United States federal budget
Encyclopedia : U : UN : UNI : United States federal budget
The United States federal budget is a piece of legislation passed by the American Congress to allocate funding for the next fiscal year, which begins on October 1st.
Each year the President of the United States submits a budget for the following fiscal year:
- United States federal budget, 2007 - $2.8 trillion (submitted February 2006 by President Bush)
- United States federal budget, 2006 - $2.6 trillion (submitted February 2005 by President Bush)
- United States federal budget, 2005 - $2.4 trillion (submitted 2004 by President Bush)
- United States federal budget, 2004 - $2.2 trillion (submitted 2003 by President Bush)
- United States federal budget, 2003 - $2.1 trillion (submitted 2002 by President Bush)
- United States federal budget, 2002 - $2.0 trillion (submitted 2001 by President Bush)
- United States federal budget, 2001 - $1.8 trillion (submitted 2000 by President Clinton)
- United States federal budget, 2000 - $1.8 trillion (submitted 1999 by President Clinton)
- United States federal budget, 1999 - $1.7 trillion (submitted 1998 by President Clinton)
- United States federal budget, 1998 - $1.7 trillion (submitted 1997 by President Clinton)
- United States federal budget, 1997 - $1.6 trillion (submitted 1996 by President Clinton)
- United States federal budget, 1996 - $1.6 trillion (submitted 1995 by President Clinton)
See also
External links
- [The President's Budget of the United States Government, FY 1996 -- present]
- [A graphical representation of the 2004 United States budget]
- [The Heritage Foundation's "Federal Revenue and Spending Chart Book"]
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
