| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Budget - Budget - 1976 - 582 pages
...request that, rather than my attempting to paraphrase,, the Budget Message be incorporated in the record at this point. BUDGET MESSAGE OF THE PRESIDENT •To...priorities. It reflects his best judgment of how we must .«hoose among competing interests. And it reveals his philosophy of how the public and private spheres... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Budget - Budget - 1976 - 566 pages
...message to the Congress with the statement that "The Budget of the United States is a good road map of where we have been, where we are now, and where we should be going as a people." He then notes the three major dimensions of the budget : a statement of economic policy, a divsion... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on the Budget - Budget - 1976 - 728 pages
...output. IV. FEDERAL BUDGET PRIORITIES As the President stated in his budget message to the Congress, "The budget reflects the President's sense of priorities....the public and private spheres should be related." This last statement concerning the division of resources between the public and private spheres has... | |
| United States. President (1974-1977 : Ford) - Presidents - 1979 - 1544 pages
...begin the third century of America's history of progress. It is good for us sometimes to take stock of where we have been, where we are now, and where we are going as a people and as a nation. America has come a long, long way in the last 200 years. We... | |
| United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee - United States - 1976 - 1448 pages
...THE PRESIDENT To the Congress of the United States: The Budget of the United States is a good rondmap of where we have been, where we are now, and where...the President's sense of priorities. It reflects his befit judgment of how we must choose among competing interests. And it reveals his philosophy of how... | |
| John A. Marini - Business & Economics - 1992 - 228 pages
...spend them."33 Ford assumed what every president since Warren G. Harding had taken for granted— that "the budget reflects the President's sense of priorities....philosophy of how the public and private spheres should be related."33 But this was no longer the case and had not been the case for at least a year.34 As Brock... | |
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