The Budget of the United States GovernmentU.S. Government Printing Office, 1969 - Budget Issues for 1951/52-1970/71 accompanied by an appendix (entitled 1951/52-1955/56, Obligations by objects and detail of personal services; 1956/57-1960/61, Detail of personal services; 1961/62, Detail of personal services and passenger motor vehicles and aircraft). |
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1969 estimate estimate 1969 estimate Increase Account and functional activities actual 1968 estimate AGENCY in thousands ANALYSIS OF BUDGET Applicable receipts assistance AUTHORITY AND OUTLAYS BUDGET AUTHORITY Bureau civilian pay act code 1967 enacted Commission Commodity Credit Corporation construction costs debt distributed as follows dollars)-Continued Account economic enacted 1968 estimate estimate 1969 estimate existing legislation expenditures facilities Farm Credit Administration Federal funds Federal Funds-Continued Federal Housing Administration finance Fiscal functional code 1967 Government grants Housing and Urban income Increase or decrease Interfund and intragovernmental Intragovernmental funds lending ment million in 1969 Mortgage NOA Exp obligational authority operations OUTLAYS BY AGENCY pay act supplemental pay supplemental payments programs Proposed for separate proposed legislation Public enterprise funds Repayments Salaries and expenses separate transmittal special funds special funds-Continued Subtotal Table 14 Tennessee Valley Authority thousands of dollars)-Continued tion Total transmittal under existing Urban renewal Veterans Administration
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Page 109 - Kansas that are vital and necessary to the conservation of land and water by the three agencies, namely, the Corps of Engineers, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the Soil Conservation Service of the United States Department of Agriculture.
Page 535 - Indicate the types of mortgages; for example, first or second mortgages and whether such mortgages are to be insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the Veterans...
Page 7 - States is a good roadmap of where we have been, where we are now, and where we should be going as a people. The budget reflects the President's sense of priorities. It reflects his best judgment of how we must choose among competing interests. And it reveals his philosophy of how the...
Page 196 - In lieu of issuing checks, obligations may also be liquidated (and outlays occur) by the maturing of interest coupons in the case of some bonds, or by the issuance of bonds or notes (or increases in the redemption value of bonds outstanding) . Outlays during any fiscal year may be payments of obligations incurred in prior years or in the same year.
Page 196 - Not all budget authority enacted for a fiscal year is obligated and paid out in the same year. In the case of salaries and wages, 1 to 3 weeks elapse between the time of obligation and the time of payment. In the case of major procurement and construction, up to several years may elapse. Amounts which have been obligated...
Page 194 - Budget authority usually takes the form of appropriations which permit obligations to be incurred and payments to be made. Some budget authority is in the form of contract authority which permits obligations, but requires an appropriation or receipts "to liquidate
Page 496 - Government payments to farmers for land retirement, payments to air carriers, and. the operating differential subsidy of the Maritime Administration. (b) Government enterprise is the term applied to those functions of the Government (usually appearing in the budget as public enterprise revolving funds) for which operating costs are to a great extent covered by the sale of goods and services to the public, as distinguished from those being financed by tax receipts.
Page 523 - SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION Payment to Trust Funds for Health Insurance for the Aged...
Page 544 - Department of Health, Education, and Welfare Department of Housing and Urban Development Department of the Interior Department of Justice Department of...
Page 8 - ... sent up to Congress, yesterday, the emphasis was on keeping other programs going or expanding while holding back on the bricks and mortar part of the education area. So, there has been a conscious effort to stretch out and defer construction activities in contrast to other programs. Third, he says: I am proposing basic changes, reforms, or reductions designed to lower the budgetary cost of a number of Federal programs which, in their present form, no longer effectively meet the needs of today.