Thursday, October 8, 2009

Government waste: gift that keeps on taking

"Time for a War on Waste" [Brian Riedl] (via National Review Online)

"With President Obama pushing federal spending past $33,000 per household, conservative lawmakers must keep up the drumbeat on how wasteful government already is. They should do so for three reasons: 1) The amount of government waste is simply unacceptable; 2) President Reagan showed that peppering speeches with (often humorous) government-waste anecdotes reminded the American people to be skeptical of liberal promises of an efficient government solving our problems (a quite relevant lesson in the health-care debate); and 3) while entitlement reform would produce larger savings, lawmakers must build public credibility to reform Social Security and Medicare by first picking the low-hanging fruit of government waste.My new paper highlights 50 examples of government waste, with costs ranging from a few thousand dollars to more than $100 billion. Examples include:

"* $92 billion spent annually on corporate welfare (excluding TARP) versus $71 billion on homeland security

"* $25 billion annually maintaining unused or vacant federal properties

"* $123 billion on programs in which government audits cannot find evidence of success

"* $2.6 million training Chinese prostitutes to drink more responsibly on the job

"* $350,000 to sponsor NASCAR driver David Gilliland; and

"* $3.9 million rearranging desks and offices at the Securities and Exchange Commission headquarters.

Brian Riedl is Grover M. Hermann fellow in Federal Budgetary Affairs at the Heritage Foundation.

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