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The 2015 United States federal budget was the federal budget for fiscal year 2015, which runs from October 1, 2014 to September 30, 2015. The budget takes the form of a budget resolution which must be agreed to by both the United States House of Representatives and the United States Senate in order to become final, but never receives the ...
The spending limits were established in the Budget Control Act of 2011 (Pub. L. 112–25 (text)), which amended the Deficit Control Act. The spending limits for 2015 are $521,272,000 for the defense category and $492,356,000 for the nondefense category, for a total of $1,013,628,000. [7]
Traditionally, after a federal budget for the upcoming fiscal year has been passed, the appropriations subcommittees receive information about what the budget sets as their spending ceilings. [5] This is called 302(b) allocations after section 302(b) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974. That amount is separated into smaller amounts for each ...
2015 U.S. federal budget [ edit ] Continuing Appropriations Resolution, 2015 - a continuing resolution that would fund the federal government of the United States through December 11, 2014 at an annualized rate of $1 trillion. [ 29 ]
Balanced Budget Act of 1995, H.R. 2491 (vetoed December 6, 1995) Taxpayer Refund and Relief Act of 1999, H.R. 2488 (vetoed September 23, 1999) Marriage Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2000, H.R. 4810 (vetoed August 5, 2000) Restoring Americans' Healthcare Freedom Reconciliation Act of 2015 (vetoed January 8, 2016)
The long-term budget situation has considerably improved in the 2015 forecast versus the 2009 forecast per the Trustees Report. [ 79 ] U.S. healthcare costs were approximately $3.2 trillion or nearly $10,000 per person on average in 2015, the equivalent of roughly $13,000 per person in 2023.
A United States federal law that specified the budget and expenditures of the United States Department of Defense (DOD) for Fiscal Year 2014. The law authorized the DOD to spend $607 billion in Fiscal Year 2014. [8] On December 26, 2013, President Barack Obama signed the bill into law. [9]
An omnibus spending bill is a type of bill in the United States that packages many of the smaller ordinary appropriations bills into one larger single bill that can be passed with only one vote in each house of Congress.