Establishing the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2025 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2026 through 2034.
Summary
What This Bill Does
Establishes the congressional budget framework for fiscal year 2025 and budgetary levels for fiscal years 2026 through 2034. The resolution sets recommended revenue, outlay, deficit, debt, and functional category levels, including budget authority and outlays for national defense, international affairs, science and technology, energy, natural resources, agriculture, commerce, housing, health, Medicare, income security, Social Security, veterans benefits, transportation, community development, education, justice, and general government. It also gives reconciliation instructions to House and Senate committees and sets reserve-fund and enforcement rules that allow Budget Committee chairs to adjust allocations, aggregates, pay-as-you-go ledgers, and other budgetary levels when qualifying legislation moves.
Who Benefits and How
House and Senate Budget Committee chairs benefit from authority to revise allocations and aggregates as reconciliation, reserve-fund, baseline, and enforcement conditions are met. House Ways and Means receives room for deficit-increasing tax legislation if required spending reductions are achieved, while committees such as Agriculture, Education-Workforce, Energy-Commerce, Oversight, Transportation-Infrastructure, and Natural Resources receive deficit-reduction instructions. Senate Finance, Armed Services, and other Senate committees receive parallel reconciliation instructions and reserve-fund procedures. Federal taxpayers, Medicare beneficiaries, Medicaid beneficiaries, Social Security beneficiaries, small businesses, energy producers, and regulated businesses are affected indirectly through the policy statements and future reconciliation legislation the resolution enables.
Who Bears the Burden and How
Congressional committees bear procedural burdens: they must submit reconciliation recommendations by May 9, 2025, operate within deficit targets, and face allocation adjustments if savings targets are not met. The House and Senate Budget Committees, Appropriations Committees, Congressional Budget Office, Joint Committee on Taxation, Social Security Administration, and Postal Service administrative accounts are affected by enforcement filings, administrative-expense treatment, baseline updates, and budget concept adjustments. Federal programs under committees instructed to reduce deficits face potential future cuts, while committees allowed deficit increases can support future tax, defense, homeland security, judiciary, or related legislation.
Key Provisions
- Establishes fiscal year 2025 budget levels and 2026-2034 recommended revenues, outlays, deficits, debt, and functional category amounts.
- Provides House reconciliation instructions, including large deficit-reduction targets for Agriculture, Education-Workforce, Energy-Commerce, Oversight, Transportation-Infrastructure, and related committees, and deficit-increase room for Ways-Means, Armed Services, Homeland Security, and Judiciary.
- Provides Senate reconciliation instructions and procedures for the Senate Budget Committee to assemble committee recommendations.
- Creates reserve funds for reconciliation legislation, deregulation, spending reductions above $2 trillion, current tax policy baseline treatment, and Medicare/Medicaid protection.
- Requires adjustment of the House Ways-Means instruction if specified House committees do not achieve at least $2 trillion in deficit reduction.
- Provides enforcement filing, administrative expense treatment, baseline, concept-definition, allocation, aggregate, and rulemaking-power provisions.
- States policy positions on economic growth, mandatory spending reduction, government deregulation, Social Security, Postal Service administrative expenses, Medicare, and Medicaid.
Evidence Chain:
This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.
At a Glance
What This Bill Does
Sets congressional budget levels for fiscal year 2025 and fiscal years 2026 through 2034, gives House and Senate reconciliation instructions, creates reserve funds and budget-enforcement adjustment rules, and states House/Senate fiscal policy positions on economic growth, mandatory spending, deregulation, tax baseline treatment, Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and Postal Service administration.
Key Policy Areas
Budget, Tax, Health Care, Defense, Government Operations
Primary Purpose
Sets congressional budget levels for fiscal year 2025 and fiscal years 2026 through 2034, gives House and Senate reconciliation instructions, creates reserve funds and budget-enforcement adjustment rules, and states House/Senate fiscal policy positions on economic growth, mandatory spending, deregulation, tax baseline treatment, Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security, and Postal Service administration.
Policy Domains
Titles I and II - Budget levels and reconciliation
Identified Gains
- House Budget Committee chair
- Senate Budget Committee chair
- House Ways-Means Committee
- Senate Finance Committee
- Federal taxpayers
- Small businesses affected by tax policy
- Energy producers affected by deregulation policy
- Medicare beneficiaries
- Medicaid beneficiaries
- Social Security beneficiaries
Identified Costs
- House Agriculture Committee
- House Education-Workforce Committee
- House Energy-Commerce Committee
- House Oversight Committee
- House Transportation-Infrastructure Committee
- House Ways-Means Committee
- Senate Finance Committee
- Congressional Budget Office
- Joint Committee on Taxation
- House Appropriations Committee
Titles III through V - Reserve funds, enforcement, and policy statements
Identified Gains
- House Budget Committee chair
- Senate Budget Committee chair
- House Appropriations Committee
- Senate Appropriations Committee
- Social Security Administration
- United States Postal Service
Identified Costs
- House Budget Committee staff
- Senate Budget Committee staff
- House Appropriations Committee staff
- Senate Appropriations Committee staff
- Congressional Budget Office analysts
- Joint Committee on Taxation analysts
Legislative Progress
Passed HouseStar Print ordered on the reported concurrent resolution.
On motion that the House agree to the Senate amendment …
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without …
Resolving differences -- House actions: On motion that the House …
On motion that the House agree to the Senate amendment …
The previous question was ordered pursuant to the rule.
Mr. Arrington moved that the House agree to the Senate …
Mr. Arrington moved that the House agree to the Senate …
DEBATE - Pursuant to the provisions of H. Res. 313, …
POSTPONED PROCEEDINGS - Pursuant to clause 1(c) of rule XIX, …
Stakeholder Effects
cui bono?How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.
Congressional Budget Office analysts, House Agriculture Committee, House Appropriations Committee
Positive-direction: House Ways-Means Committee
Negative-direction: Congressional Budget Office analysts, House Agriculture Committee, House Appropriations Committee, House Budget Committee chair, House Education-Workforce Committee, House Energy-Commerce Committee, Senate Appropriations Committee, Senate Armed Services Committee, Senate Budget Committee chair, Senate Finance Committee, Senate HELP Committee
Bill Structure & Actor Mappings
Who is "The Secretary" in each section?
- "cbo"
- → Congressional Budget Office
- "jct"
- → Joint Committee on Taxation
- "house_budget_chair"
- → Chair of the House Budget Committee
- "senate_budget_chair"
- → Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee
- "house_budget_chair"
- → Chair of the House Budget Committee
- "senate_budget_chair"
- → Chairman of the Senate Budget Committee
- "house_appropriations"
- → House Appropriations Committee
- "senate_appropriations"
- → Senate Appropriations Committee
Key Definitions
Terms defined in this bill
Recommended revenue, outlay, deficit, debt, and budget authority levels used for budget enforcement.
Directions to congressional committees to report deficit-reducing or deficit-increasing changes in laws by May 9, 2025.
Authority for Budget Committee chairs to revise allocations or aggregates for qualifying legislation.
We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.
Learn more about our methodology