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Elements of Bush's 2009 budget

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The Associated Press
About 1 pages (388 words)

AP Features, February 2nd, 2008

President Bush on Monday will release a $3 trillion (euro2 trillion) budget for 2009. Here is a look at some of its elements:

_DEFICITS: The plan will claim deficits in the $400 billion (euro268.7 billion) range for this year and next. For the 2009 budget year covered by the Bush plan, deficits are likely to rise higher than Bush predicts after additional war costs are added in.

_DEFENSE: The Pentagon would get a $35 billion (euro23.51 billion) increase to $515 billion (euro345.9 billion) for core programs, about 7 percent, with war costs additional. Another $21 billion (euro14 billion) would go to the Energy Department for nuclear weapons programs. A $70 billion (euro47 billion) "bridge fund" for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would give the next president time to consider options, with tens of billions of dollars more needed regardless of any strategy shift.

_DOMESTIC APPROPRIATIONS: These would be essentially frozen at current levels, with most services being cut after inflation and population growth are factored in.

_HOMELAND SECURITY: Overall, the budget for homeland security programs will increase by almost 11 percent, with a 19 percent increase for border security and immigration enforcement efforts, including new money to secure the border with Mexico.

_MEDICARE AND MEDICAID: The programs will see almost $200 billion (euro134.3 billion) in cuts over the next five years, about three times the savings proposed last year but rejected by Congress. Much of the savings would come from freezing reimbursement rates for most health care providers for three years and from cutting payments to hospitals serving large numbers of the uninsured poor.

_HEALTH: Health and Human Services Department funding would be cut by $2 billion (euro1.34 billion), amounting to a 3 percent reduction. Funding for the National Institutes of Health would be frozen. The Food and Drug Administration would receive a 6 percent boost to $2.4 billion (euro1.6 billion) to ramp up food and drug safety efforts.

_EDUCATION: Education programs would be frozen at $60 billion (euro40.3 billion), with no increase to keep pace with inflation. Bush is pushing to restore $600 million (euro403 million) lawmakers cut from Reading First, which serves low-income children. Title I grants, the main source of federal funding for poor students, would rise about 3 percent. Special education would receive $11.3 billion (euro7.6 billion), a $330 million (euro221.6 million) increase.

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The Associated Press. Elements of Bush's 2009 budget. Copyright 2008  AP Features.

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