February 10, 2025· 39 min

This Is Why It's So Hard To Cut Public Spending

Orality
Model
77%
Oral-dominant (speeches, podcasts, storytelling)

Speaker Breakdown

HostTracy Alloway(1,598 words)
M:28%
HostJoe Weisenthal(765 words)
M:29%
GuestFirtz Bartel(3,839 words)
M:25%

Oral Indicators

Agonistic36%
obviously, very, certainly
Engagement45%
you, our, your
Memory Aids100%
listen, now, so
Repetition100%
like (42x), think (41x), kind (37x)
Parallelism98%
And I'm Tracy Alloway...., So under the Trump administrat..., And I think deficits are aroun...
Sound Patterns51%
35 question(s), alliteration: "markets move", alliteration: "barclays brief"
Formulaic Phrases9%
you know what, i mean, so to speak

Literate Indicators

Hedging14%
could, perhaps, maybe
Passive Voice9%
was believed, was assumed, be taken
Abstract Nouns27%
investment, administration, ambition
Subordination12%
because, until, therefore
Sentence Length53%
Avg: 18.3 words/sentence
Word Complexity52%
investment, analyze, anticipate
Academic Markers0%
Impersonal Style55%
309 personal pronouns found
Descriptive Style100%
obviously, currently, really

Description

The Trump administration has come into office with big ambitions to lower the size of the US deficit. So far, a number of small items have been identified as possible waste. But to meaningfully bend the curve on spending, there's widespread agreement that we'd have to look at things like Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and defense. This is hard stuff to cut and it's something that governments around the world have long struggled with. How do you pull back on a prior commitment that your constituency has come to expect? In this episode of the podcast, we speak with Firtz Bartel, an assistant professor of international affairs at the Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M. He is also the author of the recent book The Triumph of Broken Promises, which examines the simultaneous economic crisis in the US, UK, and Soviet Union during the 1970s, and how each country was forced economically to essentially "break promises." We talk about what it takes politically to maintain domestic credibility for any government while undergoing such wrenching choices, and why some systems are better suited for it than others. Read More: Trump Tax Cuts’ Cost Estimated at $5 Trillion to $11 Trillion Judge Temporarily Halts Trump, Musk Federal Worker ‘Buyout’ Only http://Bloomberg.com subscribers can get the Odd Lots newsletter in their inbox each week, plus unlimited access to the site and app. Subscribe at  bloomberg.com/subscriptions/oddlots See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.