DOGE Year-End Review: Did Musk's Hundred-Day Reform Work?
DOGE Year-End Review: Did Musk's 100-Day Reform Work?
The DOGE (Department of Government Efficiency) initiative, led by Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy, aimed to cut bureaucratic waste, reduce regulations, and save $2 trillion to balance the federal budget. Despite ambitious goals, Musk resigned after just 130 days, and DOGE was dissolved by November—10 months into an 18-month plan.
DOGE achieved a 9% reduction in federal employees (271,000 jobs cut) and claimed $21.4–25 billion in savings through contract terminations and program closures. However, total federal spending increased from $6.75–7.135 trillion in 2024 to $7.01–7.6 trillion in 2025, a 4–6% rise. Mandatory spending (e.g., Social Security, Medicare) and interest on debt—unaffected by administrative cuts—drove this growth. Independent analyses suggested actual savings were as low as $3 billion, with potential future tax losses from weakened IRS enforcement offsetting gains.
Post-Musk, DOGE’s influence waned, and service disruptions emerged. The reform highlighted the fundamental mismatch between corporate efficiency models and government operations, where statutory spending and systemic inertia limit top-down restructuring. The experiment underscored that government cannot be run like a business, as efficiency must balance fairness, stability, and public trust.
marsbit12/31 00:30