Promises To Cut $2 Trillion Clash with Trump's Expensive Plans
Ambitious budget cuts will meet political reality in Trump’s second administration.

"At least $2 trillion" was Elon Musk's casual preelection response when asked how much a new Donald Trump administration could cut from the federal government. As a goal for the new administration, $2 trillion in cuts is both perfectly reasonable and politically impossible. The federal government, now burning $6.8 trillion annually, ran on $4.4 trillion just five years ago—hardly a time of fiscal restraint. But any ambition to curb government spending will have to contend with a political reality that isn't exactly primed for austerity—especially under a second Trump administration, where a potent combination of executive power, cronyism, and party infighting looks likely to dominate.
Musk, along with one-time presidential aspirant Vivek Ramaswamy, has been tapped to head a new Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), which will have a mandate to cut, but unclear status and authority.
Meanwhile, Trump returns to the White House with an agenda fueled by old grievances and new entitlement. Throughout his first term, Trump demonstrated an appetite for executive authority, bypassing Congress to impose tariffs, constrain immigration, declare emergencies, and unilaterally reshape policy. Those tendencies are likely to take the lead in a second Trump administration, as he retakes the Oval Office with a fresh list of targets he perceives as enemies within the federal establishment.
While a Muskian vision of downsizing may align, on the surface, with Trump's antibureaucratic rhetoric, Trump's second term seems more likely to favor selective budget adjustments aimed at punishing certain agencies rather than achieving broad fiscal discipline.
With a narrow Republican majority in the House, the prospects for reining in Trump's more expensive ambitions are complicated. A slim majority means House Republicans will be juggling competing priorities within their own party, including demands from the tiny cadre of remaining fiscal hawks and Trump-aligned members with an appetite for selective spending. Any genuine attempt at oversight or restraint is likely to be hampered by these internal divisions and the tendency to avoid cuts in areas that directly benefit Republican constituencies, such as defense. Rather than delivering meaningful cuts, a narrowly Republican House is more likely to rubber-stamp Trump's ever-changing priorities, without regard for the price tag.
To make a real dent in spending Musk would have to start with one of the clearest targets: federal grants to states. These grants, which give states incentives to follow federal policy on everything from education to transportation, amounted to $721 billion in 2019 and have surged since the COVID-19 era. Cutting back on federal support to states could not only ease budget pressures but would also reinforce federalism by allowing states more freedom to allocate resources without chasing federal dollars.
But Trump's track record doesn't suggest he's keen to unwind these programs wholesale. While he may be willing to take on certain grants as symbolic gestures, a complete rethinking of the federal-state relationship would likely clash with his penchant for rewarding allies and punishing enemies. Musk's approach would need to avoid this selective targeting and advocate for a broader rollback of federal support to states, shifting responsibility back to local governments without using it as a political weapon.
Next on the chopping block could be federal subsidies for private businesses. From agriculture subsidies to tax incentives for manufacturers, corporate welfare has become a fixture of U.S. budget policy, allowing certain companies to benefit based on political clout rather than market success. Ideally, Musk's proposed cuts would end business subsidies, forcing them to compete based on merit rather than handouts. Musk's Tesla is a beneficiary of such largesse, of course, including loans from the Department of Energy, tax credits for electric vehicles under the Inflation Reduction Act, and emissions credits. And his SpaceX benefits from government contracts with NASA, though these almost certainly save the space agency money (and heartache) compared to other possible vendors.
Trump, alas, seems more interested in using subsidies as leverage, favoring companies or industries that align with his political goals or constituencies. A genuine push to eliminate corporate welfare would require a commitment to impartiality, something that doesn't align neatly with Trump's "America First" brand of economic interventionism. To make meaningful cuts stick, the administration would need to adopt a consistent policy of reducing corporate welfare regardless of industry or political affiliation—a commitment that may not sit well with Trump's instinct for rewarding loyalty.
One of the largest sources of government spending—and a tempting target for reform—is health care. Medicare, Medicaid, and federal support for private insurance cost hundreds of billions every year. The current system is littered with subsidies, tax incentives, and regulatory requirements that drive up costs while obscuring price transparency, leaving patients and providers without clear signals for cost control. If Musk is serious about cutbacks, addressing this spending would be crucial.
But Trump's first-term attempts at reining in health care costs fell short. His stance on health care has largely involved tweaking around the edges—repealing mandates, promoting price transparency—without fundamentally rethinking the government's role in subsidizing the industry. For Musk's plan to work, any cuts to health spending would need to be accompanied by structural reforms to enable a more market-driven system, something Trump has so far shown little interest in pursuing.
For Musk's vision to become reality, Trump would need to set aside his preference for expansive executive authority and targeted, cronyist spending. According to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, Trump's proposed policies would add an estimated $7.7 trillion to the debt over the next decade. While some of Trump's ideas, like extending tax cuts, may spur economic growth, others, like tax credits for homebuyers or certain trade tariffs, represent the very type of special-interest giveaways that have to go.
All of this presumes that the Department of Government Efficiency attains a more solid form than a press release on Truth Social—and that the famously volatile Musk even makes it to Inauguration Day in Trump's good graces.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Trump’s $2 Trillion?."
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his SpaceX benefits from government contracts with NASA
A government purchase of goods or services from a private business is not a "subsidy".
Depends on the pricing of the contract, I think.
When someone like Musk undercuts existing pricing as much as Musk has while maintaining or improving reliability and capability, it doesn't really matter how bloated his pricing is.
THIS is your attitude, along with every fucking statist ever.
"I would rather pay a dollar a pound for powder for the United States in a state of war if there was no profit in it than pay the DuPont Company 50 cents a pound if they had 10 cents profit in it.: -- Robert Brookings, Woodrow Wilson's WW I price controller
Yup. Not a penny for the blasphemer even if his product is a dozen times more reliable and a hundred times cheaper.
Boeing's SLS system has cost the government $26.4 billion so far, is four years late and each flight will cost NASA $2 billion dollars.
Space X's Falcon 9 does the same thing, its development was paid for privately and it's listed price is $67 million per orbital launch.
Space X's Starship is also being developed on Space X's own dime for an estimated $5 billion. It will carry 20 times the SLS payload for $2 million a launch.
But somehow Diet Shrike wants you to think that Space X is ripping off the government because rocketmanbad.
The most recent per-flight estimate I saw was $4.1B, entirely expendable. A joke that was old ten years ago. Hell, the Space Shuttle per-launch cost was more than the fully expendable Saturn rockets, so I have read.
That quote on buying gunpowder is one of my favorites for summing up the statist hatred of private businesses.
Speaking from inside NASA manned space flight - SLS was a jobs program. It never should have used Shuttle legacy tech. Hey, it's supposed to find customers to help the cost \sarc
I do like how it's Musk, but they forget that A) there is another on the board of DOGE, and B) they are recommendations.
Especially when his prices are so much cheaper.
That SLS has been a joke since the start. Current cost is projected at $4.1B per expendable launch, and only capable of one launch a year. Starship can launch more and both stages are recovered for another launch, with per-launch costs project around $20M.
Yet statists say Musk is getting subsidies.
KMW, your entire magazine's credibility on Trump has been shot. Sullum constantly lies and exaggerates, he's got TDS worse than anybody else. Trump's an economic ignoramus, but he's still better than Biden/Harris, and if you want anyone to believe a single thing you say about Trump, well, you're about 8 years too late to re-establish your credibility.
If the government does not need the services it is a subsidy. Using SpaceX to launch satellites, space telescopes or robotic spacecraft is reasonable. Most of the work on manned flights to the Moon or Mars is unnecessary. So, any government funds for these manned missions is subsidy. Same is true for defense spending and other government spending.
This could be a half decent article without the TDS and hatred of Republicans. This highlights how Reason has become a joke under KMW. All of her hatred is reserved for the people talking about doing the right things. I'm skeptical about their chances for success as well because the other side is entrenched and there are enough traitors on the right to scuttle positive changes.
It is very telling when someone exclusively attacks the people who share their claimed goals.
How is it TDS and hatred to point out that he spent record amounts of money during his last term, that his stated agenda is really expensive, and that those things are at odds with his plans to cut the budget?
Like shrike you are incapable of understanding how government works.
As MT pointed out, you claim yo want spending cut but primarily attack those who want to cut spending. It is consistent. It shows you don't have principles. Instead of attacking those who continue to spend, you attack those who want to cut spending but fail against the entrenched of those who want to spend. You've even spent the last few months demanding those who want to spend be protected from firings and such.
You're an unprincipled joke.
Disclaimer: this comment was made before 7am. You have trouble with understanding time zones so helping you out.
Wow dude. Great argument against things nobody ever said. You must have practiced this on your drive to your do-nothing government contractor job. Oh wait, what am I thinking? You show up late every day.
Too much use of the word “you”.
"How is it TDS and hatred to point out that he spent record amounts of money during his last term"
Because the exceptional covid lockdown factor is being deliberately omitted, and it's the height of dishonesty to do so.
"that his stated agenda is really expensive"
It's only expensive if you lie about the cost of sending illegals back to their homes and grossly overinflate your estimates.
I don't think many will say that I'm a defender of Trump on fiscal matters. Anyone who fails to cut federal expenditures, or at least make a significant effort to do so is part of the problem. But I do agree you can't really blame 2020 on Trump. Now, if he had been reelected and not insisted that baseline spending be based on 2019 and not 2020 I would have some harsher things to say. I'm not terribly optimistic that he will achieve any real cuts this time either. But we'll see. At least this time there are more people saying the right sort of things.
It is very telling when someone exclusively attacks the people who share their claimed goals.
Perhaps the attack is based on the idea that she does not for a moment believe that they will accomplish those goals, nor even make a serious attempt to do so.
Her credibility, and that of the entire magazine, is shot. They wasted four years destroying their reputation as pragmatic libertarians by attacking the lesser of two evils and forgetting hat liberty and individualism and personal responsibility matter.
And now she expects her opinion of Trump to suddenly be perceived as fair and balanced? That's now how it works.
Reason has plenty of credibility. Just not with people who get emotional when Trump is criticized. Those people know who they are, and they can go fuck themselves.
Speaking of getting emotional when Trump is criticized ... how about masochists such as yourself who have to bring up Trump when he's not mentioned just to satisfy your TDS Jones?
My point still stands. The only people who feel that Reason has no credibility are Trump's Deranged Supporters who get livid whenever anyone dares to criticize The Donald. That's it. Literally everyone else thinks they do a great job promoting free minds and free markets. You know, things that Trump and his deranged supporters hate.
Your point never stood. I'll give that you probably don't have Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS) but you do have probably the worst case of Trump Supporter Derangement Syndrome (TSDS) out there. Every post you make is either frothy with rage against Trump supporters or a retarded and drunken attempt to troll them.
Even your vociferous support for the DNC and defense of its narratives springs from the profound anger of your TSDS.
Oh please. I'm just disgusted with the whole thing. Yes I despise Trump's Deranged Supporters. I also despised Obamabots. Biden wasn't a cult of personality so he didn't have defenders to despise.
I despise anyone who deifies politicians because I despise politicians. Doesn't matter to me who the politician is, or what party they belong to. They're just men. And shitty people by virtue of the fact that they are politicians.
This gets back to the libertarian conundrum, which is how do you get people who don't desire power into positions of power. Trump's first term was an aberration. He ran for president on a lark, and won. In that respect he was almost the answer to the libertarian conundrum. Except that he's not a libertarian, nor are his defenders.
“Biden wasn't a cult of personality”
He’d have to have more of a personality to garner a cult.
The guy who has raging TDS screaming Trump is Hitler and J6ers deser e ti be shot and jailed talks emotion. Lol.
It is very telling when someone exclusively attacks the people who share their claimed goals.
It's almost like The Right isn't the only place with conspicuous traitors and willing saboteurs in their midst.
" . . . but unclear status and authority . . . "
Maybe you need to get out more?
Status: Private group of individuals, free of direct political pressure because they aren't planning on getting re-elected.
Authority: None. But buddies with the President, and skilled at using social media to keep waste in front of the public, unlike previous giant reports that get dropped into a trash can.
Perfectly clear outside of the DC bubble.
skilled at using social media to keep waste in front of the public, unlike previous giant reports that get dropped into a trash can
The fact that pro-free speech, tech-optimist, pro-transparency (?), libertarians "can't" see, even just potentially, how transcendental this is, or could be, just demonstrates how far up DNC/pro-State/pro-Spending asses their head is stuck.
To paraphrase a famous Republican: "The budget is just a goddamned piece of paper."
The total unseriousness of Republicans when it comes to spending continues apace. They'll cut all the taxes at the same time they jack up the spending. Let the 2028 administration figure out why the country is suddenly moar multi-trillions in debt while inflation sucks the marrow out of our bones.
Milei took the 80 percent inflation that Argentina had and turned it into 200 percent plus. Trump will take two percent inflation and Make America Argentina.
A serious discussion must be made regarding Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
All three dominate the federal government budget, and if something is not done, like a buyout to the recipients, then the US will accelerate to its economic doom.
Spending is out of control and needs to be put on a spend-free diet starting next year.
the US will accelerate to its economic doom.
Correct. That is what will happen.
The total discretionary spending of the Federal Government is less than two trillion annually, and half is Defense, which Trump wants to spend more on. Trump needs to cut Medicare, Medicaid, or Social Security to get even close to two trillion. I hope he does. Every Republican will be defeated two years from now.
Because the Democrats will bring financial sanity to the budget? Or are you a proponent of acceleration?
He’s an idiot.
$2 trillion in cuts is both perfectly reasonable and politically impossible.
Shouldn't we try anyway?
The federal government, now burning $6.8 trillion annually.
$6.8T / 168M working = $40,476.20 /each
The "Union of States" government is stealing/spending $40,000/yr per each working citizen.
No; That cannot continue very long at all before a Venezuelan repeat occurs. There is no accounting game you can play to fix that. 'Guns' just don't make sh*t. The only prevention will have to be *EARNED* not STOLEN.
The very evil in Socialism is that it indoctrinates the 'criminal mentality' with excuses and makes people believe that STEALING STUFF can equal progress. Demand-side 'Guns' *still* isn't going to make Supply-side sh*t. No matter how much you steal; you can only steal what already exists. It's a zero-sum resources game destined to destroy humanity.
Nothing to cut -
* Penny costs 11 cents to make
* The government spent at least $518,000 in federal grants to study how cocaine affects the sexual behavior of Japanese quails.
* Northwestern University researchers received National Institutes of Health money to watch hamster fights
* government still holds onto them—about 770,000 unused and underused buildings nationwide, as of 2016
* The National Comedy Center in Jamestown, New York received more than $4.3 million from New York state, plus another $1.7 million in federal grants.For Holograms of dead comedians
* 30K to study secret language of butchers in Paris
* 350k to develop AI for smart toilet
* 660K to study impact of Covid on Russian women
* 400K on how to talk to ignorant people on climate change
* 100K to see if a sunfish is more aggressive when given gin or tequila
* 1.5 million to see if matting calls of country frogs to see if they are different than city frogs
* 1 million to see if selfies make you happy
One of my favorites * 200k to make monkeys transgender to study HIV in trans women.
Yes, they are small but it's a start. We won't talk just tracking the Pentagon spending.
But nothing to cut
Insignificant. The debt is Social Security, Medicare, and Defense. If you're not talking about cutting those, you're not serious about reducing the debt. Everything else combined is a few crumbs on the floor.
Defense being but 13%.
Cut $2Trillion in gov't spending of Monday; then the economy crashes on Tuesday. It's like allowing a deranged toddler play with nuclear weapons.
Did you just infer government spending is what keeps economies from crashing ... in complete contrast to the reality that every-single economy crash on the planet was due to too much government spending??