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kaggle-ho-020837House Oversight

Fiscal analysis of US entitlement spending and tax trends framed as corporate analogy

Fiscal analysis of US entitlement spending and tax trends framed as corporate analogy The passage provides macro‑economic observations and generic questions about entitlement spending, tax rates, and efficiency, but it does not identify specific individuals, transactions, or actionable leads. It lacks concrete names, dates, or financial flows that could be pursued, offering only broad policy commentary. Key insights: Entitlement spending has grown ~5% annually since 1965, now 51% of total US expenses.; Corporate income taxes have risen 2% per year, while social insurance taxes grew 5% per year.; Defense and non‑defense discretionary spending has risen only 1‑2% annually.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-020837
Pages
1
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0
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Summary

Fiscal analysis of US entitlement spending and tax trends framed as corporate analogy The passage provides macro‑economic observations and generic questions about entitlement spending, tax rates, and efficiency, but it does not identify specific individuals, transactions, or actionable leads. It lacks concrete names, dates, or financial flows that could be pursued, offering only broad policy commentary. Key insights: Entitlement spending has grown ~5% annually since 1965, now 51% of total US expenses.; Corporate income taxes have risen 2% per year, while social insurance taxes grew 5% per year.; Defense and non‑defense discretionary spending has risen only 1‑2% annually.

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kagglehouse-oversightfiscal-policyentitlement-spendingtax-trendsgovernment-budgetingeconomic-analysis
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