Maaf Bung Tom, Betty cuma becanda aja yah, jangan marah...



________________________________
Dari: Betty Cantik <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Kepada: [email protected]
Terkirim: Senin, 13 Oktober, 2008 13:51:24
Topik: Bls: [saham] Hati-hati ban kempes di tengah jalan...


Betty tambahin : "PEDULI SETAN"




________________________________
Dari: Tom DS <tom.ds.stock@ gmail.com>
Kepada: obrolan-bandar@ yahoogroups. com; [EMAIL PROTECTED] com; 
investium_saham@ yahoogroups. com; junior_Trader@ yahoogroups. com
Terkirim: Senin, 13 Oktober, 2008 13:36:15
Topik: [saham] Hati-hati ban kempes di tengah jalan...


FYI saja, nanti malam masih ada pengumuman Treasury Budget, hari rabu nanti 
Retail Sales, serta puncaknya minggu ini ada di hari kamis nanti yaitu 
pengumuman US Core CPI...
 
Saran saya jangan terlalu banyak membuang energi dulu, takutnya ban kempes di 
tengah jalan.. =)
 
 
T.o.m
 
 
August Treasury Budget, How about September ???
Updated 24-Sep-08 20:08 ET
About this release






Highlights
        * Raw Data Available At: http://www.fms. treas.gov/ mts/index. html
Key Factors
Big Picture

Category
Aug
Jul
Jun
May
Apr
Deficit (-)/Surplus -$111.9B -$102.8B $50.7B -$165.9B $159.3B 
Deficit (-)/Surplus Fiscal YTD -$483B -$371B -$267B -$318B -$152B 
Deficit (-)/Surplus over last 12 months -$360.9B -$375.6B -$309B -$332B -$234B 

Up to Top


Release Details
Treasury Budget
        * Importance (A-F): This release merits a D. 
        * Source: U.S. Treasury Department. 
        * Release Time: 14:00 ET, about the third week of the month for the 
prior month. 
        * Raw Data Available At: http://www.fms. treas.gov/ mts/index. html. 
In Brief
The monthly Treasury budget data follow strong seasonal patterns which produce 
huge month-to-month fluctuations in the deficit. These fluctuations tell us 
little about long term budget trends. To the extent that the market analyses 
the monthly Treasury data, the focus is on year/year changes in receipts and 
outlays, since the data are not seasonally adjusted. Only in April, the most 
important month for tax inflows to the Treasury, does the market pay any 
attention to this report. The data can be predicted with reasonable accuracy by 
using daily data in the Daily Treasury Statement.
In Depth
The President's Budget
The annual budget process begins in late January or early February with the 
presentation of the President's budget for the coming fiscal year. The 
President's proposals serve as an outline for Congress, particularly when the 
White House and Congress are controlled by the same party. In the 1980s, the 
conflicting agendas of the President and Congress often resulted in a final 
budget which bore little resemblance to the President's budget. After a quiet 
budget year in 1994 when Democrats controlled Congress and the White House, the 
Republican takeover of the House and Senate has produced more contentious 
budget battles in 1995 and 1996.
One of the most common misperceptions about the budget process is that the 
annual budgeting actually covers all federal spending. Though the President's 
proposed budget will include projections for all federal government outlays, 
less than half of all spending is actually controlled by the annual budget 
legislation. Roughly 67% of federal outlays are mandated by "permanent" law. 
Unless these laws are changed, no legislative review of spending programs 
funded by permanent law is required in the appropriations process. The same is 
true of federal receipts, where permanent law does not require annual review of 
taxation.
Permanent law should not by any means be construed as suggesting true 
permanence. Permanent laws are changed frequently, with the 1990 and 1993 
budget deals being the most recent examples. These recent efforts to reduce the 
deficit have incorporated both changes in discretionary spending and changes in 
permanent laws affecting taxes and spending. Such deficit reduction efforts are 
usually packaged into a so-called Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act (OBRA). In 
the absence of these comprehensive deficit reduction efforts, the annual budget 
review will only deal with discretionary spending which makes up roughly 33% of 
the budget.. It is perhaps one of the better kept secrets in Washington that 
the annual budget review which seems at the core of the democratic process does 
not in fact review even half of all federal spending.
The Budget Resolution
Once the President has submitted his budget to Congress, the legislative 
process begins. Within six weeks of the date that the President presents his 
budget, each Congressional committee must report to the House and Senate Budget 
Committees regarding budget estimates for programs overseen by their committee. 
The Budget Committees then approve a budget resolution based on these 
estimates. After full House and Senate approval of these resolutions, any 
differences between the House and Senate versions are worked out in conference 
committee and then a final resolution is approved by each house. This process 
is scheduled to be completed by April 15, but is often delayed, as was the case 
this year. As the budget resolution is only a blueprint for the budget and not 
actual legislation, it does not require presidential approval.
Appropriations Bills
The real job of budgeting begins after the budget resolution is adopted. The 
appropriations process is when actual budget authority for discretionary 
programs is legislated. We have already noted that annual budgeting only covers 
discretionary programs, which are responsible for just 33% of total spending. 
Even these discretionary programs are not bundled into one budget package. The 
annual budget for discretionary spending is actually comprised of 13 separate 
appropriations bills. The House and Senate Appropriations Committees each 
include 13 subcommittees which are responsible for the 13 bills. The 13 
subcommittees are listed below.
Subcommittees of the House and Senate Appropriations Committees
Agriculture
Commerce, Justice
Defense
District of Columbia
Energy, Water Foreign Operations
Interior
Labor, Health
Legislative Military Construction
Transportation
Treasury, Postal Service
Veterans, HUD, Agencies 
As all tax and spending bills must originate in the House, the House 
Appropriations subcommittees will see the first action in the appropriations 
process. The 13 bills are crafted individually and do not work their way 
through the House and Senate on the same timetable. The goal is of course to 
complete legislation on all 13 bills by the beginning of the fiscal year on 
October 1. Yet these bills proceed and are approved of on their own, and are 
not packaged into one comprehensive bill known simply as the budget.
Once a House Appropriations subcommittee approves its bill, the legislation 
proceeds to the full Committee and then to the House floor. Approval by the 
House sets in motion the same process in the Senate. Upon approval by the full 
Senate, differences between the House and Senate versions of the bill are 
reconciled in conference committee and then a final version of the bill is sent 
back to the House and Senate floors. Presidential approval of each of the 13 
appropriations bills completes the process. When work on the 13 bills is 
delayed past the start of the fiscal year, Congress and the President must 
approve of continuing resolutions which fund government programs at the prior 
year's level until the relevant appropriations bill is signed into law.
One final note about the appropriations process is that the appropriations 
bills do not set actual outlays for the coming fiscal year, but instead 
legislate "budget authority." The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) defines 
budget authority as "the authority to incur legally binding obligations of the 
Government that will result in immediate or future outlays." Actual outlays may 
exceed or fall short of budget authority in any given year depending on past 
budget authority and the duration of a program.
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act
In years such as 1985, 1987, 1990, and 1993, Congress has enacted legislation 
aimed at long term deficit reduction. These legislative efforts occur 
separately from the annual appropriations process. They may change permanent 
laws and set caps which affect discretionary spending, but the regular budget 
process will nevertheless be unchanged. OBRA legislation affects permanent law 
and is not a substitute for annual budgets. OBRA legislation packages changes 
in permanent laws which will typically affect both taxation and mandatory 
spending. The legislative process for OBRA is completely different than the 
appropriations process. Legislation is still initiated in the House, but is not 
limited to work by the Appropriations Committee. The House Ways and Means 
Committee oversees tax law, and thus plays a critical role in OBRA legislation, 
as does its Senate counterpart, the Finance Committee. Legislation affecting 
entitlement programs also falls under the
 jurisdiction of committees other than Appropriations, i.e. proposed Medicare 
changes would be considered by a House Ways and Means subcommittee on health 
care.
Supplemental Appropriations
The 13 appropriations bills are not necessarily the last word for the year on 
federal spending. Supplemental appropriations bills may be approved at any time 
to provide additional funding for government programs. Tight caps on 
discretionary spending set by the 1990 and 1993 budget acts require a 
pay-as-you-go approach to such funding, thus limiting the number of 
supplemental appropriations. "Emergency" spending circumvents the pay-as-you-go 
mandate, however, allowing for a variety of supplemental appropriations. Past 
"emergencies" have covered everything from the Gulf War to extended 
unemployment insurance to natural disaster relief.
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