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Bill

SRES 654

A resolution expressing the sense of the Senate that the United States should reduce and maintain the Federal unified budget deficit at or below 3 percent of gross domestic product.

119th Congress Introduced by Kevin Cramer and 3 co-sponsors

Senate expresses nonbinding support for reducing the federal budget deficit to 3 percent of GDP, signaling fiscal discipline preferences without legal mandate.

Submitted in Senate
8
WeVote Research Nonpartisan
Bill Summary · SRES 654

Legislative bill overview

Senate Resolution 654 expresses the Senate's nonbinding position that the U.S. should reduce and maintain the federal budget deficit at or below 3 percent of GDP. As a resolution rather than legislation, it carries no legal force but signals the chamber's policy preference on fiscal discipline. The measure was introduced with bipartisan sponsorship from senators across the political spectrum.

Why is this important

The federal deficit significantly influences economic policy, interest rates, and long-term fiscal sustainability. A 3 percent deficit-to-GDP threshold is commonly cited by economists and policymakers as a sustainable level for developed nations. This resolution could influence budget negotiations, spending proposals, and revenue discussions in future legislative sessions.

Potential points of contention

  • Feasibility and trade-offs: Achieving a 3 percent deficit may require substantial spending cuts, tax increases, or economic growth—politically difficult choices that could affect Social Security, Medicare, defense, or other priorities
  • Economic timing: Deficit reduction during economic slowdowns could be counterproductive, yet the resolution contains no flexibility for recessionary periods
  • Measurement and accountability: As a nonbinding resolution, it creates no enforcement mechanism or timeline, making it unclear how or when the goal would be achieved or measured

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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