The Annual Federal Spending Frenzy Is A Terrible Fall Tradition
Reason magazine|January 2018

The Annual Federal Spending Frenzy Is A Terrible Fall Tradition

Veronique De Rugy
The Annual Federal Spending Frenzy Is A Terrible Fall Tradition

 WHAT DO YOU do if you wind up witha little extra money in your household budget at the end of the year?

Perhaps you pay down yourcredit card debt or save it for an earlier retirement. Maybe you replace old appliances or go on a much-needed but unplanned vacation. One thing is clear: Because you’re spending your own cash, you make sure to get as much out of it as possible. You might expect our tax dollars to be treated the same way. 

You would be mistaken. The end of the fiscal year—September 30—triggers a spending frenzy in Washington, where the driving order isn’t “do something worthwhile” but rather “make sure nothing is left.” Because agencies can’t carry over any part of their operating budgets into the next fiscal year, politicians and bureaucrats spend to the last dime, knowing that leftover resources will be returned to the Department of the Treasury. They also worry Congress will reward frugal agencies with cuts to their future allotments.

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