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FY
2004 Federal Govt. Spending of $2.3 Trillion Consumed 26% of the
Economy or $8,134 per man, woman and child, or 36% of the
economy counting regulatory compliance. The Social Spending
portion consumed 58% of the total and has increased 14 times
faster than the economy. Individual incomes pay 82% of all
federal revenue compared to a 51% share in 1950.
Today's
economy is 8 TIMES more federal government-spending-dependent
compared to prior generations.
The
left chart shows total federal spending as a share of the
economy - growing from 3% of the economic pie prior to the New
Deal, to 26% of today's economy. Had
total federal spending been reduced following World War II,
equivalent to reductions of the defense spending ratio, the
current federal spending ratio would be about 13% of the economy
- - instead of today's 26% ratio - - resulting in 50% less
spending and taxes.
Political
leaders chose, instead, to eat up all defense reductions PLUS
much more via massive social spending - - much financed by debt.
Who
was it that said we are a nation of small government with a
predominant free-private sector? Well, we used to be, but no
longer. Does this impact the future economics and freedom of
our younger generation? You bet.
Summarizing:
The federal share of the economic pie increased 800%.
A
POWERFUL, REVEALING PICTURE - FEW HAVE SEEN
Question:
What has caused the explosive growth of federal spending
faster than the economy?
Answer:
look for the line in this chart that has risen the most over
that period.
The
BIG CULPRIT (rising
red line) is SOCIAL SPENDING,
which grew 14 times faster
than the economy - - to a new high - - more than eating up the
long-term decline of defense spending ratios shown by the black
line in the chart. The full report (link below) shows once the
social spending ratio rose above 5% of national income in the
late 1960s, citizen trust in government plummeted to half prior
levels and inflation-adjusted median family
incomes stagnated for all families and fell for single
wage-earner families. Note social spending (red
line) stopped rising in the early 1980s as if it hit a
brick wall and then fell. Other data show trust in government
surged only to fall back later as social spending ratios again
climbed. This is a powerful finding that deserves more
attention. The full report contains a link to a special
report and chart on citizen trust polling data).
This
trend (red line) is unique in
U.S. history.
National
security was the prime reason our founding forefathers formed a
federal government. The declining black trend
line is defense spending, which in 2001 had dropped to 3.7% of
the economy's national income, below where it started -
following a 5-decade downward slope. The black defense line for
2003-05 increased to 5% of national income as shown in the
graphic. This multi-decade declining defense ratio camouflaged a
new direction for government: surging social programs and
spending.
This
trend calls into question our nation's focus and readiness to
detect and deter major national security challenges compared to
the priority focus outlined by our nation's
founding fathers
WHERE DOES THE MONEY GO ??
Following
is a pie chart showing the major spending components of a
Federal Budget - and its huge red cloud
The
Government
Spending Report and the Government
Growth Report show the federal government increased its
spending at a rate much faster than growth of the economy
(nearly twice as fast) since the end of World War II). Where
does the spending go?
Last
fiscal year the federal government spent $2.3 Trillion or about $8,134
for each man, woman and child in America.
The
left chart displays this $2.3 Trillion as a pie with each major
spending component shown as a percent of the total.
The
BIGGIE is that HUGE
RED CLOUD in the chart called SOCIAL
PROGRAM Spending, which consumes
58% of the budget. (To place this in perspective, in 1948
social spending was but 10% of the federal budget - - prior
to the New Deal it was near zero).
This graphic is
reviewed in more detail in the full Federal
Government Spending Report.

© 2005 Michael W. Hodges
Editorial Archive
Web
note:
The above editorial is a recent summary of an updated chapter from
Michael Hodges series, Grandfather
Economic Report.
Read
the full article: Federal
Government Spending Report on G.E.R. State
& Local Government Spending is covered in a separate chapter. The
Grandfather Economic Report is a series of reports examining
economic conditions facing families and youth, compared to prior
generations.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Michael
W. Hodges
Grandfather
Economic Report
Email Mr. Hodges
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