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MAPPING THE GROWTH OF GOVERNMENT: We found spending outpaced staff growth and inflation at agency after agency
Open The Books ^ | 02/21/2025

Posted on 02/21/2025 9:21:26 PM PST by SeekAndFind

As DOGE continues searching for and flagging waste, fraud and abuse across the federal government, American taxpayers are hearing about a lot of outrageous spending – and obscure agencies and projects – for the first time.

The scandalous spending at USAID on foreign programs (think a transgender opera in Colombia) and progressive NGO’s (think The Aspen Institute) set off an explosion of headlines. Separately, our own auditors found $22 BILLION spent by the Office of Refugee Resettlement – a division of Health and Human Services – on aid to migrants since 2020. Again, NGO’s were granted the money to go out and act as ideological proxies for the Biden administration.

It’s become clear that Americans need an exhaustive map of the federal government and how much spending at each agency has grown over time.

When we began that work, we immediately found another problem.

Record keeping within the Federal Register, which is supposed to be the definitive guide to government policy, is shockingly bad.

At least 75 agencies listed there are effectively defunct or obsolete; they’ve been subsumed by other entities, renamed, or don’t even exist any longer.

Not only are agencies listed that are long-defunct, but records of those agencies are often not updated, so members of the public must conduct deep research to ascertain the composition of their own government.

The vast scope of DOGE’s task becomes much clearer in that context.

We doubled down and began taking inventory of the remaining agencies that do exist, so that taxpayers can track the changing number of federal employees per agency and the growth in expenditures over the years. We’re untangling this web in a public database.

By cataloguing every federal agency, it will create a clearer picture of the government as it stands. Where is there duplication? Bloat? Which agencies are mostly sending cash out the door for others to do the work of government?

For DOGE to be as effective as possible, it’s necessary to have the best possible understanding of the status quo as of 2024.

Open the Books will periodically release a list of agencies our auditors have studied, charting their growth, expense and activity over time. Are taxpayers getting their money’s worth? Are they getting anything at all? Regardless of your affiliation, it’s in everyone’s interest to open the books together and find out.

THE FIRST 50

Already, we’ve charted nearly 50 federal agencies as far back as the data goes, tracking the growth in headcount and the growth in outlays (money spent by the agency).

They include the Department of Justice; Department of Defense; Department of Transportation; Department of Homeland Security (and its many subagencies like FEMA, ICE and the Border Patrol); Department of Education; Department of Health and Human Services (which includes the National Institutes of Health, the Centers for Disease Control, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the Food & Drug Administration); and an assortment of independent agencies ranging from the now-infamous USAID to the lesser known, like the Administrative Conference of the United States.

We’ll continue updating this list over the next weeks until taxpayers have the full picture. It’s an absolute avalanche of data with historical context, and we invite every concerned citizen, journalist, member of Congress, and DOGE employee to take a close look. There’s an untold number of stories to be mined from these topline numbers!

KEY EXAMPLES

Critics of DOGE have complained – early and often – that the size of the federal workforce has not grown enormously since the last time cuts were implemented in the Clinton era. Why make cuts when the country has grown and the federal workforce has stayed static? they demand to know.

At agency after agency, a pattern emerges. While headcounts may or may not grow appreciably, spending seems to soar much faster regardless.

Across the political spectrum, there are explanations to be had – it’s not just inflation.

Progressive critics of the efficiency project say the real problem is privatization of government services – private-sector outsourcing like Medicare Advantage or huge equipment contracts signed by the Pentagon. More small-government proponents lament the amount of NGO’s that sop up taxpayer dollars to act as ideological proxies for the administration in power.

SIDEBAR: Our most recent story details shocking amounts of money filtered out of HHS to nonprofit organizations for aid to migrants. Not just life-saving aid, but help with home and auto loans, small business startups, fixes for credit histories, and much more! $22.6 Billion worth. Nonprofit group International Rescue Committee alone received $598 million since 2020! READ MORE.

There’s plenty of data to suggest both can be true, and then some. (We can’t forget improper payments either!)

National Institutes of Health

Take the National Institutes of Health for example. Sure, headcount grew 21.5% higher than in the year 2000. But over the same period, spending has skyrocketed 301% of that figure.

Department of Education

The pattern repeats, even more extremely, at the Department of Education. Employee headcounts actually decreased since 2000, to 13.9% lower. But spending? It rose to astonishing 749% of the prior total.

That calculation looks even more galling on the heels of recent news the American students are not recovering from Covid learning losses – they’ve fallen further behind on reading and made little improvement in math. The National Assessment of Educational Progress—known as America’s report card – showed “growing numbers of students lack basic reading skills,” according to the Associated Press. Peggy Carr, commissioner for the National Center of Education Statistics, told journalists that “poor results can no longer be blamed solely on the pandemic, warning the nation’s education system faces ‘complex challenges.’”

FEMA

What about the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)? They’ve come under fire for shortfalls in their Disaster Relief Fund, and for spending big sums to house migrants in hotels. Well, their employee count actually did rise significantly – it’s just that their spending still outpaced it by miles.

FEMA headcount was 290% higher in 2024 than in 2000. But spending swelled more than seven times faster – to 2,096% of the prior spending levels! There has to be a better way to get aid to disaster zones that’s more timely and efficient – and get away from mission creep like migrant housing.

USAID

For good measure, we’ll take a look at the Agency for International Development (USAID), as it’s been the subject of so much news. Head count since 2000 has grown 218% larger. But spending has risen to 467.7% of outlays from 2000. That’s a lot of DEI for Serbian workplaces and trans comic books for Peru.



TOPICS: Government; Society
KEYWORDS: bureaucracy; doge; government; inflation

1 posted on 02/21/2025 9:21:26 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Arlington and Alexandria are filled with federal government consultants. Millions of them. Then there are the NGOs and GSEs. You don’t need to be an actual government employee to add to the debt.


2 posted on 02/21/2025 9:45:07 PM PST by poinq (thics and customs and did not take an oath to the country. And did not follow the country's traditio)
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To: SeekAndFind

That will happen when spending goes up by inflation plus about 3% automatically. The CBO is ordered to do this by the Congressional Budget Act of 1974. That is the problem.

Go back to Zero Base Budgeting. First though there has to be a budget passed for the first time in 26 years!!!!!


3 posted on 02/21/2025 9:59:32 PM PST by Sequoyah101 (Donald John Trump. First man to be Elected to the Presidency THREE times since FDR.)
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To: SeekAndFind
The scandalous spending at USAID on foreign programs (think a transgender opera in Colombia) and progressive NGO’s (think The Aspen Institute)

Nor do we hear anyone trying to state what part of the constitution authorizes any of this spending. Even if it is something good or helpful to a nice country, what makes it OK for them to be spending the money to begin with?

4 posted on 02/21/2025 10:07:58 PM PST by Dan Zachary
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To: All

Open The Books found
<><>an astounding 75 govt agencies listed, that are effectively defunct or obsolete;
<><>that were subsumed by other entities, renamed, or that no longer even exist.
<><>Not only are these defunct agencies listed but their records are not updated,
<><>leaving the public unclear about the composition of their own government.
<><>Federal Register record keeping is supposed to be the definitive guide to govt policy,
<><>but it is shockingly bad.


It’s become clear that Americans need an exhaustive map of the federal
government and how much spending at each agency has grown over time.


5 posted on 02/21/2025 10:14:23 PM PST by Liz
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To: Dan Zachary; SeekAndFind
Nor do we hear anyone trying to state what part of the constitution authorizes any of this spending. Even if it is something good or helpful to a nice country, what makes it OK for them to be spending the money to begin with?

"I will not go into an argument to prove that Congress has no power to appropriate this money as an act of charity. Every member upon this floor knows it. We have the right, as individuals, to give away as much of our own money as we please in charity; but as members of Congress we have no right to so appropriate a dollar of the public money." - Rep. David Crockett

Not Yours to Give: Davy Crockett and Welfare

https://www.101bananas.com/library2/crockett.html

6 posted on 02/21/2025 10:22:55 PM PST by thecodont
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To: SeekAndFind

Spend your budget this fiscal year or lose it next year. That policy is why spending has constantly increased year after year. Managers are rewarded for spending, not saving.


7 posted on 02/21/2025 10:51:52 PM PST by mikey_hates_everything
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To: GOPJ; poconopundit; Jane Long; Diana in Wisconsin; Grampa Dave; Godzilla; Vaduz; null and void; ...

Open The Books found
<><>an astounding 75 govt agencies listed, that are effectively defunct or obsolete;
<><>that were subsumed by other entities, renamed, or that no longer even exist.
<><>Not only are these defunct agencies listed but their records are not updated,
<><>leaving the public unclear about the composition of their own government.
<><>Federal Register record keeping is supposed to be the definitive guide to govt policy,
<><>but it is shockingly bad.

It’s become clear that Americans need an exhaustive map of the federal
government and how much spending at each agency has grown over time.


8 posted on 02/21/2025 11:05:28 PM PST by Liz
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To: Liz

And some of these “ govt agencies” (existing or not) have 50 year old computer systems, workers who haven’t shown up in years, and entrenched democrat airs of entitlement. Trump and Musk lifting those rocks and looking under - what a mess.


9 posted on 02/22/2025 12:06:43 AM PST by GOPJ (Democrats are the party of angry black women, sexual weirdos and white liberal elites. It's a fail.)
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To: GOPJ

.......some of these “ govt agencies” (existing or not)......
<><>have 50 year old computer systems,
<><>workers who haven’t shown up in years and still get paid,
<><>and entrenched democrat entitlement and profiteering


10 posted on 02/22/2025 1:16:48 AM PST by Liz
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To: SeekAndFind
At least 75 agencies listed there are effectively defunct or obsolete; they’ve been subsumed by other entities, renamed, or don’t even exist any longer.

Let me guess. Funding for these nonexistent agencies continues unabated through CR's and omnibus spending. There is a reason con-gre$$ doesn't produce budgets any longer.

11 posted on 02/22/2025 3:18:53 AM PST by BlackbirdSST (Trump or Bust! Long live the Republic.)
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To: SeekAndFind

The cost of government should be included in inflation figures.

Also, as government increases its indirect costs (the cost of complying with endlessly increasing regulations) increases even faster.


12 posted on 02/22/2025 4:29:40 AM PST by motor_racer ("We're gonna punish our enemies and reward our friends" - Barack Hussein Obama)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bookmark, and thanks.


13 posted on 02/22/2025 5:22:14 AM PST by grobdriver (The CDC can KMA!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Left unchecked the gov growth is like hogs in a bakery store Trump and Musk has locked the door thankfully.


14 posted on 02/22/2025 5:54:46 AM PST by Vaduz
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To: Liz

And the irs looks up Our backside with a microscope tor $20.00 on a reciept for a business lunch.

< /TOTAL DISGUST >


15 posted on 02/22/2025 10:33:49 AM PST by mabarker1 (I(Congress- the opposite of PROGRESS!!! A fraud, a hypocrite, a liar. I'm a member of Congress!!!)
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