U.S. Government Overspending in the 2000s

government overspending

excerpt from High Alert: How the Internet Reformation is causing a financial hurricane – and how to profit from it:government overspending

U.S. Government Overspending in the 2000s:

• $23 billion on pork (grants to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, bridges to nowhere, etc.)

• $20 billion in unspecified overpayments. (2001)

• $3.3 billion in overpayments from the Department of Housing and Urban Development, over 10% of the department’s total budget. (2001)

• $100 million on unused Defense Department tickets.

• $2 billion to farmers to not farm their land.

• $12 billion to $30 billion on farm subsidies to wealthy farmers and agribusiness.

• $60 billion on corporate welfare versus $43 billion on homeland security.

• Millions in unnecessary public works projects from Army Corps of Engineers.

• $600 million in food stamp overpayments.

• $120 million school lunch overpayments.

• $800 million veterans program overpayments.

• $1 billion from poor tracking of student loan recipients.

• $7 billion owed by Medicare contractors to the federal government.

• A White House review of just a sample of the federal budget identified $90 billion spent on programs deemed ineffective, marginally adequate, or operating under a flawed purpose or design.

• The Congressional Budget Office published a “Budget Options” book identifying $140 billion in potential spending cuts.

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