- Sequestration
-
Originally a legal term referring generally to the act of valuable property
being taken into custody by an agent of the court and locked away for
safekeeping, usually to prevent the property from being disposed of or abused
before a dispute over its ownership can be resolved. But the term has been
adapted by Congress in more recent years to describe a new fiscal policy
procedure originally provided for in the Gramm-Rudman-Hollings Deficit Reduction
Act of 1985 -- an effort to reform Congressional voting procedures so as to make
the size of the Federal government's budget deficit a matter of conscious choice
rather than simply the arithmetical outcome of a decentralized appropriations
process in which no one ever looked at the cumulative results until it was too
late to change them. If the dozen or so appropriation bills passed separately by
Congress provide for total government spending in excess of the limits Congress
earlier laid down for itself in the annual Budget Resolution, and if Congress
cannot agree on ways to cut back the total (or does not pass a new, higher
Budget Resolution), then an "automatic" form of spending cutback takes place.
This automatic spending cut is what is called "sequestration."
Under sequestration, an amount of money equal to the difference between the cap set in the Budget Resolution and the amount actually appropriated is "sequestered" by the Treasury and not handed over to the agencies to which it was originally appropriated by Congress. In theory, every agency has the same percentage of its appropriation withheld in order to take back the excessive spending on an "across the board" basis. However, Congress has chosen to exempt certain very large programs from the sequestration process (for example, Social Security and certain parts of the Defense budget), and the number of exempted programs has tended to increase over time -- which means that sequestration would have to take back gigantic shares of the budgets of the remaining programs in order to achieve the total cutbacks required, virtually crippling the activities of the unexempted programs.
The prospect of sequestration has thus come to seem so catastrophic that Congress so far has been unwilling actually to let it happen. Instead, Congress has repeatedly chosen simply to raise the Budget Resolution spending caps upward toward the end of the legislative session in order to match the actual totals already appropriated, thus largely wiping out the incentives that the reformed budget procedures were expected to provide for Congress to get better control of the budget deficit.
Wednesday, February 27, 2013
What is sequestration and what does it mean to you?
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