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    Se·ques·tra·tion
    /ˌsēkwəˈstrāSH(ə)n/

    noun

    • 1. the action of taking legal possession of assets until a debt has been paid or other claims have been met: "if such court injunctions are ignored, sequestration of trade union assets will follow"
    • 2. the action of sequestering a substance: "carbon sequestration"
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  3. Learn the various meanings and uses of the word sequestration, from legal and medical terms to environmental and political contexts. See synonyms, examples, word history, and related phrases of sequestration.

  4. Sequestration is the act of taking possession of someone's property, keeping people apart, or separating and storing a harmful substance. Learn more about the different meanings and usage of sequestration with examples from the Cambridge English Corpus.

  5. noun. removal or separation; banishment or exile. a withdrawal into seclusion; retirement. segregation from others; isolation: sequestration of jurors during a trial. Law. the sequestering of property. confiscation or seizure.

  6. Sequestration is the act of taking possession of someone's property, keeping people apart, or separating a harmful substance. Learn more about the different meanings and usage of sequestration with examples and translations.

    • What Is Sequestration?
    • Understanding Sequestration
    • Sequestration Reductions
    • Exemptions on Mandatory Spending
    • The Bottom Line
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    Sequestration is a term adopted by Congress to describe a backup fiscal policy mechanism to enforce budgetary discipline over agreed-upon deficit reduction targets established under the 2011 Budget Control Act (BCA). Sequestration, or "the sequester," is a procedure by which planned spending increases are moderated by pre-specified percentages if C...

    Under the Budget Control Act of 2011 (BCA), Congress agreed to a series of caps on increased spending for each year through 2021. Congress passed the BCA to help resolve the debt ceiling crisis of 2011. This act increased the United States debt ceiling and established a 12-member committee (the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, or the “s...

    With the sequester in place, as actual budgetspending is set by Congress in each successive year, the BCA directs the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) to assess whether these caps will be exceeded by the planned spending increases. If they are, then the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) determines whether the law requires that sequestration wi...

    Although the spending increase limits are “across the board,” most mandatory spending is exempt from spending caps and sequestration. This includes Social Security, veterans’ programs, Medicaid, other low-income assistance programs like Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) and the Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP), and ne...

    Sequestration was designed to enforce budgetary discipline. The Congressional Budget Office sets the caps, and the Office of Management and Budget decides whether sequestration will be required based on its estimates of government spending. Sequestration can affect many different areas of the federal budget, including mandatory spending such as Med...

    Sequestration is a policy that limits federal spending increases to enforce deficit reduction targets. Learn how it works, when it was passed, and which programs are exempt or affected by it.

    • Jean Folger
  7. Sequestration is the act or process of isolating, secluding, or removing something or someone. It can also refer to the legal or chemical process of separating or preventing ions from interacting with other substances.

  8. Learn the meaning of sequestration in different contexts, such as law, chemistry, and seclusion. See how to use the word in sentences and compare it with related terms.

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