Over all, the bill provides about $245 billion for the military and $200 billion for nonmilitary spending.
This, in turn, has undercut support for cuts in nonmilitary domestic spending.
This works out to $23 billion, divided equally between military and nonmilitary spending.
Other nonmilitary spending would increase 11.4 percent, to $185.4 billion in 1988 under current law, the office said.
They also rejected most of the President's major proposals for reducing nonmilitary domestic spending.
The House proposal reduces military spending and nonmilitary spending by about $9 billion each.
The $11.5 billion of automatic cuts in nonmilitary spending would affect a wide range of programs.
A deficit projection above that level would have meant automatic cuts in both military and nonmilitary spending.
Over its two-year life span, Congress will have reduced nonmilitary spending by $53 billion, cutting more than 300 programs and grants.
Democrats say the caps have shrunk domestic nonmilitary spending to its smallest share of the national economy since 1962.