Skip to content
  • ABOUT
    • MISSION HISTORY
    • DIRECTORS/STAFF
    • Support
    • Contact Us
    • FAQ’S
    • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • WASTEWATCHER
  • MEDIA
    • CONGRESSIONAL RATINGS
    • PORKER OF THE MONTH
    • COMMENTARY
    • PRESS RELEASES
  • LEGISLATIVE
    • Communications to the States
    • Communications to Congress
    • Coalition Letters
    • Testimony
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Action Alerts
    • Support
DONATE
Facebook X-twitter Icon-instagram-1 Icon-youtube

Budget

Budget, International

Four Myths about the Export-Import Bank

02/28/2011 staff

The Export-Import Bank of the United States (Ex-Im Bank) is an independent government agency founded in 1934 in an effort to encourage U.S. exports. In 2010, Ex-Im Bank provided $24.4 billion in taxpayer-backed direct loans, guarantees, and export-credit insurance to private firms and foreign governments. Whatever its original intent may have been, today Ex-Im Bank is an obvious example of corporate welfare. Denying Ex-Im Bank’s charter, which is up for renewal in 2011, would eradicate a regressive, wasteful institution whose time has passed.

Budget, General Waste

Future of Earmarks Remains Vague

02/28/2011 Sean Kennedy

Predicting the future of earmarks can be a bit like peering into a crystal ball.

Budget, Taxes

Obama’s SOTU, Yet Another Disappointment for Taxpayers

01/27/2011 staff

During a time of record annual budget deficits and public debt, the country, more than ever, needs solutions to its fiscal problems. Most taxpayers were expecting the President’s State of the Union speech to signal a major policy shift, away from rampant government spending and toward private sector solutions to the nation’s fiscal woes. Instead they heard the President pay lip service to a few spending issues and introduce more programs for which taxpayers will be responsible. In short, it was a major disappointment.

Budget

New House Rules Focus Members on Making Serious Spending Cuts

01/27/2011 staff

On election day, taxpayers turned out in droves to support fiscally conservative candidates that they entrusted with the responsibility of cutting the federal budget, reducing the size of the national debt, and returning Congress to the hands of the American people. Charged with these critical tasks, the 112th Congress has agreed to new rules and proposed debt-busting legislation in an effort to restore some semblance of fiscal sanity.

Budget, Defense

Planned Spending Cuts Do Not Include Defense

01/27/2011 Sean Kennedy

One of the top priorities of the Republican’s campaign to take back Congress in 2010 was to reduce the deficit by cutting spending. Republican leaders intended to return nondefense discretionary spending to 2008 levels by trimming $100 billion in the first fiscal year.

Budget, Commerce

Federal Bailout No More! State and Local Governments Must Deal With TheirOwn Pension Predicaments

11/01/2010 staff

In December 2008, state governments had nearly $1.94 trillion set aside in pension funds for approximately 20 million active state and local government employees and seven million retirees and dependents who currently receive benefits. 

Using market-based discount rates that reflect the risk profile of pension liabilities, finance professors Robert Novy-Marx of the University of Chicago and Joshua Rauhof Northwestern University calculated that states have pension liabilities of $5.17 trillion, which means that state pension plans are unfunded by $3.23 trillion.  Local government pension plans are unfunded by $574 billion. 

Budget, International, Taxes

Cut Corporate Income Taxes

11/01/2010 staff

America has been called the land of opportunity largely because it has been a place where businesses and individuals prosper.  This has been the result of a stable government, an educated workforce, protection of intellectual property, and a tax rate that historically has been low. Unfortunately, taxes are now going in the wrong direction. 

Budget, General Waste

Pork on Life Support: Time to Pull the Plug

10/01/2010 staff

Save America’s Treasures was one of the 60 programs proposed for elimination in President Obama’s 2011 Terminations, Reductions, and Savings report. Released in February 2010, the report recommended the elimination of the program because it “has not demonstrated how it contributes to nationwide historic preservation goals.”  Its demise would allow the National Park Service to“focus resources on managing national parks and other activities that most closely align with its core mission.”  Citizens Against Government Waste has long criticized the program, which has been the source of tens of millions of dollars in pork since 2001.

Budget, Taxes

Extending Bush Era Tax Cuts Will Aid the Economic Recovery

10/01/2010 staff

One of the more spirited public policy debates that hasunfolded leading into the midterm elections has been what Congress should do with the Bush-era tax cuts,which are set to expire at the end of this year.  President Obama has stated he favors only extending tax cuts for the middle class and letting others expire, while businesses, Republicans, moderate Democrats, and taxpayer advocates maintain that anything other than a full extensionamounts to a tax increase that will only prolong the nation’s current economic woes. 

Budget

Pension Precipice

09/01/2010 Leslie Paige

It is time to stare the brutal facts in the face.

Posts pagination

Previous 1 … 32 33 34 … 38 Next

Search

Council for Citizens Against Government Waste works to eliminate waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government through research and public education.

  • MISSION HISTORY
  • DIRECTORS/STAFF
  • SUPPORT
  • FINANCIAL INFORMATION
  • CONTACT US
  • CAGW
  • 1-800-USA-DEBT ®
  • media@ccagw.org
  • 317 MASSACHUSETTS AVENUE, N.E.
    SUITE 300
    WASHINGTON, D.C. 20002

© Council for Citizens Against Government Waste