Obama: 'We're Not Lavishly Spending on a Whole Bunch of Social
Programs'
By
Susan Jones
President
Obama told a gathering of business executives on Tuesday that the federal government
was not "lavishly spending" on social programs. This probably even
surprises many that are using them!
"What
we know is, is that our -- our fiscal problems are not short-term deficits. Our
discretionary budget, that portion of the federal budget that isn't defense or
Social Security or Medicare or Medicaid, the entitlement programs, is at its
smallest level in my lifetime, probably since Dwight Eisenhower. We are not
lavishly spending on a whole bunch of social programs out there," Obama
continued. "And in many ways, a lot of these programs have become more
efficient and pretty effective," he added.
The
U.S. Treasury Department records the following expenditures on a few of the
many social safety-net programs for Fiscal 2013 and Fiscal 2012. In most cases,
the amounts increased year-to-year:
·
Medicaid:
$265.392 billion ($250.534B in FY 2012)
·
Food
stamps (SNAP): $82.548 billion ($80.401B in FY 2012)
·
Housing
and Urban Development Department: $56.576 billion ($49.578B in FY 2012)
·
Supplemental
Security Income: $56.489 billion ($50.674B in FY 2012)
·
Child
Nutrition Programs: $19.325 billion ($18.309B in FY 2012)
·
Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families: $17.017 billion (16.136B in FY 2012)
·
Women, Infant and Children (WIC): $6.557
billion ($6.837B in FY 2012)
As
CNSNews.com has reported, Americans who were recipients of means-tested
government benefits in 2011 outnumbered year-round full-time workers, according
to data released in October by the Census Bureau.
Among
the 108,592,000 people who fit the Census Bureau’s description of a
means-tested benefit recipient in the fourth quarter of 2011 were
·
82,457,000 people
in households receiving Medicaid;
·
49,073,000 beneficiaries of food stamps;
·
20,223,000 on Supplemental Security Income;
·
23,228,000 in the Women, Infants and Children program;
·
13,433,000 in public or subsidized rental housing;
·
and
5,854,000 in the Temporary
Assistance for Needy Families program.
Also
among the
108,592,000 means-tested benefit recipients counted by the Census Bureau were people
getting free or reduced-price lunch or breakfast, state-administered
supplemental security income and means-tested veterans pensions.
According
to a 2012 Heritage Foundation analysis, the means-tested welfare system consists of
79 federal programs providing cash, food, housing, medical care, social
services, training, and targeted education aid to poor and low-income
Americans. Heritage calculated that total federal and state
means-tested welfare spending reached $927 billion in Fiscal Year 2011.
President
Obama on Tuesday said health care costs are driving deficits:
"So
when we talk about our deficit and debt problems, it is almost entirely health
care costs. You eliminate the delta -- the difference between what we
spend on health care and what every other country -- advanced, industrialized
nation -- spends on health care, and that's our long-term debt. And if
we're able to bend the cost curve, we help solve the problem.
"Now,
one way to do that is just to make health care cheaper overall. That's, I
think, the best way to do it, and that's what we've been doing through some of
the measures in the Affordable Care Act."
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