| United States. Congress. Joint Economic Committee - 1954 - 392 pages
...are peculiarly essential, not only to the work of the United States Government through such agencies as the Bureau of the Budget and the Council of Economic Advisers, but more particularly to the State and local governments which have no other means whatever of making... | |
| United States. Congress. Economic Report Joint Committee - 1954 - 404 pages
...are peculiarly essential, not only to the work of the United States Government through such agencies as the Bureau of the Budget and the Council of Economic Advisers, but more particularly to the State and local governments which have no other means whatever of making... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs - 1955 - 1636 pages
...Commerce in consultation with the other agencies responsible for water-resource development and with the Bureau of the Budget and the Council of Economic Advisers. The long-range price projections to be used in estimating benefits and deferred costs will be announced... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Interior and Insular Affairs Committee - 1957 - 76 pages
...Commerce in consultation with the other agencies responsible for water-resource development and with the Bureau of the Budget and the Council of Economic Advisers. The long-range price projections to be used in estimating benefits and deferred costs will be announced... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations - 1961 - 966 pages
...Special Projects Fund available to the President. On January 23. 1961. President Kennedy transferred to the Bureau of the Budget and the Council of Economic Advisers the functions theretofore performed liy the Coordinator. The President also transferred to the Budget Bureau... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on Appropriations - 1966 - 864 pages
...capacity of the Center will prove useful to other agencies concerned with general economic problems such as the Bureau of the Budget and the Council of Economic Advisers. COORDINATION OF FEDERAL AGENCIES Mr. CHAMBERS. In recognition of the suddenness with which a war emergency... | |
| |