Cost of bureaucracy exploded under Biden, report shows

A report by Open The Books reveals that federal payroll costs in the United States rose significantly from $217 billion in fiscal year 2020 to $270 billion by the end of fiscal 2024, during the Biden administration. This 24% increase in spending contrasted with only a 5% rise in federal employee headcount, driven mainly by a considerable growth in highly paid positions. The number of federal workers earning over $200,000 nearly doubled, with similar increases among those earning over $100,000 and $300,000. Benefits add an estimated additional 30% to the total cost, making the true expense of federal bureaucracy even higher.

Furthermore, openness issues persist as payroll data for hundreds of thousands of employees in 56 agencies were redacted, and sensitive agencies withheld information citing national security. The report calls for urgent reforms to improve transparency so taxpayers can better assess government spending.

Supporters argue that higher pay attracts talented professionals who might otherwise avoid government roles, citing Singapore’s efficient and well-compensated civil service as a positive example. Critics,however,claim that President Biden has expanded bureaucracy inefficiently by hiring many staff focused on diversity,equity,and inclusion (DEI),with the administration spending $38.5 million on DEI personnel in 2023.

Financial regulatory agencies had the highest average federal salaries, with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and Securities and Exchange Commission employees averaging over $200,000 annually.In contrast, the Trump White House reduced its staff costs by 29% compared to Biden’s, with fewer overall staff but competitive top salaries, possibly reflecting a move toward a more streamlined, well-paid bureaucracy modeled after Singapore’s approach.


Cost of bureaucracy exploded under Biden, report shows

Federal payroll costs ballooned from $217 billion during fiscal 2020 to $270 billion by the end of fiscal 2024, a new report published by Open The Books has found.

For the federal government, fiscal 2020 began in October 2019 and fiscal 2024 ended in September 2024, covering almost the entirety of the Biden administration.

The 24% increase in salary payments corresponded to just a 5% increase in headcount, according to the report. Such a gap is explained by a surge in well-paid roles within the federal bureaucracy. By the end of fiscal 2024, the number of employees earning $200,000 or more had increased to 68,445, representing a gain of 82% since fiscal 2020. The number of federal workers earning over $100,000 and more than $300,000 increased by 49% and 84%, respectively, over the same period.

The $270 billion payroll figure underreports the true cost of the bureaucracy, as Open The Books estimates benefits for federal employees cost an additional 30%. 

Open The Books reported that the names of 383,000 people working in 56 agencies were redacted in federal records. Furthermore, the Office of Personnel Management declined to provide payroll data for employees at intelligence agencies, the State Department, the IRS, the National Nuclear Security Administration, and the Bureau of Prisons over national security concerns. 

(Open The Books)

“A fix for the transparency gap is urgently needed, particularly in light of an administrative state that’s living increasingly high on the hog,” the report reads. “In order to drain the swamp effectively, taxpayers must be able to see through the silt and measure the depth.”

Some have argued that a well-paid bureaucracy can retain high-quality talent that would usually avoid government service in favor of lucrative careers in finance or consulting. Advocates point to Singapore, famous for its highly compensated and efficient civil service, as evidence for their claims. 

Conservative critics charge that former President Joe Biden diverged from a pursuit of bureaucratic efficiency by hiring large numbers of staffers tasked with advancing diversity, equity, and inclusion in the federal government. Open The Books previously reported that the Biden administration spent $38.5 million paying DEI staffers in 2023.

During the Biden administration, average pay was highest at financial regulatory agencies. The average employee at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission and the Securities and Exchange Commission earned $236,006 and $213,869, respectively, at the end of fiscal 2024.

‘AN EXORBITANT AMOUNT’: TOP GOP SENATE AIDE CHARGED TAXPAYERS $44,000 FOR HIS COMMUTE

There is some evidence that President Donald Trump is beginning to reverse the Biden administration’s approach to bureaucracy, according to Open The Books. Trump’s White House, for instance, has 404 staffers who collectively cost taxpayers $44.1 million — the lowest since 2009, when adjusting for inflation. This represents a 29% decrease in cost from the Biden White House, which had the largest headcount since the Nixon administration. 

Trump, perhaps taking a page out of the Singaporean playbook, pays his top staff comparably well. Thirty-five of the president’s staffers earn $195,000 or more — a salary just one Biden staffer took home in 2024.


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