: Biden set to release budget with defense boost, inflation forecast in focus

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President Joe Biden on Monday is set to send Congress his budget for fiscal 2023, laying out his policy priorities and kicking off the process of funding the federal government.

Biden will request more than $813 billion in national security spending, a 4% increase from approved spending for the current fiscal year, according to Bloomberg News.

But lawmakers frequently ignore presidential budgets as they develop their own funding plans, and some Republicans are already pressing Biden to be more aggressive.

“We urge you to request a 5 percent increase over the inflation-adjusted FY22 enacted level,” wrote a group of 40 GOP members of Congress to Biden earlier this week. Analysts at Beacon Policy Advisors said that Democratic hawks in competitive re-election races may join Republicans in pressing for more Pentagon spending.

The analysts also said the administration’s inflation assumptions will be a key figure to watch for.

“Too low an inflation estimate and it won’t be believable, but too high and it will become political ammunition for Republicans,” they wrote.

As MarketWatch reported, the rate of U.S. inflation rose again in February to 7.9% — a 40-year high. And Americans could face even more pain because of the Russian war on Ukraine. March figures will be reported on April 12.

Read more inflation coverage from MarketWatch.

Inflation is a key consideration in passing Biden’s domestic agenda, with the president’s “Build Back Better” proposal slamming into opposition from West Virginia Sen. Joe Manchin. Biden’s fellow Democrat has warned about major boosts to government spending during a period of high inflation.

Biden’s budget will also contain domestic-policy priorities, as he seeks to replace Build Back Better, which was aimed at climate and social spending.

While Biden’s budget proposal begins the congressional appropriations process, the government is funded through 12 spending bills that need to clear Congress and be signed into law by the president. Those bills can clear the House of Representatives along party lines, since Democrats control the majority. The Senate is a higher bar, however, as it is evenly split.

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