Sequestration
Categories: Regulations
You've probably heard the verb form: "to sequester." If you get placed on a high-profile trial, the court might sequester you, i.e. set you up in a hotel for the duration of the trial, so you don't get any news reports and you can maintain your objectivity. Basically, the word means to separate something...to put it off to the side, on its own.
So then...what's "sequestration"? In finance, it can mean separating assets to the side for debt repayment. That situation applies to the broad meaning of the word. However, it became most famous for a specific application related to the U.S. federal budget.
During a standoff over the budget in 2011, sequestration was used as self-leverage to force Congress and the president to come to some kind of agreement. Basically, they passed a bill that set a ticking clock. If they couldn't come up with a deal by the beginning of 2013, automatic spending cuts would go into effect. These reductions were designed so that both political parties would feel the pain of the budget cuts.
Fundamentally, sequestration represented a modern-day, fiscal form of a situation popular in medieval Europe. Rival lords would exchange children as hostages as incentive to...make nice. If war broke out, they would execute each other's kids. Only, in the modern-day equivalent, the children in question were particular budget items the political parties wanted protected.
As it turned out, the parties killed the hostages. Sequestration eventually took place.
There was a two-month delay put in place, delaying decision day until March 2013. But even with the extra couple months, no deal could be reached. So the sequestration went into effect...the pre-arranged automatic spending cuts weren't avoided. Sorry, kids.
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Finance a la shmoop what is a budget? that's that thing you throw right out [Woman throws budget out the window]
the window just before you start doing all your Christmas shopping
right but generally it's a plan that lets you see where your money will be
spent if you have a personal budget well you'll be able to decide ahead of time [Personal budget example]
how much money you'll spend on clothes, food, megaphones to annoy and anger your
neighbors and you know whatever floats your boat if you own a company well
you'll probably have much more complicated budget for things like
advertising and lawyer fees either way the plan helps you make sure that you
have enough moolah for everything you need and maybe some leftover for stuff
you want.....Joan wants to control her money so she decides to set up a budget for [Joan setting up a budget on a laptop]
next month she makes a thousand bucks from her summer job and well here's what
her budget looks like.....
Now Joan knows exactly where every penny is gonna go she's not [Joan driving a car]
gonna be caught off guard by any surprise expenses she's not gonna spend
$200 on safecracking equipment and then realize she doesn't have enough left [Joan stood beside a vault of gold bars]
to pay her phone bill although if she does get hit with some unexpected
expenses well hopefully yeah she can just pawn some of those exotic vases she
took from the Peterson place [Joan holding a vase]