『DOGE Efficiency Drive: Massive Federal Workforce Cuts Yield Minimal Savings, Spark Controversy in Government Overhaul』のカバーアート

DOGE Efficiency Drive: Massive Federal Workforce Cuts Yield Minimal Savings, Spark Controversy in Government Overhaul

DOGE Efficiency Drive: Massive Federal Workforce Cuts Yield Minimal Savings, Spark Controversy in Government Overhaul

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Government efficiency was never supposed to be funny, but the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, has turned into something like the DOGE coin of bureaucracy: a viral experiment whose hype has far outstripped its underlying value.

Launched by the Trump administration with Elon Musk as its most high-profile champion, DOGE promised to slash two trillion dollars in federal spending, gut red tape, modernize government tech, and “evict the deep state.” According to Reason magazine, a year in, it has done far less than advertised on the money side, even as it has dramatically shaken the machinery of government. Reason reports that federal spending rose from about $6.29 trillion in fiscal 2024 to roughly $6.66 trillion in 2025, while many of DOGE’s loudly touted “savings” rely on accounting gimmicks, such as counting the full value of canceled contracts even after much of the money was already spent. Politico’s investigation found that of $145 billion in claimed contract savings through mid‑2025, only about $1.4 billion was verifiable cash savings.

Where DOGE has bitten hardest is people, not pennies. The Bureau of Labor Statistics data, highlighted by Reason and Fortune, show roughly 97,000 fewer federal workers by August and a 162,000 plunge in federal employment around the end of fiscal 2025, as employees took buyouts or resigned under pressure from what Fortune called Musk’s purge of the government payrolls. The Washington Times notes that DOGE is on track for the largest peacetime reduction in the federal workforce, yet with “record workforce reduction, zero savings,” as overall outlays in 2025 continue to climb.

Meanwhile, Wikipedia’s summary of federal agencies targeted by DOGE, drawing on reporting from the New York Times, Washington Post, Wired, and others, describes something closer to a hostile takeover than a quiet efficiency drive: embedded DOGE teams gaining access to core payment and data systems, freezing grants, rewriting procurement rules, and triggering lawsuits and injunctions as judges push back on overreach.

So is DOGE the future of lean government or just a meme stapled to the bureaucracy? For now, it looks like a volatile political asset: high drama, heavy human cost, modest measurable gains, and a market price in trust and stability that may be far higher than advertised.

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