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The agreement, announced jointly by Senate Majority Leader Charles E. Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.), will almost surely face vehement opposition from far-right House Republicans, who had hoped to force steep budget cuts.
Breaking it down, the deal sets aside $886.3 billion for defense spending, $772.7 billion in domestic discretionary spending, and rescinds $6.1 billion in coronavirus emergency spending authority. The deal also accelerates $20 billion in cuts from the $80 billion IRS funding allocated under the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act.
According to a Sunday "Dear Colleague" letter, the topline deal - which mostly adheres to a deal reached between the White House and former speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA), limits discretionary spending to $1.66 trillion overall. It also secures $16 billion in additional spending cuts vs. the McCarthy deal, and is around $30 billion less than what Senate Democrats wanted.
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"This represents the most favorable budget agreement Republicans have achieved in over a decade," wrote Johnson,
The best deal in a decade by Republicans is a bar so high
AmericanKulak says
The best deal in a decade by Republicans is a bar so high
Look at how they are reducing spending increases. The Republicans have a budget that is less than $30 billion than the Senate Democrats requested.
The Republicans are at least growing the budget below the inflation rate. This is still a victory as far as at least controlling spending.
The deficit is SKYROCKETING ! ! ! ! ! ! !
Otherwise once they sell the debt to a debt collector it's over. The creditor has been paid
Back from 2009 to 2017 there were complaints of how US Treasuries were providing a real return of no more than 0%. Certificate of Deposits were paying shit also.
The low interest environment helped the federal government to avoid a debt crisis as the debt to GDP ratio increased from around 60% to 107% during Obama's terms. Back then annual inflation averaged less than 2%.
Now it is around 120% and it seems with higher inflation that the government is inflating out of a debt crisis.
We'll see how debt to GDP ratio fares by this late summer.
https://www.cato.org/blog/fast-facts-about-discretionary-spending
In 2024 the discretionary budget is $1.66 trillion according to the below link. So that is an improvement credited to Speaker Johnson with his negotiations with the Democrats.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2024/01/07/congress-budget-deal/