Federal Government Has 'Grown Too Big, Promised Too Much, Subsidized Too Many,' Warns Former GAO Boss
This week's House Budget Committee hearing showed bipartisan agreement about the seriousness of America's fiscal problems.

The United States is likely to face a debt crisis within the next five years unless Congress undertakes serious fiscal reforms, says a former comptroller general who is urging lawmakers to treat the budget and deficit with the seriousness it deserves.
"The federal government has grown too big, promised too much, subsidized too many, undercut states' rights, and lost control of the budget," David Walker, who led the Government Accountability Office from 1998 until 2008, told members of the House Budget Committee on Wednesday.
Unless Congress puts the country on a different fiscal course, Walker believes there is a 70 percent chance of a serious debt crisis before the end of the decade. That crisis would have "serious adverse economic security, national security, diplomatic, and domestic tranquility consequences," he warned, adding that the middle class would "be affected the most on a relative basis" if standards of living are suddenly hit with a debt-induced shockwave.
This week's hearing was intended to highlight bipartisan agreement on the seriousness of the federal government's fiscal problems, said Rep. Jodey Arrington (R–Texas), the committee's chairman.
"We've got major fiscal problems and a completely unsustainable fiscal trajectory. I haven't heard anyone, Democrat or Republican, witness or member, that [sic] doesn't accept that fact," he said. "We won't know when the dominoes fall on us in a sovereign debt crisis, it's going to be difficult to put the pieces back together and maintain our global leadership."
Those remarks echo warnings issued in recent years by governmental entities like the GAO and the Congressional Budget Office, as well as outside groups like the Penn Wharton Budget Model. Since 2015 the gross national debt has doubled, from $18 trillion to over $36 trillion. Debt held by the public, which most economists consider the more significant measure, sits at more than $28 trillion, or 99 percent of GDP. Deficits of nearly $2 trillion are expected for the foreseeable future.
Douglas Elmendorf, the economist and dean of the school of government at Harvard University, who was invited to speak at the hearing by Democrats, also stressed the need for immediate action.
"Although we are not in a crisis now, delaying action has significant costs," Elmendorf said. "The accumulation of debt crowds out capital investment, which holds down wages and pushes up interest rates relative to what would happen otherwise. In addition, the accumulation of debt limits the government's ability to borrow when truly needed to respond to problems in the future."
While there is little disagreement about the seriousness of America's fiscal problems, the committee hearing also inadvertently highlighted the immense difficulty of solving them.
During his testimony, Walker proposed what he called a "fiscal responsibility amendment" to the U.S. Constitution, which would bind Congress' ability to borrow recklessly. This could take several different forms. Germany, for example, has a so-called "debt brake" rule—which it hasn't followed in recent years—that says the government's annual budget deficit cannot exceed 0.35 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). By contrast, the U.S. federal government ran a deficit of $1.8 trillion last year, which is about 6 percent of America's current GDP of about $29.3 trillion.
Another example is on the books in Colorado, where the growth of government spending is limited by a formula that takes into account population growth and inflation.
Those are good models to follow, but imposing those restrictions via a constitutional amendment seems like a nearly impossible lift. Amendments must be passed by a two-thirds vote in both chambers of Congress and subsequently ratified by three-quarters of the states, and no amendment has successfully navigated the process since 1992.
Of course, lawmakers don't need a constitutional constraint to prevent them from borrowing too much. They could simply pass a budget that doesn't depend on trillions of dollars in annual borrowing.
Yes, yes, it's okay to laugh. But that is the thing that must happen. New constitutional amendments or other mechanisms like debt commissions—a solution favored by Cato Institute budget expert Romina Boccia, who also testified at this week's hearing—are fine ideas worth pursuing. Embedded in both those ideas, however, is the admission that our elected leaders are somehow unable to do their most fundamental jobs without artificial constraints.
And that may very well be true: Available evidence certainly points to that conclusion. But the biggest budgetary constraint of all is the one Walker (and plenty of others) believe is looming just over the horizon. Congress cannot ignore it any longer.
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Federal Government Has 'Grown Too Big, Promised Too Much, Subsidized Too Many,'
Like everyone who voted for trump doesn’t know this.
Myes, myes, because Trump's first term (pre-pandemic) was notable for fiscal restraint
O.o
More than the current administration.
That's not saying much.
Budget deficits are lower under Biden than when Trump left office.
It's almost like there was some sort of emergency spending (which was necessary primarily because of Leftists throwing tantrums and fear-mongering), which Democrats then used as justification for permanently increased spending.
It was more Trump propping up crony businesses and the stock market.
Hell, no! Because the voters/supporters of the govt. suffer from a mass psychosis, "The Most Dangerous Superstition" (Larken Rose).
"Trade wars are easy to win" quickly morphed into "oh crap, now we have the subsidize the shit out of farmers before the bottom falls out of our agricultural sector". Just an example off the top of my head.
Are you saying Kamala would have tried to reduce government?
Sometimes pointing out the bad doesn't mean the opposition is good.
She wouldn't be starting trade wars or putting farmers in the Dole. The collapse of the Continuing Resolution started when Republicans demanded $10 billion in welfare for farmers. Democrats agreed to that only if they got some goodies for their own voters. It probably isn't possible to pass a CR without both because Republicans would not control the WH and Congress without the farmers. Between deportations and trade wars, farmers are about to get more screwed than at any time since the early 1930s -- by the party they overwhelmingly voted for.
Or an example pulled from your ass.
Triggered by facts?
Morbid obesity, unkept promises, subsidizing "kickback cronies", and treason (Constitution oath betrayal), are only symptoms of the root of the problem: a moral exemption to rule by deadly threat, fraud. It is illogical to live like this. It is not reason, just fear that gets people to vote to be enslaved and call it freedom, bravery. A citizen is neither free nor brave when letting rights be denied. There is no justification, no excuse that trumps rights.
The politicians should show adult restraint, but the truth is that it's the people insisting the politicians come up with ways for them to have "free" stuff, and that's bipartisan. You can blame the parent for giving their child everything they ask for even if it's bad for them or causes them to be spoiled and irrational, but this isn't children insisting they get everything they want for free, these are adults voting into office people who agree to do it. Possibly the Trump election indicates people are starting to realize what a mess they've made by only electing the guy who promises them other peoples stuff, but truth be told I was screaming foul at every budget Trump passed.
The fact that the CR collapsed because Republicans felt the need to reward farmers for voting Republican shows shows that they don't realize the nature of the mess.
No one was asking for "free stuff" until politicians began to offer it. Of course there are people who will jump on freebies, but the offer came first. The Progressive Movement used the need of people to grow government because they have nothing but contempt for them and, now, both the "liberals" and Conservatives use the same methodology to gain control. Conservatives offer a moral utopia and Democrats offer money and special protections from the moral utopians. It's a downward spiral that can only be arrested with a return to individual liberty. Freedom isn't only about what you can do, it's also about what you must do.
Neither party has shown restraint in growing the debt, whether it be by passing spending increases or tax cuts. Both sides operate on the “the debt is the next guy’s worry” principle.
Actually Bill Clinton had four years of balanced budgets. What killed that were Bush's tax cuts and wars.
Much of that downturn was due to bursting of the dot-com bubble. The Bush tax cuts were so damaging that Obama reinstated most of them when he signed the Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 into law.
charlie: Which year did the debt actually not increase? I can't find it. That means that Clinton's "balanced budget" was an illusion - a projection that although the budget was not yet balanced, if _nothing_ changed, the budget would be balanced in a few years. That is, if there were no increases in spending and the long economic boom that followed the collapse of the Soviet Empire and the deep military budget cuts that followed, revenue would eventually catch up with spending - but it never did, and I can see no reasonable expectation that it would.
The Democrats in Congress were itching to spend more, and too many RINO's agreed with them. The economic cycle was overdue for a downturn, which was already beginning in Clinton's last year. Finally, there were the unexpected events - which should be expected because any reasonable person knows something will happen even if it's something that could not possibly be predicted. Just 19 suicidal terrorists from Saudi Arabia put a big short-term dent in the economy and frightened Congress into a massive increase in spending on security. Also, Islamists in Afghanistan and a vicious idiot dictator in Iraq demonstrated that we'd cut the military budget too far...
True to an extent. The dot.com stock bubble fueled Clinton’s surplus. The bursting of this bubble, combined with the ramping up of war spending by Bush, started the out of control deficit spending.
Every year the federal government has a deficit, all of the legislative branch lose that year as counting towards pension or seniority, and all campaign funds are confiscated and applied to that deficit.
End of deficits.
Most Senators are rich, they don't care about their salary, and they can get outsiders to fund campaigns on their behalf.
Most Congressmembers somehow make several times their salary each year, and would not miss their salaries much as long as they have all that other income. If only there was a way to crack down on for insider trading and taking bribes under cover of the campaign finance laws each year there is a deficit.
“Oh, they’ll just print more money.”
Democrats.
"Oh, they'll just print more money."
Also, Republicans. Also, MAGA Republicans.
The only real difference is what they're subsidizing. In principle, it's the same problem.
Hard to balance the budget when the Marxist opposition and media that they own crucify anyone who tries.
If Milei can win in the birth country of Che, anything is possible. ( he is ending welfare payments if these leftist fucks block roads, airports and infrastructure)
If a Nigerian woman, fond of Hayek, can win in Britain, anything is possible.
Milei gave Argentina 200 percent inflation. Trump might do that for the US if he keeps his campaign promises which will cost about nine trillion dollars.
I agree in the past both parties are horrible. Some republicans' have talked about a balanced budget. Can you point to one dem? You know a 2% budget increase is killing grandma. Imagine a spending freeze.
I don't remember a party doing what Biden is doing now- handing out Billions before he leaves. We already have a 600 b+ deficit for 2025.
And almost all of it is to foreign entities.
And both parties will probably continue to be horrible overall. But the only people who even want to do something about it are Republicans.
And of course, the 2025 deficit is Trump's fault.
Bill Clinton had four years of balanced budgets.
We got 99 problems, and Congress won't fix 1.
Ha!
I thought it was, "Congress has 99 problems and 150 bitches is one of them."
I got 99 problems, and Congress is to blame for all of them?
Congress is 99 problems, "violence is bad, but..." is coming for them.
It's a good thing Reason is ignoring the yucky Republicans trying to cut like with DOGE.
Department of Government Efficiency
@DOGE
DOGE is undergoing a serious analysis of wasteful and burdensome regulations, and is looking for public feedback!
Which are the really bad ones? Please DM us the CFR provision, the relevant text from the regulation, and the adverse consequences of said regulation.
Vivek Ramaswamy
@VivekGRamaswamy
The Supreme Court has held that any regulation implicating a “major” economic or policy question must be passed by Congress, not a 3-letter agency. It’s helpful for us to hear directly from YOU about which regulations are impacting YOUR lives - so we can legally eliminate them.
Why would reason avoid writing positive articles on those seeking cuts?
Even with Gaetz we have more articles about the lefts sex trafficking claims other than his desire to cut spending. Even when he held up the speaker noms due to not following budgetary order Reason attacked him.
Strange stance from a publication claiming they want cuts.
...they've written several positive (or, at least hopeful albeit skeptical) articles about DOGE.
Many of your criticisms seem to be sourced directly from your ass.
"Even with Gaetz we have more articles about the lefts sex trafficking claims other than his desire to cut spending."
Because who gives a shit what a minor-fucking drug-addicted sex trafficking clown thinks?
It is quite possible for people who do bad things (which is far from proven in his case) to nevertheless be worth listening to on other matters. I don't care if an official has coke and whores parties every night if he actually moves things in a good direction.
"Many of your criticisms seem to be sourced directly from your ass."
Which is where you should stuff your TDS so your head has some company.
They have as many DOGE won't be successful articles as applauding it dummy.
Act Blue doesn't send their best lol.
Strange strange criticism coming from someone who seems to read everything Reason posts up.
The strange response from an obvious leftist that isn't libertarian.
Reason is a DNC fansite masquerading as a Libertarian place.
They rabidly criticize Republicans and always take the worst view of their policies, while giving the benefit of the doubt to Marxists (D’s) while taking their word for anything, despite our lying eyes.
I only attend for the Commentariates takes on the articles.
There are no Marxists among the Democrats in Congress. But MAGA can't do anything but lie.
I'm curious to see if DOGE even comes within a thousand miles of actually cutting something, how quickly Suderman will have an article demanding to know what they're going to replace it with.
We know if they manage to cut FAFSA - we will never hear the end of it.
And just when they got it working!
I predict DOGE will recommend to cut a lot. Recommend is the key word because they don't have power. Congress will balk.
Remember when Trump asked for a line by line budget veto. Congress had a fainting spell.
Really the whole CR process has to go too
Heck, I remember the W.R. Grace Commission. Which did achieve a few worthy things. The rest, no. But better than not trying at all.
fuck you, cut spending
"Federal Government Has 'Grown Too Big, Promised Too Much, Subsidized Too Many,' Warns Former GAO Boss."
Big government produces big problems such as bloated bureaucracies, needless social programs, career politicians, corruption and incompetence.
That's what the former GAO boss is saying.
Ive seen this first hand in the military disability system, where I spent 2 years adjudicating cases. Once upon a time, getting a disability rating after military service was a fairly rare thing. Now it's the norm. In fact, it's EXPECTED. Since the Bush years, it's exploded way beyond all measure, and fakery and exaggerated symptoms are virtually every case.
I worked on about 2500 cases, I could count on one hand the number of actual combat injury cases I did.
Which Bush's years?
Sorry, not playing along. The left, which in this case definitely includes Reason, doesn't give a fucking shit about spending us into oblivion until they are out of power. Then they're suddenly the grownups in the room who definitely follow the Science.
Republicans are patently terrible on spending. And that they are literally the only check on Democrats, who will spend any magical amount on any magical program any day of the week. We'll, that should tell you everything you need to know.
Reason Libertarians: We're tired of our daughters being raped!
10% of Republicans: We agree and we're trying to do something about it!
40% of Republicans: We agree, but there's an election coming up and, maybe we'll get to it next year.
50% of Republicans: We want to lower the age of consent!
Democrats: *pulls up in white panel van, slides open door to reveal sex toys, handcuffs, rope and duct tape* We're here to drive your daughters to school!
Reason Libertarians: Goddamn, fuck those Republicans. That's why I'm strategically and reluctantly voting for the guy in a white van who lives down by the river.
Marxists / Democrats:
- Queer Tranny Strip shows for minors
- Queen pornography for minors
- Doesn’t know what a woman is
- Tranny surgeries for minors while stealing away children
- Tranny surgeries for prisionera AND ILLEGALS(!?!)
- Sexualizes everything, just to be ‘challenging’
There IS NO comparison.
One issue this could fix is the 'must spend before end of fiscal year'.
The government agencies see money in pots not an overall government budget. They have to spend everything in their pot because giving money back would be bad. They go with the use it or lose it.
This has been a gripe since the 1980s. While it's certainly a problem, I don't believe it's the root of the problem.
It's not "Darn, if only the Department of Bullshit and DEI could be culturally incentivized to save money!" It needs to be, "We need to wipe the department of Bullshit and DEI off the map."
I'm wondering if the Democrats are secretly pleased that Trump and the Republicans won this election. They realize that the fiscal boat needs righting but they don't want to be responsible for making the big cuts. If (and granted it's an if at this point) Trump et al end up making their promised cuts, the Democrats can blame them for the cuts, while also not having to make those cuts themselves.
Trump's platform actually calls for increases in the national debt of trillions of dollars.
Ya think?
We have the biggest, most powerful, and most expensive government in human history, and yet we call ourselves "the land of the free." Congress spends so much they've piled up about 7 years' worth of spending as debt for future taxpayers to pay interest on forever.
"The federal government has grown too big, promised too much, subsidized too many, undercut states' rights, and lost control of the budget," David Walker, who led the Government Accountability Office from 1998 until 2008, told members of the House Budget Committee on Wednesday.
So, throughout the entire post-9/11 expansion. I don't disagree. But, this stinks like Lily Phillips giving lectures on the virtues of chastity and sexual modesty.
"it's going to be difficult to put the pieces back together and maintain our global leadership."
That right there is an almost perfect explanation of our problem captured in a very short phrase. Why in the ever-living hell would a national political leader worry at this point about whether our country maintains some fictional aspiration to world leadership?! Apparently the prestige is more important to him than the harm to the people he's supposed to be representing would be if he causes an economic crash. If you have to send the most exceptional national military organization in the history of the planet around the world for decades, wasting lives and resources bombing marginally evolved societies back into the stone age to protect our vital national interests, it probably means you're not the world leader you think you are! I don't want to be the world leader any more! Please stop!
The country's credit rating. For all the US fisc is in the hole, it's been better than most, so people around the world feel good about lending money to it.
What will happen?
Ref: Venezuala...
[Na]tional So[zi]al[ism] didn't work this time either.......
One big problem here is propaganda by deed. The high level of spending is precedent for even higher levels. And who could say otherwise? Any considered amount of money is small compared to what's already being spent, why quibble over it?
It is exhausting to hear such stupid comments. The govt is too big, the govt does not do enough, the balance of payments is bad, foreign aid is too high, etc., the govt should be run like a business-- the dumbest of all.
If I go to Ralph's and buy a gallon of milk, I do not come out screaming, "Ralph's charges too much." The first analysis is whether I got a decent return for my money. If Ralph's wants to charge $770.00 for a gallon of milk, I know enough to say, "that's too much." If it charges $3.90, I say that seems OK.
Saying that govt spends too much is simply stupid without assessing what we get for our money. In California people scream that gas taxes are too high and then they scream there are pot holes. Guess what fills pot holes? Tax money! If we investigate and discover that the mayor gets a kick back of 50% of the cost of each pot hole, then we have grounds to complain.
The federal govt, however, has to take into account fiscal policy. There are times to run a deficit and times to try to run a surplus. Neither a deficit or a surplus is good or bad without knowing the macro-economic situation.
Obama screwed up royally when he did not increase the amount taken in social security deductions in 2010, but increasing the age limit on employee contributions. This principle is as old as the Bible. Joseph told Pharaoh to take and store part of the profit from the good years so that he would have grain to give out during the 7 bad years. (Yes, Joseph was a Keynesian) Of course, Obama could not do that since he had given $15 TRILLION to the corrupt banks which had crashed the economy. As a result, no one wants to make more Social Security contributions when the economy is sluggish.
The counter balance is for the Feds to then increase Soc Sec payments starting about five years out and keep increasing the payments to recipients. Private pensions are basically dead. Thus, Soc Sec has to pay more in benefits. 5% plus CPI would be a good slow increase. Then when an emergency hits, like a pandemic, the seniors are not harmed and can actually help others, reducing the amount Covid relief which the government absolutely positively has to make. The adverse impact of Obama's regressive pro wall street policies extended through the pandemic and still impact us today with all the ignorance talk about inflation and who caused it.
The problem with a democracy is that voters are ignorant tools and emotional idiots. So now we are about to make an alcohol, Pig Hegseth, head of the Department of Defense! Yes, give the drunk man guns! We are too stupid for self-government
It amazes me you can dilute yourself so horribly you cannot even SEE the difference between "Ralph's grocery store" and Gun-FORCED government.
Maybe you also can dilute yourself into believing Ralph has a right to be able to FORCE you by Gun-Threats to buy that $770 gallon of milk????
UR a fool.
"...Guess what fills pot holes? Tax money!..."
You have an active fantasy life. In CA, taxes go to Pub Sec union benefits.
Economic ignorance prevents the ruled from freeing themselves from the fiat dollar despotism, i.e., currency/price inflation. The solution is free banking. No country wants freedom of any sort. They are addicted to the tyranny. Country = rulers/ruled. The public suffer but are unable to conceive of decentralized governance. They fear independence, self-reliance. This would open up the economy for innovation, prosperity, general social progress toward a non-violent world. Our species might even survive. But, it's unthinkable due to "The Most Dangerous Superstition" by Larken Rose.
"They are addicted to the tyranny."
Pretty sure you just made the master-point in immigration control.
The USA was founded on a government that ensures Individual Liberty and Justice for all. Not that anyone can recognize it as such anymore especially with so many running around yelling 'democracy' and [Na]tional So[zi]al[ism]. The documented very-definition of what the USA is will prove to be the most important part of correcting this nation from its 'democratic' Nazi-Revolution.
Here's a starting point: Congress needs to pass an actual budget by regular order as per the Congressional Budget Act of 1974. The last budget passed by regular order was for fiscal year 1997. In the 50 years since the Act was passed only four times has Congress passed a budget by regular order. Adopting zero-based budgeting would be a cherry on top.
We're two months into FY2025 (with a $600B deficit) no budget has been passed and we'll be looking at what has become the annual pre-Christmas threat of a government shutdown. Congress will "save the day" at the last minute by passing 3,000 page bucket of garbage omnibus spending bill that none of them will have read assuring a nearly $2T annual deficit, again.
Face it, there is no fiscal sanity anywhere within the federal government.
It's impossible to refute anything you said. Yet most people will claim it's not happening, including 100% of D's, 99% of journalists, and an ever-increasing percentage of R's and Libertarians. We are good and truly fucked.
^ This. It’s mostly D’s who don’t want to de-fund their inner-city SNAP & EBT bennys bc that’s their voter base.
Gotta keep the black Females paid off or they will start their 2020 Summer of Love programs up again (‘we get what we want, or we burn the system down’). That’s literally their plan, from their own lips (and historically proven.)
Simple: Let's tax our healthcare CEO's- at this point they're probably scared enough to go along with confiscatory tax rates.
Or you could just file them under the 'slave' category.
Still the party of slavery.
How about, for starters, we quit giving away 10’s of $billions to countries like Ukraine and Israel.