Trump proposes 5% cut in federal agencies’ budget to tame deficit

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Trump proposes 5% cut in federal agencies’ budget to tame deficit

Washington: President Donald Trump has called for reducing the US federal budget deficit by cutting financing to government agencies and departments by 5 per cent.

“I’m going to ask each of you to come back with a 5 per cent cut for our next meeting, I think you’ll all be able to do it… Get rid of the fat, get rid of the waste… It will have a huge impact,” Trump told the Cabinet at the White House, Efe reported on Wednesday.

He said that he would be willing to allow “special exemptions” for one or two departments but some might have to undergo cuts larger than 5 per cent.

Trump’s proposal comes after the Treasury Department reported that the federal budget deficit increased this year to $779 billion, or by 17 per cent over last year, the largest deficit in six years.

Although he did not get into specifics, Trump probably was referring to the cuts that will be in his administration’s budget proposal for fiscal 2020, which he will send to Congress at the beginning of next year.

However, although the President can ask his Cabinet members to cut their departments’ budgets, the federal funds are ultimately approved by the Congress, not necessarily in line with the wishes and desires of the President.

Lawmakers have the freedom to include their own spending plans for federal agencies and the rest of the government, although the President has the right to veto any budget they approve.

Three-quarters of the federal government’s operations have been financed through the end of September 2019, while the remaining agencies, including the Departments of Agriculture, Justice, Transportation and Homeland Security, have been funded through December 7.

The Congress will try to avoid a partial government shutdown and approve a budget for those agencies before the end of this year.

Trump had already asked for double-digit spending reductions for some federal departments, but this was rejected by the Congress.

The President’s first budget proposal, made last year, included eliminating 62 agencies, something that legislators completely ignored.

Trump has blamed Democrats in the Congress for seeking to raise spending on national programmes in exchange for fulfilling his wish to strengthen the military, but his tax reform has had one of the greatest impacts on increasing the deficit since it imposed significant tax cuts, especially on the wealthiest taxpayers.

Despite the fact that he does not want to cause a government shutdown prior to the November midterm elections, the magnate might be willing to do so in early December, before the next budget negotiation deadline.


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