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Congressional Budget Office

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The mission of the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), according to its web site, is "to provide the Congress with the objective, timely, nonpartisan analyses needed for economic and budget decisions and with the information and estimates required for the Congressional budget process.

Contents

Background

Compared with the missions of the Congress's other support agencies--the Congressional Research Service and the General Accounting Office--CBO's mandate is relatively narrow. ... A substantial part of what CBO does is to support the work of the House and Senate Committees on the Budget, which were also created by the 1974 Congressional Budget Act. Those committees are in charge of the process, spelled out in the act, by which the Congress sets its own targets for the federal budget, including the overall levels of revenues and spending, the surplus or deficit that results, and the distribution of federal spending by broad functional categories. Each spring the Congress adopts the end result of that process, the Congressional budget plan, in the form of a concurrent resolution. The resolution imposes an overall framework and discipline on the way appropriations, other spending measures, and tax legislation are passed."

Controversy

2007 leadership

"Douglas Holtz-Eakin is the sixth Director of the Congressional Budget Office, where he was appointed for a four-year term beginning February 4, 2003."[1]

Articles and Resources

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Resources

Articles

Congresspedia/SourceWatch Resources

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