pull down to refresh

By Jane L. Johnson
There is plenty of commentary today about continuing large annual US federal budget deficits and the large federal debt that keeps mounting as a result of these relentless deficits.
Many are not aware that these entitlements—particularly Social Security benefits, Medicare, and Medicaid—comprise fully two-thirds of federal expenditures. Instead, many mistakenly believe that defense expenditures are the largest single federal expenditure when, in fact, defense comprises only about 13 percent of the federal budget.
^THIS
Every year in my Public Econ class I do a pre-quiz where I ask students to guess what the Federal Government spends the most money on: Defense, Social Security & Medicare, Education, or Interest on Debt.
Students usually guess Defense and are surprised to learn that defense spending is only a relatively small fraction of the federal budget.
reply
This is also why substantial cuts are so politically difficult. Even if the bureaucracies are gutted with a machete, Ron Swanson style, most of the spending will still be in place. It would take Congressional reform to entitlements to appreciably reduce spending.
reply
lol @Rothbardian_fanatic posted the same after you!
reply
We're in a race.
reply
I'll cheer for you!
reply
Extra commentary: #768034
reply
@Undisciplined, I have been trying to make links to a previous post before, without success. How do you make them?
reply
It should happen automatically, when you paste the URL.
reply
Thank you, I’ll give it a try, another time.
reply