The increase is the
net result of an $84.8 billion increase due to higher tax bases and a
$2.8 billion decrease due to tax changes (table 7). Enacted tax changes
reduce receipts $9.6 billion, and proposed legislation increases taxes
$6.8 billion. Proposed legislation increases indirect business tax and
nontax accruals ($3.1 billion) and contributions for social insurance
($2.1 billion) and reduces personal tax and nontax receipts ($0.4
billion). The major proposal increasing indirect busienss taxes is the
extension of the cigarette excise tax; proposed user fees also
contribute to the increase. The proposal to increase the civil service
retirement contribution accounts for the increase in contributions. The
tuition tax credit accounts for the proposed reduction in personal
taxes.
Federal expenditures on the NIPA basis are $1,043.7 billion in
fiscal year 1987, up $27.8 billion from 1986; this increase is about
one-half of the 1986 increase (chart 3 and chart 4). Table 8 highlights
the major factors that contribute to recent changes in Federal
expenditures. The largest increase in 1987--$11.8 billion--is for
Social Security benefits, including $6.5 billion for cost-of-living
adjustments. "Other" national defense purchases increase
$10.9 billion; combined with the increase in purchases of military
hardware and pay raises, national defense purchases increase $19.5
billion, accounting for 70 percent of the total increase. Net interest
paid increases $6.3 billion, and medicare transfer payments increase
$3.0 billion. Partly offsetting these increases are declines in
purchases of agricultural commodities by the Commodity Credit
Corporation and in revenue sharing grants to local governments, which
expire at the end of fiscal year 1986.
Table 9 shows the relation between national defense outlays in the
unified budget and national defense purchases on the NIPA basis. In
1987, outlays, which are measured on a checks-issued basis, increase
slightly less than purchases, which are recorded largely on a delivery
basis. The larger increase in purchases reflects a sharp increase in
deliveries--particularly of the B-1 bomber and the Peackeeper (MX)
missile--for which checks were issued prior to delivery.
Quarterly pattern.--Table 10 shows the major factors that affect
the quarterly pattern of receipts and expenditures through fiscal year
1987. The Federal deficit declines steadily after the fourth quarter of
1985; the large decline in the second quarter of 1986 largely reflects
the effects of the sequester order, which was effective March 1.
Receipts reflect the pattern of enacted and proposed tax changes and the
administration's projected quarterly pattern of wages and profits.
Expenditures reflect the pattern of proposed legislation and selected
other items, such as Federal employee pay raises and cost-of-living
adjustments in Social Security benefits.
Cyclically adjusted deficit.--Measures of the cyclically adjusted
budget are estimates of what the budget would be if the economy were
moving along a trend GNP path--a path free from cyclical fluctuations--rather than along its actual path. Consequently, cyclical
fluctuations in the economy do not affect cyclically adjusted budgets.
Two measures of the cyclically adjusted budget, one based on a
"middle expansion" trend GNP and one based on a 6-percent
unemployment rate trend GNP, are shown in table 11. (At the time this
article was written, the complete model used to prepare these estimates
had not yet been updated to reflect the recently completed comprehensive
revisions of the NIPA's. The estimate shown in table 11 was
prepared using a simplified model. The complete model will be updated
and results published in the SURVEY in the spring.)
As measured using cyclical adjustments based on middle-expansion
trend GNP, the Federal sector of the NIPA's was in deficit in
calendar year 1984. The deficit widened in 1985, but will increase only
slightly in 1986. On a quarterly basis, the deficit increased
throughout 1984. A sharp decline in the deficit in the first quarter of
1985 and a sharp increase in the second quarter largely reflect a delay
in income tax refund payments in the first quarter and the subsequent
catchup. The deficit peaks in the fourth quarter of 1985, then declines
in every quarter of 1986 and 1987.
The cyclically adjusted budget based on middle-expansion trend GNP
is associated with a middle-expansion trend unemployment rate of 7.4
percent. The cyclically adjusted deficit based on a constant 6-percent
unemployment rate is lower, but follows the same quarterly pattern.