Elon Musk joins Trump in $2 trillion government cut plan
Elon Musk is eagerly preparing to join President-elect Donald Trump's administration. During Trump's campaign, the billionaire promised to reduce U.S. government spending by at least two trillion dollars. We already have some insight into where Musk wants to make significant cuts, and some of his announcements are causing considerable controversy.
1:06 PM EST, November 13, 2024
President-elect Donald Trump announced that he will appoint the "Department of Government Efficiency" (DOGE), led by Elon Musk (the creator of SpaceX and Tesla) and businessman Vivek Ramaswamy, a former rival in the Republican primaries. Musk is expected to serve in a consultative role in this quasi-department (officially an external advisory body to the White House). This arrangement ensures he can continue managing major businesses like Tesla, SpaceX, xAI, and Neuralink, which produces brain-implantable chips. Trump shared these new tasks for the businessmen on X.
"Together, these two great Americans will pave the way for my administration to dismantle government bureaucracy, remove unnecessary regulations, cut wasteful spending, and restructure federal agencies," Trump wrote in a statement published on X.
Musk and the promise of trillion-dollar budget cuts
Before the elections, Musk did not elaborate on how he would cut government spending. However, during one of the online meetings with voters, he acknowledged that the proposed cuts would cause "temporary difficulties but ensure long-term prosperity." - "We have a lot of government waste; it's a bit like being in a room full of targets where you can't miss. You shoot in any direction to hit," Musk said about his strategy for cuts. He announced plans for a gradual review of government spending.
At a famous rally in Madison Square Garden, the heads of Tesla and SpaceX convinced people that "all government spending is taxes." "Your money is being wasted, and the 'Department of Government Efficiency' intends to fix it," he said. Earlier in the campaign, Musk assured that under the new president, he would manage to cut the U.S. federal budget by at least two trillion dollars. Bloomberg reminds us that this exceeds the amount Congress spends annually on government agencies, including defense.
The agency calculates that last year the government spent over 6.75 trillion dollars, of which more than 5.3 trillion dollars went to Social Security, healthcare, defense, and veterans' benefits. It notes that practice shows it is difficult to convince Congress to cut spending in these areas.
Elon Musk, however, seems adamant on this issue. At the end of October in Pennsylvania, Musk told voters that it's necessary to "drain the Washington swamp" because "there are so many of them." He borrowed this phrase from someone in the audience (Donald Trump had also spoken about "draining the swamp" when he first ran for the presidency, and many other politicians have said the same). Musk insisted that sharp cuts are needed; otherwise, the country would be led to bankruptcy.
Bloomberg points out that Musk's plans align most closely with the multi-year vision of Republican Senator Rand Paul, which would involve cutting expenditures by 6% annually for five years until U.S. expenditures and revenues are balanced. In response to a comment from a user on X, who noted that Trump and Musk's plans would mean "serious upheavals in the economy" and "stock market crashes," after which there would be a "revival" toward a "healthier economy," the billionaire replied meaningfully - "sounds about right."
Musk announces: hundreds of thousands of layoffs, hundreds of agencies to be eliminated
Earlier, as the "Financial Times" reminds us, Musk said that savings in the system would come from dismissing hundreds of thousands of employees, who currently create "enormous bureaucracy." He also talked about eliminating regulations that, in his opinion, stifle innovation. He announced plans to identify unsuccessful investments made by predecessors. "We will have a ranking of the craziest, misguided expenditures from your taxes. It will be both tragic and enormously amusing," Musk announced in one of his posts on X.
In an interview with conservative and controversial journalist Tucker Carlson, Musk said that he also sees cuts in drastically reducing the number of government agencies, which currently amount to about 420. "There are so many of them, some people haven’t heard of. I think we should allow ourselves 99 agencies," Musk speculated.
Expert: That's simply not how it works
The "Washington Post" points out that Musk hasn't clearly stated the timeline for these radical cuts. Experts generally assess the impact of fiscal decisions over 10 years. If the billionaire means cutting two trillion dollars within one year, it would result in a real reduction in government spending by about one-third, an idea deemed absurd and unworkable.
"The idea that you can cut two trillion dollars from wasteful and unnecessary federal programs is absolutely absurd," Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, a center-right think tank, told the "Washington Post."
In his opinion, we are dealing with a fantasy in which a businessman identifies the problem solely in bureaucratic waste, but "that's simply not how it works." Another issue is Trump's expectations, who - based on experiences from his first term - might attempt to completely bypass Congress when deciding on expenditures. This would clearly signal a serious constitutional dispute in the USA.
The danger of oligarchization in Trump's second term
Theatlantic.com warns about the risk of oligarchization in the American version, which Trump's presidency could fuel. "Many of America's wealthiest have concluded that the opportunities provided by Trump outweigh any social condemnation that might follow (his taking office - ed.)," it reports.
Although the phenomenon of oligarchy is mainly associated with Russia and other Eastern autocracies, in the USA, Trump aligns himself with the most powerful businessmen who do not owe their fortunes to him, the essence of the power-business agreements remains the same. Its main goal will be the exchange of favors.
"Trump's and Putin's oligarchs share one significant similarity. Billionaires behind technological giants, attracted to Trump, would like to protect their monopolies by providing essential services that make them indispensable to the government and the nation. [...] Putin’s oligarchy largely consists of (his - ed.) old KGB friends and childhood friends from St. Petersburg," Theatlantic.com notes.
The differences that are supposed to make the American system safer are democratic control and the rule of law. "Unlike Putin, Trump allies with truly creative entrepreneurs. However, this does not make the American model better, just uniquely dangerous. Trump's transactionalism will be tied to people driven by greed," warns the publication. It adds that never before in the USA has "the state been such a profitable center of profit for private business."