Comment by brightball

2 hours ago

EDIT: I see several comments suggesting that there is nothing left to cut. I'm not sure how anyone squares that perspective with this federal budget growth chart.

The federal budget over time...

2026 - $7.5 trillion

2020 - $4.8 trillion

2015 - $3.9 trillion

2010 - $3.7 trillion

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FGEXPND

We do not have a tax problem, we have a spending problem. There's no reason that the US federal government shouldn't be able to operate on a budget equivalent of about $4 trillion which was just about the average from 2010-2020. There seems to be quite a lot available to cut.

You should leave Social Security out of the calculations. It's supposed to be a self-funding program that has no impact on budget balance. That accounts for ~$0.5 trillion of the growth since 2020.

Another ~$0.5 trillion is from higher interest payments.

A large fraction of the budget consists of wages and actual spending. Inflation is 25–30% since 2020.

Then there is healthcare spending, which can be expected to grow faster than inflation, as the population is growing older.

The US is basically running into the same issues as European welfare states. While government spending remains qualitatively the same, demographic changes make it grow faster than tax revenue. Those who couldn't maintain a balanced budget in the past are finding the situation particularly difficult. In some sense, the situation is even worse in the US. Healthcare (old age spending) is particularly expensive, while individuals have greater responsibility for childhood expenses.

That’s different than saying there’s a lot of “waste” to cut as many argue.

The benefits agencies that make up the bulk of the spending have very low overhead and are run very efficiently. The vast majority of funds go directly to beneficiaries.

Balancing the budget will require massive cuts to very popular programs.