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Old 10-17-2012, 08:11 AM  
Paul Markham
Too old to care
 
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Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: On the sofa, watching TV or doing my jigsaws.
Posts: 52,943
Quote:
Originally Posted by Minte View Post
http://www.heritage.org/research/rep...e-numbers-2012
THere is a lot of information there for you to read. Rather than me cutting and pasting it all.
Only read to that part, as |I wanted to read the article. Is this the waste you're talking about?

Quote:
Federal entitlements are driving this spending growth, having increased from less than half of total federal outlays just 20 years ago to nearly 62 percent in 2012. Three major programs?Medicare, Medicaid, and Social Security?dominate in size and growth, soaking up about 44 percent of the budget. All three programs are growing faster than inflation, and?when joined with $1.7 trillion in new Obamacare spending?will drain about 18.5 percent of the nation?s total economic output by mid-century. Because that is about the historical annual average of total federal tax revenue, it means all other government programs?national defense, veterans health care, transportation, federal law enforcement, and others?would effectively have to be financed on borrowed money.
Other entitlements continue growing as well. Anti-poverty programs have surged by 49 percent in just the past decade, even after adjusting for inflation. Spending for food stamps alone has more than tripled since 2002. Health programs, including Medicaid, have increased by 38 percent, and housing assistance by 48 percent.
Although these entitlement programs have dominated the government?s spending growth, discretionary spending?spending authorized by annual appropriations bills?also has grown by 40 percent more than inflation, to $1.289 trillion. Spending on non-defense programs has grown 29 percent. These outlays peaked in 2010 due to the stimulus bill, but remain 7 percent higher than their pre-stimulus level of 2008.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Brad Mitchell View Post
I think most of the US stock market is over inflated BS and about 2/3 of my 401k is overseas growth mutual funds. Mutual funds are very diverse by their nature and the farthest thing from investing specifically in any one company.. I'm just sayin'

Brad
And the West rode on the over inflation. Until the bubble burst.

Last edited by Paul Markham; 10-17-2012 at 08:14 AM..
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