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Conservative Economist Scores Big After Betting Almost $350,000 DOGE Would Fail
Mediaite ^ | February 25, 2026 | Sarah Rumpf

Posted on 02/25/2026 12:27:22 PM PST by Miami Rebel

Many Americans were skeptical of Elon Musk’s grandiose claims that DOGE would take a “chainsaw” to federal spending. One “tax nerd” was so skeptical he decided to “bet his life savings” on Musk’s promises being a flop — and it paid off big time, according to a report by The Wall Street Journal.

Musk has seen his approval rating descend as he has taken a more publicly active role politically, plus ongoing criticism and litigation over his management of his social media platform X and support for far-right politics in Europe.

He jumped into his work with the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, by waving around a chainsaw on the stage at CPAC in 2025 and then presided over a group of DOGE employees with little to no government experience who fired scores of federal workers, slashed budgets, and eliminated longstanding grants and programs. However, contrary to his promise to save $1 trillion, federal government spending actually went up.

It all seems somewhat predictable in retrospect, but would you have been willing to bet your life savings last year that this would, in fact, happen?

Alan Cole, senior economist at the Tax Foundation, took that bet, telling WSJ reporter Richard Rubin how and why he dropped $342,195.63 into a prediction-market wager on the Kalshi platform.

(Note: the WSJ called this amount Cole’s “life savings” and then later defined it as “effectively everything outside of his retirement accounts and home equity.”)

Describing himself as a a “normal, conventional Wall Street Journal-reading adult” — the WSJ identified him as a “tax nerd” in their headline — Cole said that he looked at the terms of the Kalshi wager and saw an opportunity, because he did not believe anything Musk would do would significantly curtail spending on interest on the national debt or entitlements like Social Security and Medicare, especially as America’s population continued to age.

The bet on the Kalshi site was simply that federal spending would go up, as it long has, and Cole interpreted the risk as lower than a standard sports bet or other prediction-market bets that can be gamed by people with insider knowledge (e.g., how long will President Donald Trump’s State of the Union speech be, whether Lady Gaga would join Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl performance, etc.).

Cole did diversify his risk somewhat, he told the WSJ, making multiple sub-bets so he would at least break even unless spending declined by more than $50 million.

When the federal government released its official 2025 spending figures on Feb. 20, it “wasn’t even close,” wrote Rubin. “The lowest spending quarter in 2025 was $66 billion above the bet’s target level,” netting Cole “$470,300, for a profit of more than $128,000, or 37%.”

Cole still has to pay capital gains taxes on the funds he withdrew from investments and taxes on his winnings.

His wife, Natalie Lynch, told the WSJ she got on board after understanding that the bet would be based on specific objective numbers. “She read comments on the Kalshi website from people on the other side of the bet and grew confident because they didn’t seem to understand what they were buying,” wrote Rubin.

The WSJ report noted that Cole sought advice from other fiscal policy wonks, including Brookings Institution fellow Jessica Riedl, who said the outcome of the bet “should have been completely obvious to anyone who knows anything about the government, the budget and public administration.”

Despite believing Cole would win, Riedl still didn’t make her own bet, saying she was ” nervous about liquidity, administrative loopholes, legality, making sure that I got paid.”

Riedl apparently was under the impression Cole had only bet a “few thousand dollars,” but after Rubin told her Cole had made a six-figure wager, she had a quick retort.

“Next time I have lunch with him,” she said, “I know Alan will be picking up the check.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: 123oclock4oclockzot; debt; deficit; delta7; doge; elonmusk; frisacasualty; inflation; itwasadatagrab; miamitroll; multiplenicks; nevertrump; nevertrumppos; randpaulsucks; randspam; tds; tdsposter; trollrepublic
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To: Miami Rebel

“Many Americans were skeptical of Elon Musk’s grandiose claims that DOGE would take a “chainsaw” to federal spending.”

Well it certainly did not take a chainsaw to federal spending but it was helpful. In regard to the bet one would need to know the precise terms of the bet.

Deficit forecasts
2024 $1.82T actual
2025 $1.8T projected
20265 $1.9T projected


41 posted on 02/25/2026 2:49:30 PM PST by plain talk
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To: Miami Rebel

“Musk has seen his approval rating descend as he has taken a more publicly active role politically ...”

BS leftist wet dream. This reporter lies.


42 posted on 02/25/2026 3:49:02 PM PST by Theo (FReeping since 1997 ... drain the swamp.)
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To: plain talk

Several related bets at Kalshi, not sure which one(s) Mr. Cole wagered on. Here is one of the “spending reduction” wagers:

https://kalshi.com/markets/kxgovtcuts/government-budget-cuts?utm_source=kalshiweb_eventpage


43 posted on 02/25/2026 4:06:51 PM PST by Drago
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To: spintreebob

We need you to have a conversation with Elon, et al.


44 posted on 02/25/2026 4:11:22 PM PST by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: Drago

Thanks. That helps. A bet has to be based on a measurable item.


45 posted on 02/25/2026 4:18:06 PM PST by plain talk
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To: Miami Rebel

Of course DOGE would fail, if judged by cut spending. No D and many R’s in Congress have no interest in cutting spending, one little bit.

Judged by changes that got made in accounting, there were some wins.

Judged by public exposure of bizarre spending (e.g., trans operas in Finland, research into transgender mice and the like), it was a success. In fact, it was step 1 in getting the public to understand things like into the Minnesota fraud cases and the astonishing levels of abuse by NGOs.

It also gave a very smart and powerful man insight into the enormity of the problem Americans face in getting control of their government. I think that will redound to America’s benefit in the long run.


46 posted on 02/25/2026 4:36:50 PM PST by ModelBreaker
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To: Theo

Mediaite is a far-left propaganda organ, for the sort of people who think MSNBC, PBS, CNN, NYT, etc. are too “right-wing.”


47 posted on 02/25/2026 6:58:52 PM PST by EnderWiggin1970
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To: PGR88

But that is not how it failed, it failed because Congress ignored what they uncovered. DOGE had no authority to succeed in that sense.


48 posted on 02/25/2026 7:12:59 PM PST by Robert DeLong
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To: Miami Rebel

I have often commented on how there has never been a complete discussion of tariffs. Each side cherry picks those parts that make it look good. Below are articles after the SOTU decision on tariffs. They still don’t want to admit the truth. They don’t want to see the complete picture. They still want to cherry pick.

What economists got wrong about Trump’s tariffs. https://www.vox.com/politics/480751/trump-tariffs-economy-prices.

Democracy Now! https://www.democracynow.org › joseph_stiglitz_sotu

Economist laughs at question regarding Trump’s tariff failure. https://ca.finance.yahoo.com/news/economist-laughs-regarding-trump-tariff-103000057.html

No, Economists Didn’t Get It Wrong On Trump’s Tariffs - CEPR. https://cepr.net/publications/economists-didnt-get-it-wrong-on-tariffs/


49 posted on 02/28/2026 9:02:47 AM PST by spintreebob
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To: spintreebob

Tariffs are pro worker and help balance budget. Free trade is pro consumer (insect view of human life), exports wealth and weakens the USA. That is just fact.


50 posted on 02/28/2026 9:09:09 AM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn... )
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To: spintreebob

You gonna see your illegal heroes in church tomorrow? Tell them I said go home and worship there.


51 posted on 02/28/2026 9:10:39 AM PST by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn... )
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