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Budget of the United States Government: Citizen's Guide Fiscal Year 2000

Federal Budget 2000 Chart Descriptions


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Chart 1-1. Government Spending as a Share of GDP, 1998

Chart 1-1 represents total Government spending in the U.S.
Item 1. Total Government spending in the U.S. accounts for 29% of the national economy, or gross domestic product, in 1998. Private spending accounts for 71% of the gross domestic product.
Item 2. Total Federal spending accounts for 20% of the gross domestic product, while total state and local spending account for 12%.
Item 3. 3% of Total Federal spending is federal grants to local and state governments, while 17% is spending for direct federal programs.
Item 4. 3% of Total State and local spending is from Federal grants. 9% of total state and local spending is from state and local revenues.

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Chart 1-2. Government Spending as a Share of GDP, 1998

Chart 1-2 represents government spending as a percent of the Gross Domestic Product of 7 industrialized nations. The nations represented on the chart are: the United States of America, Japan, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, France, and Italy. The y-axis of the chart is percentage of GPD; the x-axis is the year, from 1981 to 1997. In 1997, the United States allocated the smallest percentage (32%) of its GDP to government than the other six nations charted.

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Chart 2-1. Family and Budgeting

Chart 2-1 illustrates a family planning a budget. Above the representation of a family is a thought bubble containing 7 items. These items are Household Appliances, Transportation, Clothing, Housing, Food, Education, and Restaurants/Entertainment. These items represent all the things the family needs to take into consideration while planning a budget.

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Chart 2-2. National Budgeting

Chart 2-2 illustrates the United States Government planning the budget. Pictured above the White House and the Capitol is a thought bubble containing 7 items. These items are Crime Prevention, Environmental Cleanup, Child Nutrition, Education, Military, Research, and Health Care. These items represent all the things the Government needs to take into consideration while planning the budget.

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Chart 2-3. The Federal Government Dollar- Where it Comes From

Chart 2-3 represents total Federal Government revenues, consisting of 5 items.
Item 1. Corporate Income Taxes 10%.
Item 2. Social Insurance Payroll Taxes 34%.
Item 3. Individual Income Taxes 48%.
Item 4. Excise Taxes 4%.
Item 5. Other 4%.

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Chart 2-4. Composition of Revenues

Chart 2-4 is a percentage graph chart, representing 100 percent of total Federal Government revenue. Charted on the graph are five sources of revenue which make up the total Federal Government revenue. These sources are Social Insurance Taxes, Excise Taxes, Corporation Income Taxes, Individual Income Taxes, and Other. Each source represents a percentage of the total Federal Government revenue for a given year, ranging from 1956 to 2001. The chart depicts how each of these sources fluctuate in its percentage of the total revenue from year to year. Between 1960 and 1998, payroll taxes have increased substantially as a percent of total revenues, and corporate income taxes have declined, but individual income taxes have remained roughly constant.

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Chart 2-5. Revenues as a Percent of GDP— Comparison with Other Countries

Chart 2-5 represents Government revenues as a percent of the Gross Domestic Product of 7 industrialized nations. The nations represented on the chart are: the United States of America, Japan, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, France, and Italy. The y-axis of the chart is the percentage of GPD; the x-axis is the year, from 1981 to 1997. Before 1983, Japan's revenues were the lowest, but equaled the United States in 1996. From 1983 to 1995, the United States had the lowest revenues as a percent of GDP of the 7 countries listed, staying at around 30%.

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Chart 2-6. The Federal Government Dollar— Where it Goes

Chart 2-6 is a pie chart representing Federal Government spending for 2000. The chart is made up of nine items, each representing a percentage of total Government spending.

Item 1. Social Security 22%.
Item 2. Net Interest 11%.
Item 3. Medicare 11%.
Item 4. Medicaid 6%.
Item 5. Other Mandatory 6%.
Item 6. Other Means-tested entitlements 6% (Footnote: Means-tested entitlements are those for which eligibility is based on income. The Medicaid program is also a means-tested entitlement.)
Item 7. Reserve pending Social Security reform 6%.
Item 8. Non-defense discretionary 17%.
Item 9. National defense 15%.

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Chart 2-7. On and Off Budget Projections

Chart 2-7 shows the on- and off-budget deficit projections. It is represented by a line-graph consisting of the Budget deficit (excluding off-budget items Social Security and Postal Service), and the unified budget surplus from 1998 to 2004. The lines show that as the unified budget surplus increases, budget deficit decreases.

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Chart 4-1. Past and Future Budget Deficits or Surplus

This chart illustrates the rise and fall of the budget in deficit and surplus from 1940 projected through 2004. The y-axis represents budget values in billions of dollars, starting with a positive value of 250 (surplus) and ranging up to -300 (deficit). The x-axis represents the range of years from 1940 through 2004. Deficits began increasing dramatically in the 1980s, but have now been reversed.

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Chart 4-2. Outlays as a Percent of GDP

Chart 4-2 is a percentage graph chart, representing up to 25 percent of the Gross Domestic Product. Charted on the graph are six outlays which make up the total Federal Government spending for the years 1965 through 1998. These outlays are Net Interest, Social Security, Medicare/Medicaid, Other Mandatory, National Defense, and Non-Defense Discretionary. Each outlay represents spending as a percentage of GDP. The chart depicts how each of these outlays fluctuate in its percentage of the total GDP from year to year.

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Chart 4-3. Outlays as a Percent of GDP

Chart 4-3 shows the total outlays as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product in comparison to six other countries. The nations represented on the chart are: the United States of America, Japan, United Kingdom, Canada, Germany, France, and Italy. The y-axis of the chart represents what percentage of the GDP that the budget deficit or surplus is; the x-axis is the year, from 1981 to 1997. Of the seven nations shown, only the United States and Canada eliminated their total Government budget deficits in 1997. The United Kingdom and Japan are the only economies that had a surplus during this time frame.

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Chart 5-1. Past and Future Budget Deficits or Surplus

Chart 5-1 consists of 8 items which depict the yearly cuts (in thousands) of full time equivalent positions in Federal employment.

Item 1: In 1993, 16,000 full time equivalent positions were cut.
Item 2: In 1994, 103,000 full time equivalent positions were cut.
Item 3: In 1995, 185,000 full time equivalent positions were cut.
Item 4: In 1996, 264,000 full time equivalent positions were cut.
Item 5: In 1997, 321,000 full time equivalent positions were cut.
Item 6: In 1998, 365,000 full time equivalent positions were cut.
Item 7: In 1999, 354,000 full time equivalent positions are projected to be cut.
Item 8: In 2000, 338,000 full time equivalent positions are projected to be cut.

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