Las Vegas Review-Journal

Federal ’19 budget foresees cutting agencies

- By Josh Boak The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion aims to further tighten its grip on spending, issuing a memo Friday that calls for eliminatin­g some federal agencies and cutting government jobs as part of the upcoming fiscal 2019 budget.

Office of Management and Budget Director Mick Mulvaney wrote in the memo to agency and department heads that the goal is “ensuring that the federal government spends precious taxpayer dollars only on worthwhile policies.”

He added that the 2019 budget would be a “comprehens­ive plan” to reduce the number of workers and merge or terminate agencies as requested by an executive order signed in March by President Donald Trump.

The guidance follows in the spirit of Trump’s 2018 budget proposal initially outlined in March. That blueprint would sharply reduce spending for Medicaid, food stamps and student loan subsidies. Mulvaney said in the memo that spending reductions are necessary to achieve annual economic growth of 3 percent.

Most economists say the United States will struggle to grow much faster than 2 percent a year due to baby boomers retiring and relatively low productivi­ty gains. But Trump has promised to restore growth to the average previously seen in the half-century after World War II.

The memo for fiscal 2019 is an initial step for a budget the White House would propose early next year.

Mulvaney said that agencies should plan to spend at the levels proposed in the 2018 budget during fiscal 2019. Fiscal 2018 begins Oct. 1.

Agency heads are allowed to submit requests for additional 5 percent in funding levels that would be applied to “effective programs,” the memo said. But Mulvaney doesn’t specify what constitute­s an effective program and said they would be closely scrutinize­d.

The memo said the agencies and department­s are to submit their budget requests to OMB no later than Sept. 11. Each agency budget submission is to include any costs or savings for proposals to overhaul or streamline the government’s structure.

 ??  ?? Mick Mulvaney Office of Management and Budget director
Mick Mulvaney Office of Management and Budget director

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