>
> So, what's a big government?  Are there any other national statistics for
> comparison?


The real question is: Why in hell does no one know just how good a job
Obama is doing?  He's mute!  Why?

The best speech at the DNC was Clinton, and then Michelle!  Why is Obama so
unwilling to defend what good he has done?

Makes me not want to vote for him.  Sigh!

   -- Owen

On Fri, Sep 14, 2012 at 12:58 PM, Roger Critchlow <r...@elf.org> wrote:

> This graph shows the government employees in the US, all levels of
> government, divided by the population of the US.
>
> http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/fredgraph.png?graph_id=87170
>
> Color me surprised.  The government/capita has been 0.0725+/-0.0025 since
> 1982.  Variation in the last digit, 0.0001, represents ~31500 employees in
> our current population of ~315 million, so there's room for a lot of wiggle
> there.  But it looks like a resource limited growth curve that met its
> limit 30 years ago and has danced around the limit since then.
>
> This graph shows the federal government employees in the US divided by the
> population of the US.
>
> http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/graph/fredgraph.png?graph_id=87182
>
> The federal/capita fell from 0.016 to 0.009 over these 60 years, most
> steeply under the Clinton administration.  The only federal/capita
> increases in the last 60 years were during Johnson's "Great Society" and
> Reagan's administration.  The most recent federal contraction started under
> Bush1 in 1988 and has brought us from 0.013 to 0.009 federal
> employees/capita.  Obama's stimulus started to reverse the trend, but he's
> now running the leanest federal/capita in the last 60 years.
>
> The rough constancy overall since 1988 is a crowd sourced result combining
> decisions made by 50 state and ~87000 local governments while the federal
> government shrank.
>
> So, what's a big government?  Are there any other national statistics for
> comparison?
>
> -- rec --
>
>
>
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