Can we make cost savings to ‘balance’ the federal budget?
Yes we can (we can do anything we have the political will to do) and we should try to find savings wherever we can. The deficit in fiscal 2019 was $2,995 per U.S. resident and demographic trends will increase Social Security and Medicare costs over time – Crunchicrant estimates we need to find savings of $3,500 per person per year to get the federal budget to “sustainable”.
This is what the federal US government spent in fiscal 2019 (using the $ per US person measure):
(Note that the government distinguishes between discretionary expenses (outlays which congress approves each year); and mandatory expenses (outlays which are required under laws passed at some point in the past). These latter can be changed, but require that the laws which require the expenditure are revisited and changed – a much heavier legislative ‘lift’).
There are three broad approaches to balancing the budget by cost cutting: (all three in some measure could be taken, but useful to look at the three groups of costs, separately).
There is one final category of expense (Interest on government debt – $1,142 per US person person): nothing we can do about that. A category that will likely grow the longer it takes us to achieve a rational and sustainable budget.
A final but important point: every adjustment to spend impacts:
To allow all the stakeholders in any decisions to cut expenditure to adjust, time is needed: early decisions and phase in of the change create time.