discretionary spending
English
Noun
discretionary spending (usually uncountable, plural discretionary spendings)
- (economics) The amount or portion of a person's or group's expenditures which is used for non-essential or voluntary disbursements; the amount or portion of one's expenditures which one may make as one sees fit.
- 2000, D. W. Elmendorf et al., "Social Security Reform and National Saving in an Era of Budget Surpluses," Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, vol. 2000, no. 2, p. 48:
- In this scenario discretionary spending is held to a constant share of GDP.
- 2000, D. W. Elmendorf et al., "Social Security Reform and National Saving in an Era of Budget Surpluses," Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, vol. 2000, no. 2, p. 48:
- The action of making such expenditures.
- 2001, Michael Elliott, "Don't Worry About Oil," Time, 29 Oct.:
- Nervous consumers and business executives put off discretionary spending.
- 2009, Josh Quittner, "Kindle 2 Will Woo You," Time, 30 March:
- If only the Kindle 2 were cheaper! Despite its other shortcomings, Amazon's new and improved digital-book reading device does enough right that it could become the Model T of e-readers, capturing the imagination—and discretionary spending—of the masses.
- 2001, Michael Elliott, "Don't Worry About Oil," Time, 29 Oct.:
- (US, government finances) US government expenditures which are subject to annual review and authorization by Congress, as distinct from expenditures authorized by existing laws.
- 1992, Bill Turque AND Ginny Carroll, "Ross Perot's New Tease," Newsweek, 31 Aug.:
- Perot would cut federal discretionary spending by 15 percent, chopping items that range from the space station to the Rural Electrification Administration.
- 1992, Bill Turque AND Ginny Carroll, "Ross Perot's New Tease," Newsweek, 31 Aug.: