Reason

HAS THE U.S. GOVERNMENT FINALLY SPENT TOO MUCH?

WHEN COVID-19 ARRIVED in America, Uncle Sam was already deep in debt. The federal government was poised to have a permanent annual budget deficit of at least $1 trillion. Debt was already sky high thanks to demographic trends and a few entitlement programs that experts had warned us about for decades. But after the most recent three months of frenzied, bipartisan spending, those previous balances seem like small potatoes.

Emergency spending related to COVID-19 has increased government outlays by $3.6 trillion. The net deficit impact of this fiscal incontinence is roughly $2.4 trillion. So far, $1.4 trillion of this authorized spending has been committed. Another $400 billion has been authorized through executive

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Reason

Reason1 min read
Photo
ON FEBRUARY 22, Odysseus became the first private spacecraft to have a (largely) successful soft moon landing. It launched seven days earlier on another private sector success, SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket. Developed by Intuitive Machines, the mission ca
Reason2 min readInternational Relations
Are U.S. Strikes on Houthis Constitutional?
SINCE JANUARY, THE United States and its allies have been conducting strikes against the Houthis, a Yemen-based Islamist militant organization that has been attacking commercial ships in the Red Sea. These attacks, the Houthis claim, are a gesture of
Reason2 min read
Carding People To Watch Porn
THE LATEST TREND in anti-sex action is carding people to watch porn online. After years of passing resolutions to declare porn a “public health crisis,” state lawmakers are coalescing on age-verification measures as a way to address this alleged scou

Related Books & Audiobooks