
The Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), the quasi-official advisory board led by Elon Musk to recommend workforce reductions and cost-savings in the Federal Government, has a laudable goal. There certainly is a lot of waste in the government. Fraud, too. There are probably many tasks that the Feds currently do that states or private entities could do better. Furthermore, without substantial changes, the Federal budget deficit is unsustainable. There is a lot of fat that must be trimmed from the Federal government budget.
However, there is a right way and a wrong way to reduce budgets. When facing cuts, one wants to right the ship in the least painful manner. Indiscriminately cutting can make the situation worse. In my years as a consultant before graduate school, I saw many firms turn a budget problem into a budget crisis (and, in one extreme case, turn a minor issue into bankruptcy) simply because they did poor budget cuts.
The wrong way to do cuts is what DOGE is now: slash and burn. It’s hard to tell what criteria they are using to recommend cuts. As best as I can tell, the reasoning is “I don’t understand this, so it must be waste or fraud.” They’ve had to walk back several recommendations upon discovering they were recommending firing key personnel . Cuts like these reduce the productivity of the organization and eliminate institutional knowledge, undermining the purpose of the cuts (to right the ship and get the organization running more efficiently). Not only that, but seemingly arbitrary cuts undermine morale, which in turn reduces productivity further. Budgetary problems persist, more cuts are needed, and the organization continues to become weaker. This can lead to a vicious cycle of cuts and cuts, the ship never quite righting.
This vicious cycle is not always maliciously intended. It’s probable that Musk and Trump are doing what they believe through their experience businessmen is the right action. I’ve seen the exact same mistakes made by many firms: bosses seek to “share the burden” of the cuts, asking various departments to all cut by an equal amount. Or, also like DOGE, they lay off probationary employees (who tend to be easier to fire), thus cutting off the firm from young, maturing talent. They target parts of the firm they do not understand, rather than relying on managers to help them make informed decisions.
What’s the right way to make cuts? Fortunately, economics can help us. The optimal way to make cuts is to find the least marginally productive workers and target them for cuts. Who, on the margin, is contributing least to the firm’s output? Are there certain departments not advancing the goal? These are questions that need to be answered.
Of course, just because this method is right doesn’t mean it is easy. Measuring marginal productivity is no easy task, especially when one has an organization like a government where there are no products being willingly sold. Furthermore, someone may appear unproductive, but actually has a wealth of institutional knowledge that would disappear with them.
Righting a sinking corporate ship is no easy feat. There’s a reason so many businesses fail, even those helmed by great leaders. Nevertheless, it is a task that must be done from time to time. And if one is to do it at all, one must do it well. Trump and Musk would be wise to slow down and make reasoned, deliberate cuts, rather than flashy, often misunderstood, cuts for the camera.
READER COMMENTS
Craig
Mar 19 2025 at 10:52am
“As best as I can tell, the reasoning is “I don’t understand this, so it must be waste or fraud.”
Well Elon is a smart guy, if he can’t figure it out between him and the government I’ll defer to Elon on that one, but I digress…..I disagree with you, but likely for a reason you wouldn’t expect given your post. There already was a DOGE, Congress was supposed to be DOGE. [past tense intended] — So when you write: “there is a right way and a wrong way to reduce budgets.” I agree, the right way was through Congress.
I’d prefer #nationaldivorce but I suppose I’ll have to settle for DOGE. Its high time the federal aristocracy faced somebody like Musk.
But Congress? I’m done with them. They’re not the answer.
Jon Murphy
Mar 19 2025 at 11:49am
So? Smarts are irrelevant here. I’ve seen lots of smart people, people with MBAs and PhDs and decades of experience, make these mistakes.
steve
Mar 19 2025 at 1:13pm
I also dont understand the smart guy thing. I have had to deal with this so many times it’s not funny. Talking with a cardiologist or orthopedic surgeon, just as examples, who thought because they were really smart and good at what they did that meant they would be good at everything. So, for example on staffing issues I would ask them if they had ever hired anyone or done staffing schedules or budgets. They would say no but they were sure they knew how to do it, largely because they were good at other stuff.
I agree Musk is smart, but he knows little about the work/jobs he is deciding about. More worryingly, he really cant do it himself and he has apparently chosen a team that will make most of the decisions that are mostly coders in their 20s, chosen for loyalty to him. There are thousands of people out in the business world who are better qualified and have experience that would be more appropriate. I think Musk/Trump supporters dont really care they just want someone to fire govt workers whom they see as bad people.
I also dont buy the idea that we need to rush. If it were really urgent then we wouldn’t see proposals for tax cuts that will outweigh the spending cuts. It’s pretty clear that the speed is intended to to do two things. First, if you declare everything an emergency you can keep claiming executive privileges for an emergency, Second, its to outrun the ability of people to respond and for courts to rule on legalities. I agree that Congress has fallen down on its responsibilities but we are still a nation of laws. An authoritarian POTUS doesnt get to ignore our laws, even if its popular.
Steve
Craig
Mar 19 2025 at 1:59pm
Yes, the cardiologist is a specialist and such a specialty requires a few neurons which aren’t thus trained for other things. But Musk’s specialty IS larger organizations, in his case for profit ones. Right now he’s findibg the low hanging fruit, literally tge processes that can’t even self-justify themselves.
Musk deserves a great deal of deference here because he’s earned it through his own experiences. The government will justify its parasitization. Let me guess the end result, you won’t notice.
Craig
Mar 19 2025 at 1:54pm
I’ve earned a few stripes, you’ve earned a few stripes for yourself, but Musk has earned a few stars.
steve
Mar 19 2025 at 6:18pm
Whenyou look at his history he didnt do it by bringing in a bunch of coders. He brought in people with relevant experience. To date the number of errors they have made is concerning. There is little evidence that he is doing anything other than firing people at agencies he and Trump dont like. You dont need any real expertise for that.
Steve
Jon Murphy
Mar 20 2025 at 8:30am
If you wish to maintain this position that Musk deserves some sort of deference because he is “smart” (whatever that means in this context) then the obvious follow-up question is:
If he’s so smart, why is he bungling this so badly?
David Seltzer
Mar 19 2025 at 11:43am
Jon: I’m plowing through Calculus of Consent. Plowing being the appropriate verb. (Present participle). Buchanan, from the, “homely observation,” people respond to incentives and pursue their interests in the political arena just as they do in the marketplace. How people actually proceed, rather than how they could or should act. The political incentives for DJT and EM to fix it now result in a scorched earth policy that earn laudits from their clients. I suspect, if he were living, William Tecumseh Sherman would approve.
Jon Murphy
Mar 19 2025 at 11:51am
Well, I think that’s part of the problem. The incentive isn’t to fix it now. The incentive is to be flashy. The cuts haven’t been useful; they’ve been flashy.
Craig
Mar 19 2025 at 2:29pm
Of course to be fair fellas I am one to eliminate the federal government, in its entirety. I am a bit bemused that I seem to advocate for smaller government than some libertarians!
Jose Pablo
Mar 19 2025 at 2:38pm
The Trump administration is certainly not in favor of a smaller government. A government less controlled by a smaller public administration is not a smaller government; quite the contrary.
I have never felt the influence of the government in my day-to-day decisions to the extent that I do now. Never before.
That is not ‘smaller government.
Jose Pablo
Mar 19 2025 at 2:32pm
There certainly is a lot of waste in the government. Fraud, too.
The most relevant issue is not whether this is properly done or not (although you are certainly right on this topic). But even more relevant is that there isn’t any meaningful waste in the areas (direct spending as opposed to transfers) that DOGE is mainly focusing on.
All U.S. government direct spending, excluding defense, is around $650 billion, $300 billion for federal workforce salaries and operations, $200 billion for public works, and $150 billion in “other” areas (mainly law enforcement, scientific research, and environmental and land management).
Even cutting this spending in half (a herculean task, to say the least), and assuming it’s done “properly,” the savings would amount to less than 5% of the federal budget. Roughly equivalent to one-year growth of the federal budget. The whole effort would mean having for 2025 the fiscal budget of 2024. That would have no meaningful impact whatsoever on the path to fiscal responsibility.
For the most part, DOGE is a marketing campaign. In particular, the entire USAID budget for 2024 is $27 billion, which is a rounding error in the federal budget. In a properly managed company, savings from USAID would be handled by a fourth- or fifth-level manager, who wouldn’t even report directly to the head of any unit.
One can only wonder why so much presidential attention is devoted to such an insignificant issue. I have my own guess
Craig
Mar 19 2025 at 2:44pm
“For the most part, DOGE is a marketing campaign. In particular, the entire USAID budget for 2024 is $27 billion, which is a rounding error in the federal budget. ”
The problem with this logic is that Big Government itself makes very large expenditures small as a percentage of the whole…..therefore….don’t bother.
Death by a billion cuts, JP.
Jose Pablo
Mar 19 2025 at 3:19pm
Nah!, there are just around 20 cuts of this size (of around 27 billion) in the Federal Government’s direct spending, not billions (by any stretch of the imagination).
On the other hand, there are, certainly, some “arterial hemorrhages” in the Federal Budget:
1.7 trillion in Medicaid and Medicare
1.4 trillion in Social Security
1.4 trillion (5% of GDP) in defense (around 120% of Russia’s GDP!)
0.8 trillion in transfers to States
I bet none of these “arterial hemorrhages” are going to be properly tackled by DOGE”. It is, indeed, a marketing campaign, Craig
Jose Pablo
Mar 19 2025 at 3:29pm
Don’t get me wrong, Craig, I firmly believe that I (and not my government) should be the one deciding how much foreign aid I want to finance. And I do believe there’s plenty of waste within government ranks.
I just don’t fool myself into thinking that this is as relevant as Trump and Musk are trying to make us believe. Optimizing these insignificant expenditures is a task for low-level government employees (interns, for instance).
I sometimes stand in line at my supermarket gas station. I save a few bucks and feel good about it. But I don’t fool myself into thinking that this is some incredibly important activity that will save my domestic economy.
And, of course, I don’t even let my friends know about this. I am fully aware that my opportunity cost standing in line is higher than the savings.
Craig
Mar 19 2025 at 4:44pm
“Don’t get me wrong, Craig”
Phew!@! You had me worried there for a moment.
john hare
Mar 19 2025 at 7:24pm
I think you are targeting the critical issue here. The federal government shouldn’t be in the medical business, or the retirement business, or in the educational loan business, or, or, or. To me, there is massive savings to be had that would jumpstart the economy into double digit expansion. Mainly from people being able to invest instead of paying certain taxes.
I’m sure the military could do the job with a lot less as well, but I have no idea of which is muscle and which is fat. I have noticed that often the less productive spend a bit more time on appearances that the productive don’t such that the wrong people get RIFed.
Alan Goldhammer
Mar 19 2025 at 2:48pm
My views on both Musk and President Trump are well known and I won’t dwell on them. The right way to do this job is how Vice President Gore and Elaine Kamarck attacked this back in 1992. They eliminated mounds of Federal regulations and reduced government employment by over 400K over six or so years. I was tangentially involved, being asked for input on some biopharma regulations (and was likewise involved back in 2008 when Obama won).
What the Gore Reinventing Government initiative did was tangible and made a difference. To my knowledge not a single lawsuit was filed against this effort (IIRC).
nobody.really
Mar 21 2025 at 12:53pm
You don’t say….
Mactoul
Mar 20 2025 at 12:06am
USAID was essentially a scam to transfer money to favored journalists and fatcat NGOs whose directors were getting lavish salaries.
DOGE is an operation to end such enrichment of Left leaning bodies. Also, with NGOs that do all kinds of climate related mischief and propaganda.
So, it is a political operation whose value is not calculable in dollar terms.
Jon Murphy
Mar 20 2025 at 5:38am
If that’s the case, than DOGE is unconstitutional and quite possibly illegal.
Mactoul
Mar 20 2025 at 8:27pm
And perfectly constitutional to transfer billions to one’s pals for ideological subversion and run disinformation campaign globally?
Jim Harper
Mar 20 2025 at 7:43am
The federal government has been highly resistant to reform through decades of effort. My piece, Haste Controls Waste, offers a defense of the DOGE approach despite my reservations.
Knut P. Heen
Mar 20 2025 at 10:20am
This is an agency problem, not an optimization problem. A slow process gives people an opportunity to become entrenched.
Moreover, you do not fire people because they have low marginal productivity, you usually pay them accordingly. The problem is at the other end of the distribution. People with high marginal productivity who are paid far too much because they have been clever enough to get entrenched in their positions.
I doubt there are such a thing as key personnel. There are key positions, like a pilot in a plane, but you can change the pilot.
Jon Murphy
Mar 20 2025 at 12:15pm
While I am sympathetic to the “entrenched” point, I don’t think it’s as major a factor that can justify DOGE’s chaos. Example: Clinton was able to substantially downsize the Federal government in a deliberate manner.
Jon Murphy
Mar 20 2025 at 11:00am
To all making the “haste” point:
Speed isn’t even accomplishing those goals, though. Most of the cuts have been rolled back and a vast majority of them are, well, fake.
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