sylver_dragon,

Handy Infographic from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO):
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ea/2023_US_Federal_Budget_Infographic.png.

  • Total Federal outlays: $6.1 Trillion
  • Federal Social Spending
    • Social Security: $1.3T
    • Medicare: $0.839T
    • Medicaid: $0.616T
    • Income Security Programs: $0.448T
    • Total Social Spending: $3.203T

Math warning:


<span style="color:#323232;">(3.203T / $6.1T) * 100% = 52.5%  
</span>

So, not quite the previous poster’s 55%, but pretty close. There is also an “Other” column which likely includes other social spending and may have gotten us to that number. But, it’s enough of a mixed bag, and way too much work, to try and pick it all out.

While the US could certainly adjust it’s spending in a lot of good ways, the idea that the US spends “nothing” on social programs is provably false. These numbers also get weird and much harder to pin down when we look at State level taxes and spending. Many years ago, I dug into education spending in the US. And while Federal Education spending is a drop in the bucket, the actual number is pretty large, because it’s considered a State responsibility and each State spends large amounts of money on it.

For example, my home State of Virginia budgets $29.9 Billion for “Health and Human Services” this Fiscal Year 2024 and $25.0 Billion for “Education”, those two line items eating up about 62% of the State budget.

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