The President's budget request for 2010 totals $3.55 trillion. Percentages in parentheses indicate percentage change compared to 2009. This budget request is broken down by the following expenditures:[8]
- Mandatory spending: $2.173 trillion (+14.9%)
- $695 billion (+4.9%) – Social Security
- $571 billion (+58.6%) – Other mandatory programs
- $453 billion (+6.6%) – Medicare
- $290 billion (+12.0%) – Medicaid
- $164 billion (+18.0%) – Interest on National Debt
US receipt and expenditure estimates for fiscal year 2010.
- Discretionary spending: $1.378 trillion (+13.8%)
- $663.7 billion (+12.7%) – Department of Defense (including Overseas Contingency Operations)
- $78.7 billion (−1.7%) – Department of Health and Human Services
- $72.5 billion (+2.8%) – Department of Transportation
- $52.5 billion (+10.3%) – Department of Veterans Affairs
- $51.7 billion (+40.9%) – Department of State and Other International Programs
- $47.5 billion (+18.5%) – Department of Housing and Urban Development
- $46.7 billion (+12.8%) – Department of Education
- $42.7 billion (+1.2%) – Department of Homeland Security
- $26.3 billion (−0.4%) – Department of Energy
- $26.0 billion (+8.8%) – Department of Agriculture
- $23.9 billion (−6.3%) – Department of Justice
- $18.7 billion (+5.1%) – National Aeronautics and Space Administration
- $13.8 billion (+48.4%) – Department of Commerce
- $13.3 billion (+4.7%) – Department of Labor
- $13.3 billion (+4.7%) – Department of the Treasury
- $12.0 billion (+6.2%) – Department of the Interior
- $10.5 billion (+34.6%) – Environmental Protection Agency
- $9.7 billion (+10.2%) – Social Security Administration
- $7.0 billion (+1.4%) – National Science Foundation
- $5.1 billion (−3.8%) – Corps of Engineers
- $5.0 billion (+100%-NA) – National Infrastructure Bank
- $1.1 billion (+22.2%) – Corporation for National and Community Service
- $0.7 billion (0.0%) – Small Business Administration
- $0.6 billion (−14.3%) – General Services Administration
- $0 billion (−100%-NA) – Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP)
- $0 billion (−100%-NA) – Financial stabilization efforts
- $11 billion (+275%-NA) – Potential disaster costs
- $19.8 billion (+3.7%) – Other Agencies
- $105 billion – Other
Also read:
- Budget breakdown or how a goverment budget is born
- CAP’s “A THOUSAND CUTS” – What Reducing the Federal Budget Deficit through Large Spending Cuts Could Really Look Like
- Federal Spending by the Numbers 2010
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