the budget

The real estate sector will see positive changes in the budget for 2024

This budget’s extensive measures demonstrate the government’s dedication to the real estate industry’s overall growth, which makes it a major driver of the country’s economic expansion.  The Finance Minister, Nirmala Sitharaman, unveiled the 2024 Union Budget, which includes some ground-breaking … Continue reading




the budget

The Budget: Five questions for Scotland answered

Labour claims that public services require a £40bn increase in taxation and spending




the budget

How the Budget will affect you and your money

The chancellor has delivered a packed Budget, so here's how it affects you and your money.




the budget

Six ways the Budget will affect you if you're under 25

Among the policies announced by the chancellor, some will have a direct impact on younger people.




the budget

Policast: Lawmakers ponder their next steps on the budget

Lawmakers ponder their next steps on the budget




the budget

It’s Been a Very Busy Week at the PA Capitol as the Budget Deadline Looms

There was a lot going on this week at the PA Capitol and work continues to try to get a budget in place by the Sunday deadline. Here are some highlights from the week as posted on our Facebook page. https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1aqPW3tYtMySPUcY/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/iPW4XyHKBf3oNVpA/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/MRTAq999kpMtkhv9/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/7ZdipDQTXzD21sM1/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/HMNCDYPoBPLBkMHn/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/2R5HH7NwBWVfMptZ/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/EhG7jnpXiU6wgbM9/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/ZpTH7M8RmkWASUTD/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/s2DhksEQn8eiyWhR/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/RwnUBVxxYpHCEds3/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/HGy8LvPkMrWfaUSQ/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/GZB94RZN77WXGCkq/?mibextid=WC7FNe https://www.facebook.com/share/v/8dkx16UsiGUsi7y1/?mibextid=WC7FNe




the budget

Analyzing the Budget Growth of the National Organ Transplant Programme

Highlights: Significant budget growth reflects societal recognition and commitment to organ transplantation Enhanced




the budget

What is the budget for Prabhas and Hanu Raghavapudi's film?

After Salaar and Kalki, fans of Prabhas are eagerly waiting for his upcoming film The Raaja Saab which is slated for release in the month of April 2025. Meanwhile, the actor is shooting for Hanu Raghavapudi directorial produced by Mythri Movie Makers.




the budget

Optimizing Cloud Spend: How to increase growth without increasing the budget | WIRED Brand Lab

Produced by Wired Brand Lab with IBM | As businesses grapple with fluctuating computing demands for an endless suite of technologies, ensuring optimal cloud capacity becomes crucial. How can they keep up without breaking the bank? Discover how IBM Turbonomic on AWS automates the optimization of cloud resources, from EC2 instances to EBS volumes, allowing businesses to reallocate savings and drive growth.




the budget

Taking stock of the Budget

How will Budget 2018 impact the stock market? Traders and investors share their expectations




the budget

What do taxpayers want from the Budget?

Almost everyone Portfolio spoke to is hopeful of an increase in the tax exemption limit to at least ₹2 lakh




the budget

How are old-timers playing the Budget?

Senior citizens tell Portfolio how they plan to make the most of the benefits offered to them




the budget

Ponniyin Selvan: Lyca Productions Asks Mani Ratnam To Cut Down The Budget?

Ponniyin Selvan, the historical drama directed by the veteran filmmaker Mani Ratnam, is one of the most anticipated upcoming projects of the Tamil film industry. The project, which is being made with a massive budget, is produced by the popular banner




the budget

Cut the budget, save the environment

The Green Scissors 2010 report shines the spotlight on government spending that is both wasteful and harmful to the environment.




the budget

Poke Me: The Budget ignores urban India, where two-third of India's GDP is generated

As per the new Budget, the profit-linked income tax exemption for promoters of affordable housing with a 30 sq m limit will apply only to the four metropolitan cities.




the budget

Bracing for the Budget

Coronavirus Journal: Virus hitting unincorporated areas in Alameda County hard. The forecast for Alameda County's short-term fiscal health will come into focus this week and it could be sobering news for those who depend greatly on the county's safety net services. County supervisors will learn at a budget workshop session on Thursday the extent of the damage caused by COVID-19 on the local economy.…



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the budget

UK Tech Weekly Podcast - Episode Six: The Internet of Board Games (IoBG) + The Budget & AlphaGo

In this week's UK Tech Weekly Podcast host Matt Egan is joined by first time podder Tamlin Magee (1:50), online editor at ComputerworldUK.com, to discuss the UK tech implications of this year's Budget, including rural broadband and driverless cars. Then Christina Mercer, assistant online editor at Techworld.com, chats AlphaGo (10:00) and board games following the AI's historic win over world Go champion Lee Sedol. Later, resident Virtual Reality (VR) enthusiast and PCAdvisor.co.uk staff writer Lewis Painter discussed "the big three" VR headset release dates, pricing and features from HTC, Sony Playstation and Oculus Rift (19:00). Finally, UKTW Podcast regular David Price, acting editor at Macworld.co.uk chats about Apple's big upcoming event (28:45).  


See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.




the budget

Fin24.com | As South African investors eye 2020, the Budget looms large

Finance Minister Tito Mboweni’s February Budget speech will be scrutinised for evidence the country is doing enough to preserve its last remaining investment grade rating from Moody’s.




the budget

Datsun Go & Go+ CVT Review: The most advanced automatic in the budget segment

Datsun’s Go as well as Go+ models have now received a CVT option. These come in the top trim and boast a slightly higher fuel efficiency compared to their manual counterparts or at par. How are they to drive? Take a look at our video.




the budget

How can the budget help ensure sustainable growth for auto industry

How can the budget help ensure sustainable growth for auto industry




the budget

The Budget and Implications for Development and Regeneration

The Chancellor announced yesterday his second budget aimed at achieving strong, sustainable and balanced growth, more evenly shared across the country and between industries. A number of measures are introduced that will significantly impact on dev...




the budget

Samsung Galaxy Tab S6 Lite: The Budget Tablet Just Landed In Australia

Samsung just released the smaller version of its Galaxy Tab S6 tablet in Australia. Though it did appear in some online stores a little early, now it's official. Here's what its packing and how much it will cost in Australia. More »
    




the budget

Generational war over the budget? Hard to see it in the numbers


Government spending on the elderly continues to climb.  Fueled by rapid growth in the number of Americans over age 65 and increased spending on benefits per person, public expenditures devoted to the elderly continue to edge up. A crucial question for future policy making is whether rising outlays on programs for the aged will squeeze out spending on programs for children, especially investments in their schooling. Many pessimists think this outcome is inevitable, and they urge us to reduce government commitments to the elderly to make room for spending on the young.

Federal spending is especially concentrated on the elderly. The Urban Institute publishes annual estimates of federal outlays on children and adults over 65. The estimates inevitably show a huge imbalance in spending on the two groups. In 2011, federal spending for the elderly amounted to almost $28,000 per person over 65.  In the same year, per capita spending on Americans under 19 amounted to just $4,900 per person. This means aged Americans received $5.72 in federal spending for every $1.00 received by a child 18 or younger.

The Urban Institute’s latest estimates show that federal spending on youngsters has trended down in recent years.  After reaching a peak of about $500 billion in 2010, expenditures on children fell 7 percent by 2012, and they have remained unchanged since then.

Future prospects are not encouraging. Urban Institute analysts predict that from 2014 to 2025, only 2 percent of federal spending growth will go to children. Almost 60 percent will be swallowed up by additional outlays on Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. Spending on many federal programs that provide benefits to children are financed out of discretionary programs. In contrast, big public programs for the aged seem to run on automatic pilot, with spending linked to changes in the cost of living and the size of the population past 65. Spending on most domestic discretionary programs is expected to be severely constrained as a result of Congressionally imposed budget caps. This is bad news for many federal programs targeted on children.

Focusing solely on federal government spending gives a misleading picture, however. While federal spending is heavily concentrated on the elderly, state and local spending tilts toward programs that help children, notably, through public school budgets.  Whereas aged Americans receive $5.72 in federal spending for each $1.00 received by someone under 19, those under 19 receive $10.11 in state and local spending for each $1.00 received by someone who is 65 or older. To be sure, total federal spending is considerably greater than that of state and local governments, but the imbalance of public spending on the young and the old is less extreme than federal budget statistics suggest.

Government spending on the aged is high because legislators (and voters) decided to establish government-backed pensions—through Social Security—in the 1930s and government-guaranteed health insurance for the elderly—through Medicare—in the 1960s.  In view of the overwhelming and enduring popularity of these two programs, most voters appear to think this was a sensible choice.  One implication of the policies is that Americans past 65 derive a sizable percentage of their retirement income, and an even bigger share of their health care, from public budgets.

The nation has not made an equivalent commitment to support the incomes or guarantee the health insurance of Americans under 65, except in special circumstances.  Those circumstances include temporary unemployment, a permanent work disability, and low household income.  Families headed by someone under 65 are expected to derive their support mainly from their jobs and from their own savings.  If non-aged families prosper, government spending on them falls.  If instead breadwinners become disabled or lose their jobs, government spending will increase as a result of higher disability payments, unemployment and food stamp benefits, and public assistance rolls.

Nearly all children are raised in families headed by someone under 65.  The government benefits they receive, except for free public schooling, increase in bad times and should decline when the unemployment rate falls.  The Urban Institute’s numbers are instructive.  Between 2007 and 2011, real federal spending on children increased 27 percent, or more than 6 percent a year, as the unemployment rate soared in the Great Recession. Federal spending on children then fell as unemployment—and outlays on government transfer payments—shrank.  For many categories of public spending on children, we cannot assume that lower spending signals a weaker commitment to children’s well-being. Instead it may signal a healthier private economy, a lower unemployment rate, and faster improvement in breadwinner incomes.

Of course, some components of government spending on children do not automatically rise in a slumping economy or shrink when breadwinners’ earnings improve.  Public investments in children’s preschool and K-12 education should be adjusted to reflect the needs of children for compensatory instruction and the expected payoff of added investment in schooling.  Statistics on public school budgets show that spending per pupil has increased considerably faster than inflation and faster than GDP per person over the past seven decades (see Chart 1). Whether spending has increased as fast as warranted is debatable, but rising government spending on the aged has not caused per-pupil spending on K-12 schools to shrink.

Government spending on children’s health has also increased over time as public insurance for children has been expanded.  In 2014 just 6 percent of Americans under age 19 lacked health insurance for the entire year.  The only age group with higher health insurance coverage was the population past 65, which is covered by Medicare (see Chart 2).  The main explanation for rising insurance coverage among children is that federal and state health insurance programs have been expanded to cover most low-income children.  Insurance coverage of children can and should be improved, but a sizeable expansion of public insurance has occurred despite the increase in public spending on the elderly.

The presumption that rising outlays on programs for Americans past 65 must come at the expense of spending on children rests on the unstated assumption that voters will zealously defend programs for the aged while tolerating cuts in programs that fund education, income protection, and health coverage for the young.  The trend toward higher public spending on the elderly has been underway for at least five decades, but the predicted cuts in spending on the young have yet to materialize.

Editor's Note: this op-ed first appeared in Real Clear Markets.

Authors

Publication: Real Clear Markets
     
 
 




the budget

The Budget Deficit: Does It Matter?

Thank you. I am honored to be here at the City Club of Cleveland, and I'd like to express my thanks to Jim Foster and Bud Talbott for extending the invitation. As you may know, Bud's son is now the president of Brookings, where I work. I'm told that Bud has particularly high standards, and I suppose if I don't live up to them this afternoon, I may hear about it back at work next week.

My topic today is the U.S. budget deficit and its effects. In 2003, the budget deficit amounted to slightly less than $400 billion. That's about 3½ percent of GDP. Under reasonable projections, the deficit is expected to remain about this share of the economy over the next decade – and then grow much larger as the costs mount from the retirement of the baby boomers.

The title of my talk asks whether these deficits matter. I assume that a simple "yes" would not suffice in this intellectually rigorous environment. So I'll spend most of my talk describing the various ways in which substantial budget deficits are economically harmful, and then provide some thoughts on how we can bring the deficit under control.

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Authors

  • Peter R. Orszag
Publication: City Club of Cleveland
      
 
 




the budget

Revisiting the budget outlook: An update after the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019

The Congressional Budget Office’s (CBO’s) latest federal budget projections (CBO 2019b), released in August, contain two major changes from their previous projections, which were issued in May (CBO 2019a).  First, the new projections incorporate the effects of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 (BBA19), which substantially raised discretionary spending (as it is defined in CBO’s…

       




the budget

For whom the budget cut tolls - Blog on downsizing in the public sector

A Job for Life? The old notion of a safe job in the civil service is profoundly changing - OECD Insights blog by Bill Below.




the budget

Pinn’s illustration of the week: Balancing the Budget

UK government spending faces increasing pressures




the budget

The budget beauties right on your doorstep

World-class quality is on our doorstep and our home-grown bubbly is setting pulses racing. It's time for your cork to pop!




the budget

The budget beauties right on your doorstep

World-class quality is on our doorstep and our home-grown bubbly is setting pulses racing. It's time for your cork to pop!




the budget

The Budget and us

Expectations were built up that the minister will increase the minimum tax deductible slab from Rs 2.50 lakh, but no such thing was done.




the budget

What's 'inclusive' about the Budget?


The government's understanding of an 'inclusive' Budget is simply that it ought to be the provider of welfare for the lower income groups. The evidence so far suggests that this is an attempt doomed from the start, since the government is not very good at administering such programmes. Ashwin Mahesh says that there are better options.




the budget

India’s best hope is that the Budget due February 2015 chooses growth and jobs

The presidential address to Parliament on June 9, 2014 had focussed nearly exclusively on projects and schemes, eschewing policy. Therefore, many had eagerly awaited the budget speech for a policy vision of the new government. Unfortunately, it too left observers guessing on whether the government would tackle tough reforms or rely principally on better implementation.




the budget

Ponniyin Selvan: Lyca Productions Asks Mani Ratnam To Cut Down The Budget?

Ponniyin Selvan, the historical drama directed by the veteran filmmaker Mani Ratnam, is one of the most anticipated upcoming projects of the Tamil film industry. The project, which is being made with a massive budget, is produced by the popular banner




the budget

A history (and future) of the budget process in the United States: budget by fire / Paul Winfree

Online Resource