Obama
orders across-the-board budget cuts
US President Barack Obama has signed an order on Friday that starts putting into effect across-the-board budget cuts known as the 'sequester' after he and congressional leaders failed to find an alternative budget plan.
2
June, 2013
The
White House has released a copy of Mr Obama's directive
entitled Sequestration
Order for Fiscal Year 2013.
A
deal proved elusive in talks at the White House on Friday, meaning
that government agencies will begin to slice a total of $85 billion
from their budgets between now and 1 October.
The
order follows the failure Mr Obama and congressional leaders to find
an alternative budget plan that would avoid the series of steep
budget cuts.
The
budget plan put in place in 2011 initiates automatic,
across-the-board cuts that can only be halted by agreement between
Congress and the White House.
Speaking
after the failed talks Mr Obama described the raft of spending
reductions as a series of arbitrary and avoidable cuts to the things
Americans depend on.
Mr
Obama blamed the Republicans' refusal to allow any tax rises for the
failure to reach a deal and called the spending cuts inexcusable.
Republican
House Speaker John Boehner reiterated his party's refusal to allow
tax increases and challenged the gridlocked US Senate to pass a bill
first before the House acted on a plan.
The
International Monetary Fund warns that US economic growth could be
slowed by 0.5 of a percentage point this year as a result of the
spending reductions, hitting the global economy.
In
the absence of any deal, the Pentagon will be forced to slice 13% of
its budget between now and 30 September, Reuters reports.
Most
non-defence programmes, from NASA space exploration to
federally-backed education and law enforcement, face a 9% reduction.
If
the cuts were to stay in place through September, the administration
predicts significant air travel delays due to layoffs of airport
security workers and air traffic controllers.
The
non-partisan Congressional Budget Office predicts 750,000 jobs could
be lost in 2013 and federal employees throughout the country are
looking to trim their own costs.
Instead
of the indiscriminate cuts, Mr Obama and Democrats in Congress have
urged a mix of targeted spending cuts and tax increases on the rich
to help tame the growth of a $16.6 trillion national debt.
Republicans
want to cut the cost of huge social safety nets, including Social
Security and Medicare, that are becoming more expensive in a country
with an ageing population.
By
midnight on Friday, the president is required to issue an order to
federal agencies to reduce their budgets, and the White House budget
office must send a report to Congress detailing the spending cuts. In
coming days, federal agencies are likely to issue 30-day notices to
workers who will be laid off.
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