Government shutdown didn't save money. It cost $2 billion, report says.
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| Washington
The federal government鈥檚 partial shutdown last month was a costly exercise in agreeing to disagree. Now we know exactly how costly.
Or at least, we have a preliminary price tag estimated by the Obama administration.
The roughly two-week hiatus in many federal operations represents 鈥渃ost of lost productivity鈥 exceeding $2 billion, says Sylvia Mathews Burwell, director of the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
That鈥檚 not an estimate of the total economic costs of the shutdown. It鈥檚 just the cost that accrues to taxpayers from taking thousands of federal employees off the job, not getting any work out of them for a couple of weeks, and then restoring their lost pay after the shutdown ended.
Economists say this practice makes no sense, yet it鈥檚 become a pattern for those rare occasions when a budget impasse between Republicans and Democrats results in a temporary refusal to fund government operations.
In those cases, the result is a lose-lose situation. It interrupts the paychecks of federal workers, disrupts federal services that many Americans count on, while eventually making sure workers get paid for the time that Congress told them to stay home.
Although Ms. Burwell didn鈥檛 try to quantify the effect on the nation鈥檚 economic output, she said that independent forecasters have estimated that the shutdown will subtract 0.2 to 0.6 percentage points from the fourth quarter growth (with the economy growing in the neighborhood of 2 percent per year).
Late last month, President Obama鈥檚 Council of Economic Advisers estimated that the slowdown in growth hindered private sector employment, costing an estimated 120,000 jobs.
An OMB report released Thursday sheds additional light on the shutdown鈥檚 impacts. Here are some of the details:
Energy. About 200 drilling permits were delayed because the Bureau of Land Management was unable to process applications.听
Science. 鈥淐ritical government-sponsored scientific research was put on hold,鈥 the report said. 鈥淔our of the five Nobel prize winning scientists who work for the Federal government were furloughed during the shutdown.鈥
Foreign trade.听Import and export licenses and applications were put on hold, negatively impacting trade.
Tax refunds. Almost $4 billion in tax refunds were delayed.
Fisheries. The shutdown delayed the Alaskan crab fishing season, because the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration was unable to apportion harvest levels. This means some lost industry revenue, 鈥渟ince days lost at the beginning of the season cannot be made up later.鈥
Aircraft purchases. Closure of the Federal Aviation Administration鈥檚 aircraft registry delayed an estimated 156 aircraft deliveries valued at $1.9 billion.听
Late fees. The federal government will owe interest because the shutdown delayed payments such as money owed to contractors. Burwell didn鈥檛 put a dollar figure on the interest costs, but the report said 鈥渂illions of dollars of payments鈥 were late.
Tourism. Closure of national parks and Smithsonian museums cost an estimated $500 million in lost visitor spending nationwide, an 鈥渆conomic hit to communities surrounding national parks.鈥
Furloughs for federal workers. Federal employees sat home for a combined total of 6.6 million days, more than in any previous government shutdown. This exceeded the total in a 1995-96 episode in part because back then, Congress had passed appropriations bills that funded many federal agencies despite the shutdown. This time, at peak, about 850,000 employees were on furlough at one time.
Many government services such as Social Security and unemployment benefits continued as usual during the recent shutdown, because they were labeled 鈥渆ssential鈥 or had sources of funding that don鈥檛 depend on annual appropriations from Congress.