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Government Spends More on Corporate Welfare Subsidies than Social Welfare Programs

GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT 2012/06/22 14:11:34
I support corporate welfare & think they should get more taxpayer dollars
I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
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Isn't it amazing that during a time when it's fun for our politicians to demonize people who have lost so much since the economic meltdown--they are unwilling to end the Corporate Welfare because all the Republicans have signed Grover Norquist's "No Tax Increase" pledge?

About $59 billion is spent on traditional social welfare programs. $92 billion is spent on corporate subsidies. So, the government spent 50% more on corporate welfare than it did on food stamps and housing assistance in 2006.

Before we look at the details, a heartfelt plea from the Save the CEO’s Charitable Trust:

There’s so much suffering in the world. It can all get pretty overwhelming sometimes. Consider, for a moment the sorrow in the eyes of a CEO who’s just found out that his end-of-year bonus is only going to be a paltry $2.3 million.

“It felt like a slap in the face. Imagine what it would feel like just before Christmas to find out that you’re going to be forced to scrape by on your standard $8.4 million compensation package alone. Imagine what is was like to have to look into my daughter’s face and tell her that I couldn’t afford to both buy her a dollar sign shaped island and hire someone to chew her food from now on, too. To put her in that situation of having to choose… She’s only a child for God’s sake.”

It doesn’t have to be this way. Thanks to federal subsidies from taxpayers like you, CEO’s like G. Allen Andreas of Archer Daniels Midland was able to take home almost $14 million in executive compensation last year. But he’s one of the lucky ones. There are still corporations out there that actually have to provide goods and services to their consumers in order to survive. They need your help.

For just $93 billion a year the federal government is able to provide a better life for these CEO’s and their families. That’s less than the cost of 240 million cups of coffee a day. Won’t you help a needy corporation today?

The Traditional Welfare Queen

When one thinks about government welfare, the first thing that comes to mind is the proverbial welfare queen sitting atop her majestic throne of government cheese issuing a royal decree to her clamoring throngs of illegitimate babies that they may shut the hell up while she tries to watch Judge Judy. However, many politically well-connected corporations are also parasitically draining their share of fiscal blood from your paycheck before you ever see it. It’s called corporate welfare. The intent here is to figure out which presents the greater burden to our federal budget, corporate or social welfare programs.

There are, of course, positive and negative aspects to this spending.The primary negative aspect is that you have to increase taxes to pay for it. Taxing businesses puts people out of work, which results in more welfare enrollees, which requires further taxation of business, which puts more people out of work, an infinitely cumulative cycle which will ultimately result in a rip in the fabric of space and time, eventually producing an inverse big bang phenomenon. Also, taxing individuals lowers their standard of living.It reduces people’s ability to afford necessities like medical care, education, and low mileage off-road vehicles. The common usage definition of social welfare includes welfare checks and food stamps. Welfare checks are supplied through a federal program called Temporary Aid for Needy Families. Combined federal and state TANF spending was about $26 billion in 2006. In 2009, the federal government will spend about $25 billion on rental aid for low-income households and about $8 billion on public housing projects. For some perspective, that’s about 3 percent of the total federal budget.

TANF (Temporary Aid to Needy Families)

Another negative aspect relates to the fact that social welfare programs reduce the incentive for recipients to become productive members of society. However, in 1996, Congress passed a bill enacting limited welfare reform, replacing the Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program with the new Temporary Aid to Needy Families (TANF) program. One key aspect of this reform required recipients to engage in job searches, on the job training, community service work, or other constructive behaviors as a condition for receiving aid. The bill was signed by a man named Bill Clinton, who is much better known for an act of fellatio which, of course, had far greater societal implications. Regardless, the success of this reform was pretty dramatic. Caseloads were cut nearly in half. Once individuals were required to work or undertake constructive activities as a condition of receiving aid they left welfare rapidly. Another surprising result was a drop in the child poverty rate. Employment of single mothers increased substantially and the child poverty rate fell sharply from 20.8 percent in 1995 to 16.3 percent in 2000.

Child Poverty by Living Arrangements

The Corporate Welfare Queen

Now, let’s consider the other kind of welfare.

Definition: corporate welfare

n. Financial aid, such as a subsidy, provided by a government to corporations or other businesses.

The Cato Institute estimated that, in 2002, $93 billion were devoted to corporate welfare. This is about 5 percent of the federal budget. To clarify what is and isn’t corporate welfare, a “no-bid” Iraq contract for the prestigious Halliburton, would not be considered corporate welfare because the government technically directly receives some good or service in exchange for this expenditure. Based on the Pentagon’s Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) findings of $1.4 billion of overcharging and fraud, I suppose the primary service they provide could be considered to be repeatedly violating the American taxpayer. On the other hand, the $15 billion in subsidies contained in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, to the oil, gas, and coal industries, would be considered corporate welfare because no goods or services are directly returned to the government in exchange for these expenditures.

Energy Subsidies Infographic

Tax breaks targeted to benefit specific corporations could also be considered a form of welfare. Tax loopholes force other businesses and individual taxpayers without the same political clout to pick up the slack and sacrifice a greater share of their hard-earned money to decrease the financial burden on these corporations. However, to simplify matters, we’ve only included financial handouts to companies in our working definition of corporate welfare.

Whenever corporate welfare is presented to voters, it always sounds like a pretty reasonable, well-intended idea. Politicians say that they’re stimulating the economy or helping struggling industries or creating jobs or funding important research. But when you steal money from the paychecks of working people, you hurt the economy by reducing their ability to buy the things they want or need. This decrease in demand damages other industries and puts people out of work.

Most of the pigs at the government trough are among the biggest companies in America, including the Big 3 automakers, Boeing, Archer Daniels Midland, and now-bankrupt Enron.

Farm Subsidies

However, the largest fraction of corporate welfare spending, about 40%, went through the Department of Agriculture, most of it in the form of farm subsidies. (Edwards, Corporate Welfare, 2003) Well, that sounds OK. Someone’s got to help struggling family farms stay afloat, right? But in reality, farm subsidies actually tilt the cotton field in favor of the largest industrial farming operations. When it comes to deciding how to dole out the money, the agricultural subsidy system utilizes a process that is essentially the opposite of that used in the social welfare system’s welfare system. In the corporate welfare system, the more money and assets you have, the more government assistance you get. Conversely, social welfare programs are set up so that the more money and assets you have, the less government assistance you get. The result is that the absolute largest 7% of corporate farming operations receive 45% of all subsidies. (Edwards, Downsizing the Federal Government, 2004) So instead of protecting family farms, these subsidies actually enhance the ability of large industrial operations to shut them out of the market.

Farm Subsidies

Wal-Mart. Always high subsidies. Always.

The same is true in all other industries, too. The government gives tons of favors to the largest corporations, increasing the significant advantage they already have over smaller competing businesses. If, in the court of public opinion, Wal-Mart has been tried and convicted for the murder of main street, mom-and-pop America, then the government could easily be found guilty as a willing accomplice. Wal-Mart receives hundreds of millions of dollars of subsidization by local governments throughout the country. These subsidies take the form of bribes by local politicians trying to convince Wal-Mart to come to their town with the dream of significant job creation. Of course, from that follows a larger tax base. For example, a distribution center in Macclenny, Florida received $9 million in government subsidies in the form of free land, government-funded recruitment and training of employees, targeted tax breaks, and housing subsidies for employees allowing them to be paid significantly lower wages. A study by Good Jobs First found that 244 Wal-Marts around the country had received over $1 billion in government favors.

The Big Picture

So now let’s look at the big picture. The final totals are $59 billion, 3 percent of the total federal budget, for regular welfare and $92 billion, 5 percent of the total federal budget, for corporations. So, the government spends roughly 50% more on corporate welfare than it does on these particular public assistance programs.

Should we spend less on corporate welfare and/or social welfare programs? Or should we spend even more? It’s up to you. A bunch of people died horrible deaths to make sure this country remained a democracy, so if you feel strongly about this issue you owe it to them to call or write your congressman and senators and give them a piece of your mind.

Read More: http://thinkbynumbers.org/blog/government-spending...

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Top Opinion

  • Don Leuty 2012/06/24 17:50:21
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Don Leuty
    +8
    The government should not be in the business of picking winners and losers, that is the function of a free market..

    I do not support open-ended social welfare, either. When a hand up becomes an entitlement, the government is suborning sloth.

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  • MarinerFH 2012/06/24 19:21:52 (edited)
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    MarinerFH
    +2
    The definition(s) given here for "Subsidies" are inaccurate.

    The farm subsidies were begun under FDR. Energy Subsidies have exploded under Obama. The Oil Depletion Allowances are also on FDR.
    Now the GM Bailout was Union Welfare and Solidra was Green Welfare. Those have boomed under the current administrations.

    When one gives bogus definitions and information, one can claim anything.
  • GuruA2J... MarinerFH 2012/06/25 04:56:25
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT
    It's one thing to assist a fledgling area of the economy. When energy companies are making double-digit BILLIONS in pure profits there is no way they need or should be given those subsidies.

    IMHO green energy sources should get subsidies for a limited amount of time.

    What you call the GM bailout was a loan & everybody had to make sacrifices to get that loan, including the UAW.

    I don't care if the "farm subsidies" started under FDR. Huge agricultural interests such as Monsanto should NOT be receiving them. If anybody should get them it should be the small family farmer.
  • MarinerFH GuruA2J... 2012/06/25 16:01:30
    MarinerFH
    What you call energy subsidies are the common deductions available to all corporations and farmers.

    Oil companies make 7% gross profit on sales and less than 3% net profit. Over 2/3 of those go to Stock Holders, like Unions and Pension Funds.

    Apple Computer makes 38% profit and has more sales than Exxon-Mobil. And Apple makes their products in China with Customer Service in India. Why are you not attacking Apple Computer?

    Is it just that you have drunk the KoolAid of the left and just parrot the talking points???
  • GuruA2J... MarinerFH 2012/06/25 23:45:26
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT
    Don't insult my intelligence by using such miniscule percentages. Those oil companies have been making double-digit BILLIONS in PURE PROFIT (that means NET PROFIT).

    I refuse to buy anything from Apple as a result of their business practices. I don't care if "malicious code writers" target the Windows OS over Apple's. The day I spend over $3000 for a computer is the day I need my head examined.

    BTW, I'm sick of y'all using the terminology of the Jonestown massacre of roughly 30 years ago to denigrate people's intelligence. I have a mind of my own, I think for myself & nobody dictates to me how I should take a stand on ANYTHING.
  • MarinerFH GuruA2J... 2012/06/25 23:56:29
    MarinerFH
    What intelligence? Where have you been hiding it?

    America's three biggest oil companies, ExxonMobil ( XOM - news - people ), Chevron ( CVX - news - people ) and ConocoPhillips ( COP - news - people ), all endure income tax burdens of more than 40%--higher than the statutory U.S. rate of 35%. Exxon, with a 45% rate, tallied $21.6 billion in worldwide income taxes for 2010. Wal-Mart Stores ( WMT - news - people ) paid $7.1 billion (at a rate of 32.4%) in income taxes.

    ExxonMobil paid over $10 Billion in US taxes and $89 Billion worldwide.

    By contrast. Obama supporter the giant G.E. paid no income taxes at all on American earnings of over $5 Billion.
  • GuruA2J... MarinerFH 2012/06/26 01:09:09
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT
    You just crossed the line when you denigrate me & I ALWAYS block those who can't make their point without speaking disparagingly. GOODBYE!
  • Don Leuty 2012/06/24 17:50:21
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Don Leuty
    +8
    The government should not be in the business of picking winners and losers, that is the function of a free market..

    I do not support open-ended social welfare, either. When a hand up becomes an entitlement, the government is suborning sloth.
  • Dwight-AFCL>dogsbody 2012/06/24 17:42:32
    I support corporate welfare & think they should get more taxpayer dollars
    Dwight-AFCL>dogsbody
    +6
    Since we have had a Democrat Senate for the last six years, a Democrat House for four of those six, and a Democrat president for three and a half years who did nothing to change any of it, what can this mean?

    I can only assume that Democrats support Corporate Welfare. Certainly Chris Dodd and Barney Frank saw no problem with taking donations and getting sweet deals from Corporations, and President Obama doesn't seem to have a problem with taking donations from Corporate CEO's on Wall Street.

    It must be a good thing.
  • FeedFwd Dwight-... 2012/06/24 19:21:21 (edited)
    FeedFwd
    +2
    Suspiciously missing is any mention of the welfare for green energy.... a la Solyndra, or "welfare" for public companies like NPR, or "welfare" for "educational" research grants in important fields like women's or black studies and scams like global warming. No doubt there are statist on both sides of the aisle and no doubt the corporate farmers scratch the backs of both democrat and republican politicians to receive favors. Look at the taxes paid by companies with democrat supporters like Jeffery Immelt of GE.
  • Dwight-... FeedFwd 2012/06/24 21:12:44
    Dwight-AFCL>dogsbody
    +1
    You are correct.

    I just writing whole books on these replys.
  • Doc 2012/06/24 17:30:56
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Doc
    +6
    This poll is truly based on a false premise of fuzzy leftist political math.

    Let's take a corporation like Solydra, who got 500million in taxpayer money.
    That's corporate welfare.

    Take another corp like Apple, they made 128 billion in 2011, and paid 33 billion in taxes. That's 25%, not the highest rate of 35%. In that case they would have paid 45 billion taxes.
    This poll calls the 12 billion that Apple didn't pay SPENDING, which is mathmatically false,

    Mean while, the "Welfare Queen" pays ZERO

    This Poll states that WE spend more on Apple becasue they paid only 33 billion in taxes than we do on folks who pay NOTHING in taxes.

    This Poll is absolutley fase.

    You can not break this argument.

    This arguement is based on Math. Math is not subject to interpretaion, it IS what it IS.
  • Muriel 2012/06/23 22:20:36
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Muriel
    +1
    these politicians will do ANYTHING they feel will help get them elected.
  • chgo 2012/06/22 23:23:50
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    chgo
    +1
    great post.
  • GuruA2J... chgo 2012/06/22 23:28:52
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT
    +2
    Thanx my friend. I knew this country spent a lot on corporate welfare. When I saw that we spend nearly twice as much for corporate welfare as we do for social welfare programs that help the needy, I knew I had to share this information.
  • Tennessean 2012/06/22 19:47:27
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Tennessean
    Just as I did not believe in the bailout of Wall Street, banks, or auto companies.
  • wildcat 2012/06/22 18:48:48
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    wildcat
  • Mr. Smith 2012/06/22 17:40:54
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Mr. Smith
    +1
    This is corporatism and both sides are knee deep in it - politicians have to pay back their investors, otherwise they won't back them for reelection. Corporations who donate (invest) in a politicians campaign expect a return on that investment. If you want to end corporate welfare and corporatism, then you have break up the private/public partnership between big government and big business. How do you think we ended up with Obamacare? It's straight-up corporatism (i.e. soft-fascism)!
  • FeedFwd Mr. Smith 2012/06/24 19:24:52
    FeedFwd
    What that means in simple terms is reducing the scope and power of government as opposed to increasing it, right? Yet all we here is for more government to reduce this cronyism. If politicians are powerless to help their cronies, there will be no cronyism.
  • JohnT 2012/06/22 16:00:51
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    JohnT
    +1
    To me the biggest amount of money spent is Defense and it a fact we spend more than
    all other countries combined or 4.7GDP or for FY11 687,105,000,000 I think based upon deficit spending we need to cutback on this huge amount. We are one hell of a war machine, but we don't care much about our taxpayers including our poor or elderly. As far as the greedy corporate folks go cut them off at the knee caps. Also what about farm subsidies, and foreign aid Give me a week or two and I am sure with the help of a few non partisan economic experts we could balance the budget.
  • FeedFwd JohnT 2012/06/24 19:28:49
    FeedFwd
    +1
    Balancing the budget is easy. It just takes the will to do it and make the hard decisions required. We borrow almost 50 cents of every dollar spent. We pay cabinet members, congress critters, agency heads and the like to make those hard decisions. We should just reduce the budget of every department, across the board, by 50%. Let those highly paid managers and directors decide where to make the cuts. Done! Nobody will be happy in the short term, but it has to be done to preserve our country over the long term.
  • JohnT FeedFwd 2012/06/24 19:45:07
    JohnT
    +1
    Makes great common sense to me.
  • Manster 2012/06/22 15:54:49
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Manster
    +2
    If a corporation makes poor decisions,that puts it in jeopardy of failing,they should be allowed to fail,and another business will likely spring up and take their place,hopefully with better results.
  • ☠ Live Free Or Die ☠ 2012/06/22 15:22:54
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    ☠ Live Free Or Die ☠
    +2
    How about no welfare?
  • Gloria 2012/06/22 15:15:56
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Gloria
    +4
    Corporations are not people. They need none of our taxes.
  • Roger 2012/06/22 15:01:26
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    Roger
    +2
    There should be no kind of welfare for anyone
  • JohnT Roger 2012/06/22 16:29:53
    JohnT
    +1
    How about a little input on perhaps a solution then? You know the 45 million kids in poverty and the six million seniors that cannot afford to eat? Perhaps just decrease the surplus population that will teach them not to plan, just get rid of them.
  • Roger JohnT 2012/06/22 17:08:53
    Roger
    +1
    Take away all income taxes,Destroy all fedral institutions except the military,post office and they can work on infrastructure. Have a flat tax of 20%,lower regulations,follow the constitution. Senriors have families allow them to take care of them,scum on welfare can have 6 months of unemployment then there cut off. People that have 20 kids just to get extra welfare deport them they are useless scum.
  • FeedFwd JohnT 2012/06/24 19:34:50
    FeedFwd
    Nothing like cold feet and a hungry belly to motivate you to make better choices instead of relying on others. There are plenty of charitable organizations who can and will take care of the needy, especially if taxes are lowered and people are able to contribute more. A lot of people make bad, self-destructive choices because their are no incentives to make good choices and often perverse incentives to make bad choices.
  • TheBadOne 2012/06/22 14:34:16
    I do NOT support corporate welfare & think they should sink or swim on their own
    TheBadOne
    +3
    If you want to get rid of welfare, you have to start with the top-down. I don't agree with the Liberal solution of throwing money at a problem in hopes it goes away, but the GOP has taken the rather disingenuous position of acting like social programs are bankrupting us when, in actuality, they merely want to allow that money to be available for their cronies until we suffer through another economic meltdown. And when that happens, they never blame their failed policies or the greed of their cronies who fleeced millions or billions from the system, but the single mother who receives a few thousand dollars worth of aid annually. Unbelievable.
  • JohnT TheBadOne 2012/06/22 16:07:17
    JohnT
    +3
    Good evaluation of our current condition. The GOP has no problem with corporate greed but to invest in human beings is such a waste, I find that mentality a human failure of their party.
  • Blank B... JohnT 2012/06/22 17:17:58
  • GuruA2J... Blank B... 2012/06/22 19:24:40
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT
    It's ridiculous their clamoring for raw milk. Raw milk can carry salmonella, E. coli & listeria. How often have recalls been issued because people got sick or died after ingesting food stuffs that were infected with any of these organisms?
  • GuruA2J... JohnT 2012/06/22 19:25:33
    GuruA2J~#IOKIYAR~612 BLOCKT
    +1
    So do I John.
  • FeedFwd TheBadOne 2012/06/24 19:37:59
    FeedFwd
    Spending twice the federal revenue is what is bankrupting us. It doesn't matter how we collect revenue or how we spend the money. The fact is that for the past few years, we have been borrowing almost 50% of every dollar spent. That simply isn't sustainable and taxing a few % more cutting spending by a few percent isn't going to solve the problem!
  • TheBadOne FeedFwd 2012/06/25 01:19:27
    TheBadOne
    +1
    We could stand to scale back the war machine first before we tell old ladies on Social Security that they're the reason we're going broke.

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