Word: fiscales
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...falling further and further below the line of Federal expenditures, with a widening deficit between them. Then, said Franklin Roosevelt, he decided to do something courageous, to turn the line of Federal expenditures upward in hope that Federal revenues would also rise. They did and the Budget for fiscal 1937 was his crowning achievement, showing the line of revenues rising closer & closer to expenditures...
Revenues. The figures of the 1937 Budget did indeed prove much. The President estimated final receipts for fiscal 1936, now half over, at $4,411,000,000, a 112% increase over fiscal 1933, a 9% increase over fiscal 1929. Receipts for fiscal 1937 he set at $5,654,000,000, more revenue than the U. S. Government ever had in any year except 1920. This huge expectation arose from the following estimates: $547,000,000 from the New Deal's social security, railway pension and Coal Act taxes; $547,000,000 from the New Deal's processing taxes...
...zooming. Every regular department of the Government shows substantial increases in its costs for 1937 over 1936 and 1935. The Departments of Agriculture (not including AAA), Commerce, Interior, the nonmilitary activities of the War Department, and independent offices all will spend more than twice as much in fiscal 1937 as they nominally spent in fiscal 1935. Labor and Navy will spend over 75% more. The "regular establishments" as a group-exclusive of veterans' pensions, interest on the public debt, AAA, CCC-are to spend $2,586,000,000 in fiscal 1937 as compared...
...practical purposes all the elements of the budget, except one, had long been disposed of. The requirements of all the regular Government departments had been settled before the President finished his Thanksgiving visit to Warm Springs. The Treasury's guess as to the amount of revenue available in fiscal 1937 had been filed away as a State secret. All that remained was to settle how much money Franklin Roosevelt would ask. not for the Government, but for the unemployed...
...Presidential nomination was being demonstrated by Colonel Frank Knox, energetic publisher of the Chicago Daily News. Aspirant Knox was speeding back & forth across the land, making speeches, giving interviews, openly creating for himself the publicity buildup, the indispensable "name & face stuff," which Governor Landon was getting by indirection. Fiscal 1936, Colonel Knox told Worcester (Mass.) Republican women last week, will end with a national public debt...