DOGE Can Succeed by Scaling Back Its Ambitions
The new advisory group promises bold savings and massive spending cuts, but without any expertise in the federal budget, it’s likely to be all bark and no bite.

With great fanfare and stratospheric ambitions, President-elect Donald Trump has unveiled his new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Trump declared DOGE the "Manhattan Project of our time" that will "dismantle Government Bureaucracy, slash excess regulations, cut wasteful expenditures, and restructure Federal Agencies." While such exuberant confidence may be exciting, Trump and his appointed DOGE co-directors Elon Musk—who is also already promising DOGE-related merchandise—and Vivek Ramaswamy are inflating expectations well beyond any plausible outcome.
Despite its name, DOGE will not be an actual government department—or even a White House office. Rather, it will function as a private advisory group with no formal investigative or administrative powers within the federal government. All it can do is research government waste and send a report of policy recommendations to the White House and Congress. And while Trump will have the authority to implement modest administrative reforms unilaterally, any major savings or agency reorganizations will require an act of Congress with bipartisan support to overcome a potential Democratic filibuster.
The question is whether DOGE will make a serious effort to dive into the weeds of administrative waste or just become the ideological vanity project of two billionaires possessing little familiarity with the federal budget and even less time to divert from their more important endeavors. Musk, in particular, is already running Tesla, SpaceX, and X and is thus unlikely to spend much time overseeing an analysis of Medicare payment policies.
DOGE's Discouraging Start
Musk and Ramaswamy's public pronouncements thus far do not inspire confidence. Musk's promise to save "at least $2 trillion" annually—approximately one-third of all (noninterest) federal spending—suggests a lack of familiarity with the federal budget. Roughly 75 percent of all federal spending goes to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense, veterans, and interest, and the final quarter includes priorities such as infrastructure, justice, border security, health research, national parks, unemployment benefits, disaster aid, and disability benefits.
Trump has already taken much of this spending off the table for cuts, and Congress is highly unlikely to gut these functions. Last year, congressional Republicans failed to specify enough reforms to meet their $130 billion in targeted discretionary spending cuts, and Trump's last GOP Congress failed to pass any spending cuts whatsoever.
Instead, Musk's America PAC recently shared on X an image of Sen. Rand Paul's (R–Ky.), "The Waste of 2023" as its new target. In between minor waste examples costing as little as $8,395 was Musk's pledge to "fix" the $659 billion spent annually on interest on the debt—a figure that (under current interest rates and bond maturities) can be reduced only by running colossal budget surpluses to pay down the $28.6 trillion federal debt. Not to be outdone, Ramaswamy publicly pledged to target the $516 billion spent annually on programs with expired authorizations—seemingly unaware that this would mean eliminating funding for veterans health care, the Department of Justice, NASA, and all U.S. embassies.
Ramaswamy has also recommended laying off 75 percent of all federal employees, using what is essentially a random lottery to determine which employees are laid off. Yes, the federal government is excessively bloated—the Department of Agriculture bursting with nearly 100,000 full-time equivalent employees is particularly egregious. However, it is also noteworthy that federal civilian employment has remained around 2 million for at least 40 years, even as the demands on the federal government have soared. Targeted staffing reductions across certain agencies are much more workable than equally laying off a huge percentage of civilian workers at the Department of Defense, Department of Veterans Affairs, and Social Security Administration. Nor is it realistic to lay off most Border Patrol agents, federal prison guards, and staff at U.S. embassies abroad. Determining layoffs by a random lottery is, to quote P.J. O'Rourke, the kind of half-baked nonsense found in a "dorm room bull session."
The budget savings from a massive reduction in the federal work force are also smaller than commonly believed. Full-time, permanent, civilian federal employees cost $300 billion in annual salaries and benefits. Removing one-quarter of these jobs would therefore save around $75 billion, or a little more than 1 percent of federal spending—and many of those savings would likely be reprogrammed into new federal contractors to plug the gaps. Musk significantly reduced costs at X by laying off employees. However, the overwhelming majority of federal spending goes not toward bureaucracy, but rather mailing benefit checks and state reimbursements for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, veterans benefits, and other aid programs. It's true that even modest budget savings are worth enacting, however, the bulk of deficit reduction must come from benefit programs.
The push for bold and flashy savings may also lead fiscal conservatives to dust off the same old proposals to close down federal departments (such as education, commerce, labor, and housing and urban development), or to privatize all transportation spending, drastically reduce welfare spending, and end all foreign aid.
If I were in Congress, I would vote in favor of several of these proposals—which is one reason I could never get elected to Congress. Think tank conservatives (myself included) have spent the past four decades pushing Congress to aggressively terminate major spending categories—without ever coming close to succeeding. Not even the mid-1990s Gingrich Congresses, early 2010s Tea Party Congresses, or Trump's unified Congress in 2017 and 2018 ever came close to passing even a scaled-down version of these terminations. Closing full departments has occasionally been popular with conservatives in the abstract, yet as soon as voters learned the specific programs that would be eliminated (the Labor Department runs the federal side of the unemployment insurance system; the Education Department runs Pell Grants, student loans, and aid for disabled students), the overwhelming public opposition forced even conservative lawmakers to abandon such ideas. We've seen this movie too many times.
So, is DOGE doomed to fail? Not if its architects take a more realistic approach to cutting government. Fundamental reform of Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid will require delicate, bipartisan negotiations that are already taking place within parts of Congress. Senate Democrats will not back down from filibustering a partisan GOP Social Security plan just because Musk and Ramaswamy recommended it in a report. Nor will Congress suddenly drop its longstanding opposition to eliminating entire federal departments.
Republicans need to stop overpromising and underdelivering on federal budget policy. Congressional Republicans unrealistically promise to balance the budget within a decade while not even attempting to pass any actual legislation slowing the growth of spending. Musk promises to zero out one-third of federal spending, and Ramaswamy pledges to fire three-quarters of federal employees. It's all bluster to compensate for ultimately doing nothing.
Focus on Efficiency, Not Ideology
The focus of the Department of Government Efficiency should be found within its own name: Government Efficiency. Instead of undertaking a doomed ideological quest to eradicate government functions that remain broadly popular with voters, DOGE should focus on combatting true government waste in order to help Washington perform its functions more cheaply and efficiently.
The Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently estimated that fraud costs the federal government between $233 billion and $521 billion annually. The Office of Management and Budget estimated that payment errors alone totaled $191 billion in 2023. During the recent pandemic, as much as $400 billion in assistance was lost to fraud and waste, mainly within the Small Business Administration and unemployment insurance system.
Government duplication also wastes resources. Washington runs dozens (and sometimes hundreds) of overlapping programs addressing economic development, drug abuse, K-12 education, and other areas. As mentioned, the Department of Agriculture should not need nearly 100,000 employees in 4,500 locations to deliver farm subsidies to 300,000 full-time farms.
Republican lawmakers have proven quite adept at highlighting these and other examples of government waste. Yet as soon as the press releases are sent, the cameras turn off, and the congressional hearings end, virtually no lawmakers are doing the complicated and thankless work of designing solutions to stop the waste. Congress has largely abandoned its oversight role because, for example, designing a new set of Medicare Fee-For-Service oversight controls to combat the $31 billion lost annually to payment errors can be monumentally complicated without providing any political payoff. No lawmakers cruise to reelection on their tireless efforts to consolidate duplicative housing grants and save $1 billion in administrative costs.
Rooting out administrative waste is quite resource-intensive. Washington runs roughly 10,000 federal programs, nearly all of which have their own payment systems, technology, accounting, oversight, and procedures. And each federal program faces its own unique administrative challenges that require unique solutions. Congress does not have the attention span nor the resources to move from diagnosing these problems to solving them. The GAO and the agency inspectors general produce countless oversight reports that mostly go unread and ignored on Capitol Hill. Within health care alone—the fastest-growing category of federal spending—Washington wastes an extraordinary sum on provider payment policies that are inconsistent, reward excessive medical procedures, and even encourage outright fraud.
This is where DOGE can make a difference. It can build on the GAO's work and recruit management consultants, accountants, I.T. experts, and others to design cheaper and more efficient methods of delivering public services. While Congress is not interested in an ideological crusade to eliminate entire functions of the government, it may provide bipartisan support for a detailed set of blueprints to rein in overpayments, serve program recipients more efficiently, and save taxpayers money.
Cutting true waste may also lay the groundwork for bolder budget savings later. By publicly picking the low-hanging fruit of government waste, lawmakers build more public credibility to reform more sensitive and popular programs. The "broken windows theory" famously claims that police crackdowns on vandalism, public drunkenness, and other smaller but visible public nuisances build a culture of law and order that ultimately dissuades more serious crimes.
Similarly, a Washington war on waste shows a respect for taxpayer dollars and fiscal responsibility that can build momentum for bolder fiscal reforms. Put more succinctly, lawmakers must have an answer for voters who ask why they should be singled out for painful tax hikes or benefit cuts while growing government waste consumes those savings with little oversight.
DOGE can potentially save taxpayers hundreds of billions of dollars by reducing government waste and improving program efficiency. This hard work will require deep expertise in public administration across multiple subfields. More importantly, it will require DOGE's leaders to set aside their egos, ditch the gimmicks, and not waste time recycling the same old dead-on-arrival proposals to shutter cabinet departments and terminate most government jobs.
At some point, Congress and the White House may finally be ready for a bipartisan "grand deal" to reform entitlements, address taxes, and scale back lower-priority federal functions. But a partisan report vaguely overseen by a duo of GOP billionaires will not provide the spark that finally convinces skeptical lawmakers of both major parties to take the most dangerous political vote of their lives. Instead, a war on waste is a war that DOGE can actually win.
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End the US occupation by bureaucrats. Massive cuts to the federal employee rolls.
This feels like a setup.
How many times has reason criticized someone for reforms not going fat enough?
Libertarians for moar government bureaucracy.
Wanting fewer govt cuts is like voting for a progressive that has a Libertarian platform website.
Just cut to the chase, it's just gay.
Does sarc know?
Very rarely.
*Eric Cartman Voice*
REASON: ‘no, no, noooo don’t cut my govern-meeeeent! NoooOOooOoOo!’
Steaming TDS piles of shit.
Succeed by scaling back and listening to the bureaucrats you're trying to get rid of?
Cops Can Succeed by Scaling Back crime reporting and putting the criminals in charge.
Soldiers can succeed by retreating and putting the enemy in charge.
Rand Paul can cut spending by spending more and putting the spendy Dems and GOP in charge.
Last year, congressional Republicans failed to specify enough reforms to meet their $130 billion in targeted discretionary spending cuts, and Trump’s last GOP Congress failed to pass any spending cuts whatsoever.
Don’t worry. Lucy will let Charlie kick the ball this time.
Too funny. DOGE is a joke by Trump. A way to get rid of two huge egos hogging HIS limelight. If it gets rid of a whole bunch of purported policy wonks as well , then so much the better
Are you really retarded, or do you just play a retard here?
Both. He is his secret identity.
Last time Congress passed a full budget was 1996.
For some reason I don’t have much confidence in them doing it now. If they can, great, especially if they can cut spending.
But I don’t think it will happen.
Roughly 75 percent of all federal spending goes to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense, veterans, and interest
And that's all off limits. Doesn't leave much to cut.
You didn’t think trump was going to win either.
"Roughly 75 percent of all federal spending goes to Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, defense, veterans, and interest, and the final quarter includes priorities such as infrastructure, justice, border security, health research, national parks, unemployment benefits, disaster aid, and disability benefits."
Social Security: 1.4 trillion, 21 % of federal budget.
Medicare: 848 billion, 14%
Military: 820 billion, 13.3%
Medicaid: 860 billion, 13.5%
Veterans Benefits: 302 billion, 5%
So that accounts for 66%, or 2/3 of the federal budget. Sounds a bit more defined than "entitlements and all the rest of it" as if it is just so bit and complicated, you may as well not even try.
You forgot interest, which just surpassed defense. So you’ve got to add another 13.3% at least, which takes your running total to a minimum of 80.1%. Wonder why they said 75%. Sounds better than 4/5?
Four fifths?
Sounds like an afternoon at sarc’s place.
Afternoon? I thought that was under an hour.
Yeah the beginning of breakfast.
Best of luck to DOGE. The cynic in me says nothing will change, but a small glimmer of hope lies in that sea of gray.
Doge would be more successful if they just scaled back their ambitions.
Loser talk.
Reason 2024: "Woah, hold back on all that cost cutting and deregulation guys. We don't want to get ahead of ourselves"
If pre-2000 Reason could see Reason today it would punch it in the mouth.
"All it can do is research government waste and send a report of policy recommendations to the White House and Congress."
There is one more small thing they can do.
Each and every day they can keep up the web site that will put all the waste and corruption directly in the face of the American taxpayers.
Each and every day.
When a bureaucrat says something is necessary, every voter can go look up reality.
Every congressman can go see what it is going to look like when he votes to keep any given boondoggle.
When the congress says we need an increase in the debt limit, DOGE will be screaming a great big HELL NO WE DON'T into the internet.
So let's review:
Two people who were not elected to anything, want to tell bureaucrats who were also not elected, how to spend public money. Do I have that right?
Maybe it should be some type of elected branch of government that directs government spending.
That’s just dumb.
They aren’t directing spending, they are directing cutting.
directing cutting == directives to spend less == directing spending
So what? The people who developed Obamacare weren't elected to anything. It was later voted on by people who were and that's when it because law, and this will work exactly the same. This is just Jeffey's instinct to claim everything from the right is illegitimate.
The people who developed Obamacare weren’t elected to anything. It was later voted on by people who were and that’s when it because law, and this will work exactly the same.
No it won't. Vivek and Elon both contemplate that these spending decisions will be made by executive order. And I dare you to call me a liar on this point.
This is just you pushing a bullshit narrative and projecting onto me the voices in your head. I am beginning to think that you are mentally ill.
Rather, it will function as a private advisory group with no formal investigative or administrative powers within the federal government. All it can do is research government waste and send a report of policy recommendations to the White House and Congress.
Maybe next time read the article.
Maybe you should be more well informed.
Vivek and Elon:
So Vivek and Elon (again, not elected to anything) want Trump to use his 'pen and phone' to direct spending in accordance with their wishes, and without input from Congress. And I'm sure you're totally on board with that while at the same time railing against 'unelected bureaucrats' doing the same.
I’m not unhappy this is happening to you.
Seething so hard now. Can’t wait until they start mass deportations of your precious illegals.
Yeah it figures. Marshal slinks away when he is called out for HIS lies. He feels entitled to call everyone else a liar, but he never holds himself up to his own standard.
Step1: Vivek and Elon both change their names to "Bob."
Step 2: Make sure any autistic-libertarian-type employees have possession of their staplers.
Step 3: Wait for a Friday...
"We find it's always better to fire people on a Friday. Studies have statistically shown that there's less chance of an incident if you do it at the end of the week."
You don't need to fire them, just fix the glitch.
any major savings or agency reorganizations will require an act of Congress with bipartisan support to overcome a potential Democratic filibuster.
This might be true if they planned specific cuts as part of independent legislation, but I don't believe it's true if the plans are implemented as part of the budget. If you recall Obamacare passed with fewer than 60 votes due to a House official corruptly ruling it was a budget and thus did not require a filibuster proof majority (which it did not meet).
So the best way to pass the cuts is to layer them into the existing budget plans and pass that requiring only 50 votes. The typical bureaucratic reaction to this is for the department heads to cut the things the public wants most, then wait for the public reaction to get the funds reinstated. But the Executive response to this is to fire every department head who does this and give his replacement ten days to rework the plan. That's why this tactic generally only works when the cuts are from congress but the Presidency disagrees.
What budget? Congress hasn’t passed a budget in almost thirty years.
If what you say had the meaning you imply no government employees would be getting paid. Since we know that's bullshit we can recognize this as you trying to find an obstacles to throw in the way. Luckily no one else will give a shit about this one either.
This is yet another example of projecting the words in your head onto other people.
There are actually two processes in Congress: the budgeting process, and the appropriations process. Sarc is right, there hasn’t been a formal budget passed in Congress for years now. The reason why government employees nonetheless get paid is because the appropriations process proceeds anyway, without a budget, to allocate the money. That is one reason why the national debt is so high.
You used the term “budget” in your original post, which is technically incorrect, you should have used the word ‘appropriations’. But instead of correcting your own error, you project bad faith onto Sarc, because he couldn’t read the thoughts in your head and ‘know’ (maybe) that you REALLY meant ‘appropriations’ instead of ‘budget’.
Instead of doing a little bit of self-reflection, you just accuse everyone around you of bad faith for not adhering to the thoughts in your head. That is your standard MO and it is tiring.
>>but without any expertise in the federal budget, it’s likely to be all bark and no bite.
lol watchout or the doge twins will purchase the Manhattan Institute next
Is Reason trying out new writers? I’ve noticed a number of unfamiliar names lately.
And most/all notably less or even patently unlibertarian than even the regular crew of closet progressives.
The headline of this article is an oxymoron. Regardless of the goal, there CANNOT be such a thing as succeeding by abandoning the goal.
"Don't you fools remember? Nobody survived 2019! Nobody would survive if the federal budget went back to then!"
DOGE can succeed if it sets moderate goals and achieves these goals. If it does this, it will show that it is possible to cut government spending and in doing so act as a spring-board to greater cuts.
The Libertarian Case For Not Being Too Ambitious With Spending Cuts.
Riedl, fuck your ambitions. Fuck your moderation of your ambitions. Fuck your calls for the moderation of others’, your betters’, ambitions. Fuck your pet causes. Fuck you, cut spending.
Jacobin and Reason walk into a bar...
there was a term in the olden days, The Horseshoe Theory?
Let me explain the Republican playbook:
1. Grow government
2. Pretend we want to cut government
DOGE is part of #2.
DOGE is all about exposing and broadcasting waste, not playing footsy with the deep state. Sure they will need to work with any group which is attempting to do similar work, but if these other groups actually worked then DOGE would never have been created.
The problem with the other groups and efforts to reign in out of control government is that they are largely ignored by government. The only way to break past this barrier is to bludgeon the worst examples in public and embarrass them until they correct it.
This is basically an extension of the bully pulpit with a very specific goal. Trump will be coming into office as a lame duck president, so hopefully he will go scorched earth against government agencies that should be drastically reduced in size or eliminated.
We are way past the point of playing nice with departments and agencies that were weaponized. Even though I'm not a fan of nor have ever voted for Trump, I heartened that the anointed puppet queen wanabe was soundly rejected.
The voters have voted for the change candidate time and time again. It should be no secret by now what the electorate wants. Trump has the chance to deliver change, but it will take Javier Milei level of actions and it will not be easy. The country needs a massive reset and return to smaller government, less powers in Washington DC and a return to states rights.
I'm not MAGA, but they do have a point. We have enough problems within the country, so why are we spending money we don't have outside of the country?
Why are we constantly engaged in a military conflict, but we never declare war? The National Guards of the various states should NEVER be deployed to a foreign combat zone unless there is a formal declaration of war. Until then the commander in chief would be the Governor of the state.
No, DOGE needs to expose and broadcast through every means imaginable the worst abuses. Hopefully exposing the worst will inspire less egregious abusers to correct and cleanup their acts.
This is a libertarian website.
It should be pushing the reduction of government size to the fullest!
Steaming piles of TDS addled shit REASON writers.
UM MAGA ‘16 ‘20 ‘24
Fuck the Big Deep Swamp - but that monster down to size!
"DOGE Can Succeed by Scaling Back Its Ambitions. The new advisory group promises bold savings and massive spending cuts, but without any expertise in the federal budget, it’s likely to be all bark and no bite."
I'm sure Trump and Musk can find competent accountants to rid the federal government of waste and help reduce the runaway spending that's been going on for decades by both parties.
Doge would be more successful if they just scaled back their ambitions.
Your football team would be more successful if they aimed for more wins than losses, and don't try for a Superbowl ring.
Derp.
DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP DERP.
Didn't Brian's Mommy educate him to "Aim for the Sun to reach the Moon"
“A man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for?”
Brian, Brian, how low to attack someone for MAGNAMINITY 🙂
Somebody writes an article with some realistic ideas for reducing debt and deficits. It gets attacked by anarchists/tiny-government purists who know that their ideas will never get implemented. Wash rinse and repeat.
The feds are still using DOS in some departments-moderate and efficient!