The “swamp” includes most government employees. Their
priorities are driven by higher government spending on their wages, benefits
and perks.
Federal government employees earn more than their private
sector counterparts in all categories except for the highest paid professions.
The federal government
employs about 2.2 million civilian workers—1.5 percent of the U.S.
workforce—spread among more than 100 agencies in jobs that represent over 650
occupations. As a result, the government employs workers with a broad
complement of talents, skills, and experience, and it competes with other
government and private-sector employers for people who possess the mix of
attributes needed to do the work of its agencies.
In fiscal year 2016,
the government spent roughly $215 billion to compensate federal civilian
employees. About two-thirds of that total was spent on civilian personnel
working in the Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, or
the Department of Homeland Security. Federal employees typically receive
periodic increases in their wages on the basis of performance, longevity, and
changes in private-sector pay. However, lawmakers eliminated annual
across-the-board increases for most federal civilian workers in calendar years
2011, 2012, and 2013.
https://www.cbo.gov/publication/52637
Comments
Government employees often have obsolete software and lack
other tools to increase their productivity. Government at all levels needs to update
equipment to save on expensive, unnecessary labor. Consultant and Contractor
costs are often out of control and bids can be double what they should be. Government employees have no incentive to
save money. They are encouraged to spend their entire budgets to avoid having
them cut.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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