Press Briefing by OMB Director Rob Portman on the President's Fiscal Year 2008 Budget, FULL STREAMING VIDEO, Room 450, Eisenhower Executive Office Building, Budget of the United States Government Fiscal Year 2008, |
Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008, THE BUDGET DOCUMENTS.
Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008 contains the Budget Message of the President, information on the President’s budget and management priorities, and budget overviews organized by agency
Analytical Perspectives, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008, contains analyses that are designed to highlight specified subject areas or provide other significant presentations of budget data that place the budget in perspective. This volume includes economic and accounting analyses; information on Federal receipts and collections; analyses of Federal spending; detailed information on Federal borrowing and debt; baseline or current services estimates; and other technical presentations
The Analytical Perspectives volume also contains a CD-ROM with several large tables previously published in the budget documents, along with summaries of new performance assessments and updates on earlier assessments for approximately 600 Federal programs.
Current Program Assessment Rating Tool summaries and details are available on ExpectMore.gov including a CSV File for Researchers and Academics and the data model diagram. Government-wide PART summary data is also available in PDF and XLS format on the OMB website.
PDF FORMAT, Historical Tables, Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008 (2.2 MB) FORMAT HELP provides data on budget receipts, outlays, surpluses or deficits, Federal debt, and Federal employment over an extended time period, generally from 1940 or earlier to 2008. To the extent feasible, the data have been adjusted to provide consistency with the 2008 Budget and to provide comparability over time.
Budget of the United States Government, Fiscal Year 2008—Appendix contains detailed information on the various appropriations and funds that constitute the budget and is designed primarily for the use of the Appropriations Committee. The Appendix contains more detailed financial information on individual programs and appropriation accounts than any of the other budget documents. It includes for each agency: the proposed text of appropriations language, budget schedules for each account, new legislative proposals, explanations of the work to be performed and the funds needed, and proposed general provisions applicable to the appropriations of entire agencies or group of agencies. Information is also provided on certain activities whose outlays are not part of the budget totals
SUPPORTING DOCUMENTS IN PDF FORMAT:
- Federal Credit Supplement
- Object Class Analysis
- Balances of Budget Authority
- The Budget System and Concepts
Spreadsheets, Many of the tables in the Budget, Analytical Perspectives and Historical Tables are available for download in spreadsheet (XLS) format
Public Budget Database, The Public Budget Database provides account level detail for budget authority (1976-2008), outlays (1962-2008) and receipts (1976-2008). This data is provided in various formats along with a user's guide.
Prior Year Budgets, Budget documents for current and prior years are available for downloading and viewing at the Government Printing Office (GPO) web site
GPO also maintains a searchable database of selected budget documents in PDF and text formats.
Printed Budget Documents, Budget documents are available for purchase from GPO
Budget CD-ROM, The CD-ROM contains all the budget documents and software to support reading, printing, and searching the documents. The CD-ROM also has many of the tables in the budget in spreadsheet format. The budget also contains the material on the Analytical Perspectives CD-ROM.
GENERAL NOTES 1. All years referred to are fiscal years, unless otherwise noted. 2. Detail in these documents may not add to the totals due to rounding. 3. At the time of this writing, only two of the appropriations bills for 2007 had been enacted; therefore, the programs provided for in the remaining 2007 appropriations bills were operating under a continuing resolution (P.L. 109–289, Division B, as amended). For these programs, references to 2007 spending in the text and tables reflect the levels provided by the continuing resolution. |
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