(165,141 - 165,160 of 181,089)
Pages
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage20
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
632 1,262’ -1 1,261 1,650 -101 1,549 3,409 -50 3,359 450 . -16 434 373 -15 353 8,200 -378 7,322, 8,180" -155* 3,025" 3,473 - - 3,473 - - - - - - 1,500 -54' 1,436 ) 1,049 -4 1,045 560 -24 536 ) - - 30 -1 29 31 -1 30 ‘Z7090’ SS9 ‘.001 1,030“ -5 1,075" 1 213 - - 213 40 - - 40 895 -9 886. 553 -6 557 - - 1 - - - - 1 - - 1 14,371 - -476 14,395“ 9:364 -166’ 9,598‘ (continued)
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage23
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
USDAtwNews Division Room 404-A L United States Department oi F 2 0 Agriculture Scott Steele (202) 4&7-3396s Office of _ _ Infonnafion , Arthur Uhitmore (202) 447 4026 NUSDA ANNOUNCES SPENDING REDUCTIONS UNDER GRAMM?RUDMAN-HOLLINGS ACT .wAsn1uoron, Feb. 12-Secretary of Agriculture John Black today said the 0.8. Department of Agriculture soon will begin spending reductions in its commodity
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage14
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
costs will be sequestered. i C Also, although the law does not specifically address it, budget analysts at CBO and OMB apparently are assuming that "PIK," or payment-in- 5The January 21 GAO report on sequestration indicates that a scheduled 4.8 percent benefit increase this spring for wool will be forgone, achieving a savings of $10.3 million for fiscal 1986. °
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage04
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
could cost from $50 billion to $60 billion between fiscal 1986 and 1988, according to some estimates. 1 This total, the result also of the continuing agricultural recession, would exceed even the historical high of $44 billion logged between fiscal 1983 and 1985. 1These estimates do not take into account any necessary sequestration reductions.
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage21
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
’ -22 18,702 Marketing and Inspection Programs Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service ...... 324 -14 310 324 -12 312 Food Safety and Inspection Service .............. 363 -16 347 363 -16 347 Agricultural Marketing Service .................. 146 -5 141 127 -6 121 00000000000000000-1000000000000000000000 .3 -2 fiotal, Marketing and Inspection Programs ...... -38 856 837 1-36 851 00000OOOOCIOOOOOOOf
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage09
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
$DAr-must be changed. The Corporation has an authorized capital stock of just $100 million but is authorized to borrow up to $25 billion from the U.S. Treasury to finance its operations. Whenever its losses push it to the $25 billion limit, it must request an appropriation to offset these losses (known as
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage05
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
be reduced in specified steps to zero by fiscal 1991. Maximum allowable deficits are $171.9 billion in fiscal 1986, $144 billion in fiscal 1937, $108 billion‘ in fiscal 1988, and $72 billion in fiscal 1989, and $36 billion in fiscal 1990. When lawmakers prepare for an upcoming fiscal year, the sum total of all of their normal appropriations, authorization, and revenue measures must bring the deficit within
-
-
Title
-
CRS86547ENRpage03
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:56679
-
Text
-
, to comply with the fiscal 1986 budget-cutting goal. ‘Nearly every Federal agriculture program is - subject to this reduction. Total agriculture spending reductions for fiscal 1986 will be $1.3 billion, including about $824 million in the major price and income support programs. The unusual nature of the agriculture budget-how price support programs are funded, the extreme difficulties in predicting
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage20
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
CRS-17 APPENDIX* TABLE A. LEADING U.S. EXPORTS TO LATIN AMERICA, 19850 Product Description Value 0 ($ Million) Electrical Machinery 2,143 Road vehicles 1,990 Specialized machinery ' 1,734 Cereals 1,685 Power generating machinery 1,286 Industrial machinery . 1,249 Office machines 1,165 Organic chemicals 1,127 ' Other transport equipment 865 Telecommunications equipment 847 Source: U
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage06
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
CRS- 3 .mm:mmH m:ownm> .ommHm .mwmuH uuomEH mam uuomxm .m.: mo munwwanwwm .m=m:mU mcu mo smmusm .muumEEoU mo uamauummmn .m.: umuuaom ;mm> %o ucm 8 E 8 mm B V 8 E E R E R 3. 2 mm K E - - ‘F’ H u u u u u H o mgmflmoa E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. O O I I U I I O I O O I O O C O O mace: .m.=-...- ...... m:..an_x.H_ .37.. .. 2. .T
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage10
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
percent in 1985. (See table 3 below.) TABLE 3. U.S.-Latin American Trade in Manufactures and Non-Manufactures, 1981-85 (Millions of Dollars) 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 U.S. Exports Manufactures 29,727 22,034 15,200 18,107 19,679 Non-Manufactures 8,401 6,842 6,685 7,237 6,991 Total 38,1285 28,876 21,885 25,344 25,570 U.S. Imports Manufactures 8,878 8,585 11,117 14,714 15,570 Non-Manufactures 23,177 23
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage05
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
with Latin America, 1970-85 (Millions of Dollars) Year Exports Imports Total Balance 1970 5,695 4,779 10,474 916 1975 15,655 11,847 27,502 3,808 1980 36,030 30,019 66,050 6,011 1981 38,128 32,055 70,183 6,073 1982 28,876 32,511 61,387 - 3,635 1983 21,885 35,683 57,568 -13,798 1984 25,344 42,341 67,684 -16,998 1985 26,670 43,447 70,117 -16,778 Source: U.S. Export and Import Trade. U.S. Department
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage03
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
lo U.S. 1970"‘85ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooobooo 2. Share of Each Country in U.S.—Latin American Trade; 1985.-.-o.-o-.--.. 3; U.S.-Latin American Trade in Manufactures 1_981"'85oooooooonooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo ii 12 15 17
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage15
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
CRS--12 . VII. IMPACT OF U,.S,. TRADE ON LATIN AMERICA Latin America depends on U.S. trade. Furthermore, this dependence has increased over the last few years, as the data on U.S. shares of Latin American exports below indicate: 1981 28.8 1982 31.4 1983 35.o 1984 339.2 ggj In 1981, the United States absorbed about 29 percent of Latin American exports and 39 percent by 1984. Only time will tell
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage17
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
CRS- 14 .ommHm .mvmuH uuoaem wcm unomxm .m.= .mw:mmH wDOflHfl> mo muzwaacwwm .m:m:mo mcu mo smmusm .moumEEou mo ucmeuummma .m.: umuuaom Lmm> We saw 32 £2 82 $2 33 $2 22 E2 R3 33 T “ u “ “ u w “ n o . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..Lx m L
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage19
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
CRS+l6 On the other hand, U.S. policymakers face pressure from local interests to protect domestic industries from import competition. Strong efforts in this direction could inhibit Latin American progress in exporting and resolving financial problems. The issue is whether, or how, policymakers can balance they political and economic benefits and costs of these two seemingly conflicting interests.
-
-
Title
-
CRS86570Epage02
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:38242
-
Text
-
ABSTRACT U.S.-Latin American trade flows have changed dramaticalLy over the last‘ few years. This paper briefly examines U.S.-Latin American trade to determine, among other things, the cause and possible consequences of the shift in trade flows.
-
-
Title
-
CRS86760GOVpage12
-
Page from
-
info:fedora/mu:73336
-
Text
-
.073‘ .833 .481 .723 .456 .082 ,178 .632 .738 ,....,., - .. h-l Pjolf I ..5'._.L .143 RAM POPULATION EV HOV 2.743 5 372 25 171 36 142 38 168 36 200 34 312 28 57 43 138 ,38 286 28 68 42 325 27 158 37 244 31 383 23 81 41 118 40 184 35 680 15 162 37 805 13 348 26 1,446 8 830 \ 13 731 13 370 25 58 17 363 25 4‘? 22 28' 28 13’ 38 757 14 583 16 328 27 242 31 671 15 183 134 1,684 8 833 12 547 15 1.087
Pages