White House to release budget on February 14

30 Jan, 2011

President Barack Obama's budget proposal for fiscal 2012 will be released on February 14, an administration official said on Friday, setting up a tough fight with Republicans who vow to cut spending. Democrat Obama wants a 5-year, non-security discretionary spending freeze as a downpayment toward curbing the huge US budget deficit, while also promoting investment that he says will boost US growth and ease high unemployment.
Republicans say this represents spending the country cannot afford, and pledge deeper cutbacks to help control a federal deficit the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office estimates will hit $1.48 trillion in fiscal 2011. The US funding gap grew sharply after Obama agreed with Republicans to extend Bush-era tax cuts for all Americans for two years, pumping $858 billion into the economy over time as it slowly recovers from a deep recession.
Data released earlier on Friday showed the US economy grew by a 3.2 percent annualised clip in the fourth quarter, up from a 2.6 percent pace in the previous 3 months. The president's budget lays out the cost of the administration's policy proposals, together with revenue and debt projections over 10 years.
These are expected to hit a $14.3 trillion federal debt ceiling by the end of March, risking an unprecedented default by the US government unless Congress votes to lift the limit as the Obama administration has urged it to do. The White House says the spending freeze, which the president proposed during his State of the Union address on Tuesday, will lower the deficit by $400 billion over 10 years. But the freeze will not apply to massive US entitlement programs such as social security and Medicare, which represent the core of the country's fiscal problems.

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