Elon Musk says his D.O.G.E wouldn’t destroy US job market: “There is infinite potential”

Source Cryptopolitan

Elon Musk doesn’t want to hear about the scarcity mindset. The eccentric billionaire, co-leading Donald Trump’s Department of Government Efficiency (D.O.G.E), says the U.S. job market is nowhere near as fragile as people make it out to be.

Elon believes in limitless possibilities for job and business creation, especially when driven by innovation. “The ‘fixed pie’ fallacy is at the heart of much wrong-headed economic thinking,” he said on X (formerly Twitter). “There is essentially infinite potential for job and company creation. Think of all the things that didn’t exist 20 or 30 years ago!”

D.O.G.E and its bold goals have triggered a heated national conversation this Christmas, not just about job creation but about immigration reform, AI policy, and America’s fiscal future.

The bold promises and harsh realities of D.O.G.E

D.O.G.E is an advisory group with a sweeping mandate: cut $2 trillion from federal spending. That’s nearly equivalent to the U.S. government’s projected deficit for 2024. Their plans are massive layoffs, slashing agency budgets, and gutting all regulations they see as “bloated.”

The proposal is ambitious to a fault. Elon and his co-lead Vivek Ramaswamy envision reducing the federal workforce by up to 75%. That’s three-quarters of federal employees potentially losing their jobs—a figure staggering enough to send chills through Washington. But experts aren’t buying it.

Around 75% of federal spending is tied to mandatory programs like Social Security and Medicare, which are politically untouchable. This leaves only $1.7 trillion in discretionary spending to target, with half of that earmarked for defense, an area Trump has historically been reluctant to trim.

Even with aggressive efficiency cuts—estimated savings of $150 billion to $200 billion annually—the numbers fall laughably short of the $2 trillion target. Critics say the math doesn’t add up, and failing to meet these goals could backfire.

Higher borrowing, ballooning deficits, and escalating interest payments (already devouring $880 billion annually) could seriously destabilize the economy.

Immigration reform and innovation debates collide

While D.O.G.E has its sights set on trimming bureaucracy, Elon’s comments about “infinite potential” renewed debates about immigration and the workforce. Entrepreneur Joe Lonsdale brought immigration reform to the forefront, referencing Trump’s senior AI policy adviser pick, Sriram Krishnan.

Krishnan has been vocal about eliminating country-based caps for green cards, arguing that the U.S. needs to prioritize skills over nationality. “Anything to remove country caps for green cards/unlock skilled immigration would be huge,” he wrote on X.

He called the current system “bizarre,” pointing out how it penalizes individuals based on their birthplace rather than their contributions. David Sacks, Trump’s White House crypto and AI czar, weighed in, supporting Krishnan’s merit-based approach.

“Sriram still supports skills-based criteria for receiving a green card, not making the program unlimited,” Sacks said, adding that it is critical to maintaining America’s leadership in AI and emerging technologies.

Elon didn’t miss the chance to tie the immigration discussion back to his D.O.G.E ambitions, doubling down on his belief in innovation as the ultimate driver of economic growth. Trump himself underlined Krishnan’s importance to the administration, saying that he would work closely with Sacks on AI policy across government agencies.

Is D.O.G.E fiscal disaster in the making?

First, the target savings of $2 trillion appear wildly out of reach, even if inefficiencies are ruthlessly cut. The U.S. is already swimming in over $36 trillion in national debt, with the Congressional Budget Office projecting it to hit 166% of GDP by 2054.

If D.O.G.E fails to deliver substantial savings, the government will have no choice but to borrow even more. Trump has already called for eliminating the statutory debt ceiling, which could temporarily avoid debt crises but risks unchecked borrowing in the long term.

And then there’s the issue of tax cuts. If Elon and Trump propose cutting taxes without slashing spending proportionately, deficits will explode further.

During Trump’s first term, his administration added nearly $8 trillion to the national debt, thanks partly to tax breaks. If D.O.G.E adopts a similar strategy, the U.S. could see its debt spiral even faster, making an already precarious situation worse.

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