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View Full Version : Ten Ways President Trump's Agencies Spent $100B In A Use-It-O




Zippyjuan
03-11-2019, 01:19 PM
https://www.forbes.com/sites/adamandrzejewski/2019/03/11/ten-ways-president-trumps-agencies-spent-100b-in-a-use-it-or-lose-it-shopping-spree-in-sept-2018/#65ed732d2c43

But this is not unique to the current government. It happens every year.


For federal agencies, Christmas comes in September.

In the final month of the fiscal year, federal agencies scramble to spend what’s left in their annual budgets. Agencies worry that spending a smaller amount than Congress appropriated this year might mean they’ll receive less money next year.

So, rather than admit the department could run efficiently on a smaller budget, federal agencies embark on a shopping spree. This is the “use it or lose it” spending phenomenon – and it happens every year on the taxpayer dime.

Our OpenTheBooks oversight report on the fiscal year 2018 use-it-or-lose-it spending spree quantified $97 billion in contracts signed during the month of September.


In the final seven days of the year, federal agencies blew through $53 billion in contracts – that’s $1 in $10 of all contract spending on the year, in the final week.

The problem isn’t new and it isn’t going away. In fact, it’s getting worse. Our report shows a 15 percent increase in use-it-or-lose-it contracts from last year to this year. From 2015, that’s a 39 percent increase.

Here are ten ways the government spent your tax dollars in last year’s use-it-or-lose-it spending spree:

$26.8 million at Trump’s Executive Office of the President – In the final month of fiscal year 2018, President Donald Trump’s office signed 16 contracts, purchasing office furniture, passenger vehicles, cameras, newspaper subscriptions, and more. From 2015 to 2018, there was a 60-percent increase in use-it-or-lose-it spending by the office of the president.

$5 Million on Crab and Lobster – As the fiscal year wrapped up, federal agencies celebrated by splurging on luxury food items. The Department of Defense spent $2.3 million on snow crab, Alaskan king crab, and crab legs and claws, plus another $2.3 million on lobster tail. Additionally, agencies spent nearly $300,000 on steak (ribeye, top sirloin, and flank).

$491 Million to Redecorate – In the final month of fiscal year 2018, federal agencies signed nearly 10,000 contracts to purchase furniture. Notably, the Department of Defense spent $9,341 on a Wexford leather club chair.

More than $300,000 on Booze – For some agencies, the end of the fiscal year seems to be one big party. The Department of Defense and the Department of State purchased beer, wine, and whiskey. Contract recipients included Coors Brewing Company ($76,173); E&J Gallo Winery ($16,510), and more.

More Than $800 Million to Load the Gun Locker – Fifteen agencies made last-minute purchases of guns, ammunition, and other weaponry during the final month of the fiscal year. Even non-military agencies including the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Office of Personnel Management, the Small Business Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency bought more than $100,000 in guns and ammunition.

$9.8 Million on Workout Equipment and Recreation – Federal agencies must have set new fitness goals when they spent $462,791 on treadmills and dumbbells and $22,505 on CrossFit equipment. Spending tax dollars is all fun and games according to the $1.2 million agencies spent on playground equipment, $50,000 on skis and ski poles, and $12,000 on a foosball table.

$462 Million Self Promotion Machine – Federal agencies spent millions on public relations, marketing research and public opinion, communications, and advertising in the final month of fiscal year 2018. The feds already employ 5,000 public affairs officers. It wasn’t enough.

Nearly $300 Million on Transportation – Federal agencies drove up taxpayer costs, signing nearly 3,000 transportation-related contracts in the final month of fiscal year 2018. Agencies purchased passenger vehicles from Navistar Defense, Ford Motor Company, and General Motors. Additionally, the government purchased nontraditional vehicles including golf carts, motorcycles, and snowmobiles.

$7.7 Million on iPhones and iPads – Federal employees were sure to update their cell phones before the fiscal year ended, contracting with AT&T, Apple, and T-Mobile. These purchases included iPads at Veterans Affairs, cellular data at the Department of Defense, and a bulk order of iPhone 8s and blackberry replacements. The Department of State spent $107,097 on Apple’s latest iPhone X and screen protectors.

$49 Million on Miscellaneous Spending – The federal agencies’ last-minute shopping spree purchases range from batteries and books, to toys and tableware. The General Services Administration spent $53,000 on china tableware, $42,500 on inflatable games, and $34,000 on model rockets.

acptulsa
03-11-2019, 01:26 PM
Hardly different from the Times article. What's the matter, Zippy? Didn't like my thread?

http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?532302-The-More-Departments-the-More-Abuse

spudea
03-11-2019, 07:24 PM
https://www.forbes.com/sites/adamandrzejewski/2019/03/11/ten-ways-president-trumps-agencies-spent-100b-in-a-use-it-or-lose-it-shopping-spree-in-sept-2018/#65ed732d2c43

But this is not unique to the current government. It happens every year.

The Trump administration just proposed a budget that cuts $2.7 Trillion from these wasteful agencies. The excessive spending over many decades has always been a failure of the congress.

Zippyjuan
03-11-2019, 07:33 PM
The Trump administration just proposed a budget that cuts $2.7 Trillion from these wasteful agencies. The excessive spending over many decades has always been a failure of the congress.

"Cutting" a budget which would spend $45 billion more than the last one (it would be a record of $4.75 trillion vs $4.3 trillion for this year)? Spends more money- just on different things than now. How many years for those cuts? ($2.7 trillion off this year would be more than half of it- including defense and Social Security). Ten years? Either way, his proposal won't go anywhere. Congress- starting with the Dem controlled House- writes the real one.

Cuts would be over ten years- and conveniently most of them are far into the future. By then, the suggestion will be forgotten and won't cost as many votes. Talk about reducing government while doing the opposite.


The Trump administration is proud of the proposed cuts.

“This budget will have more reductions in spending than any president in history has ever proposed,” a senior administration official told reporters Monday, expressing concern about the national debt. The deficit has swelled under Republican leadership in large part because of the tax cuts enacted last year. Trump’s administration, however, has balked at the notion that the decrease in revenue from cutting corporate taxes is the root cause of the growing debt.

https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/3/11/18259789/trumps-2020-budget-proposal-cuts


If Trump’s budget were to be enacted, some of the biggest policy changes would include:

$1.5 trillion in cuts to Medicaid over 10 years, implementing work requirements as well as eliminating the Medicaid expansion under the Affordable Care Act. The budget instead adds $1.2 trillion for a “Market Based Health Care Grant” — block grant to states, instead of paying by need. It’s not clear whether that would be part of Medicaid.

An $845 billion cut to Medicare over 10 years, about a 10 percent cut, to be achieved through targeting wasteful spending and provider payments and lowering prescription drug costs.

$25 billion in cuts to Social Security over 10 years, including cuts to disability insurance.

A $220 billion cut to Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly referred to as food stamps, over 10 years, including mandatory work requirements. The program currently serves around 45 million people.

A $21 billion cut to Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, an already severely underfunded cash-assistance program for the nation’s poorest.

$207 billion in cuts to the student loan program, eliminating the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program and cutting subsidized student loans.

Increases defense spending by $34 billion next year, to a $750 billion budget baseline. That makes up a 5 percent boost to defense and military spending. To keep the defense budget within current caps, the White House uses a gimmick, putting $164 billion of this budget increase in an uncapped overseas contingency (OCO) fund.

$8.6 billion in funding for the southern border wall, separated between increased funding for the Department of Homeland Security and funding for military construction.

Overall, there is a 9 percent cut to non-defense programs, which would hit Section 8 housing vouchers, public housing programs, Head Start, the Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) nutrition program, and Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program, among others.




Then again, going into a presidential election cycle fighting for serious cuts to Medicare and Social Security — both programs Trump promised to never touch — among other programs, would be a bold and risky political position.


https://www.vox.com/policy-and-politics/2019/3/11/18260385/trump-budget-economic-growth-cbo


The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which advocates for fiscal responsibility, estimates that the Trump budget would add more than $10 trillion to the national debt. The group’s president, Maya MacGuineas, in a statement on Monday slammed the Trump administration for its “fantasy assumption” on GDP growth. “Every independent forecaster foresees growth to average closer to 2 percent over the next decade,” she said. “Assuming an extra point of growth serves no purpose but to mask the high deficits and debt likely to materialize under the president’s budget.”

The White House claims the budget will balance in 15 years. Nobody believes it.

acptulsa
03-11-2019, 07:54 PM
The more departments a government has, the more budgets are getting wasted at year's end.

The more departments, the more spending can be done while bragging is going on about spending cuts.

The more departments, the more turf wars.

It's insane.


Never was a country in the throes of more capital letters than the old U.S.A., but we still haven't sent out the S.O.S.

Zippyjuan
03-11-2019, 07:59 PM
The more departments a government has, the more budgets are getting wasted at year's end.

The more departments, the more spending can be done while bragging is going on about spending cuts.

The more departments, the more turf wars.

It's insane.

https://www.space.com/president-trump-space-force-directive.html


Trump Signs Directive to Create a Military Space Force

The Space Force just took a big step from sci-fi-sounding dream toward reality.

President Donald Trump signed Space Policy Directive-4 (SPD-4) today (Feb. 19), ordering the Pentagon to establish the Space Force as the sixth branch of the United States military, to go along with the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.

But the Space Force still has a big hoop to jump through: Congress must approve the creation of any new military branch.



Making government smaller?

acptulsa
03-11-2019, 08:02 PM
https://www.space.com/president-trump-space-force-directive.html



Making government smaller?

Yes, we know you love big, fat, wasteful, corrupt government. Stop gloating. It's unseemly.

Zippyjuan
03-11-2019, 08:06 PM
Yes, we know you love big, fat, wasteful, corrupt government. Stop gloating. It's unseemly.

Actually, I don't. I just sometimes point out how hard it is to try and get it reduced. I point out that if you are serious, the only way to do it is to go after the big ticket items- Social Security, Defense, Medicare/ Medicaid. But cutting those is political suicide. Cutting $20 billion in student loans isn't going to have much impact on a $1 trillion deficit. If you want to stay away from the Big Three, you have to cut everything else to zero. All of it. And if you leave out Defense, you still are running $750 billion short of balancing. Cut $1 trillion plus from all of this:

https://media.nationalpriorities.org/uploads/trump2019_discpie_unbranded_large.png