EBOOK

What the Cuts Cut

A Field Guide to the Hidden Harm of Government Downsizing

Marjorie Stern
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Year
2026
Language
English

About

When politicians promise to cut government spending, the conversation usually revolves around budgets, agencies, and numbers. But what do those cuts actually mean for ordinary people?

What the Cuts Cut answers that question by tracing the real-world consequences of government disinvestment into the parts of life Americans care about most: their homes, healthcare, schools, jobs, transportation systems, food supply, public safety, environment, and financial security. Rather than focusing on political rhetoric or partisan debates, the book starts where people live-asking practical questions such as: What if I can't get a mortgage? What if my local hospital closes? What if my child's school loses funding? What if disaster strikes and help never arrives?

Written as a practical reference guide, each chapter examines a different aspect of daily life and explains how public systems quietly support it. Readers discover how federal programs help families buy homes, fund medical research, keep food safe, maintain roads and bridges, support schools, protect drinking water, respond to disasters, and sustain local economies. The book then explores what happens when those systems are weakened through budget cuts, staffing reductions, privatization, or the withdrawal of public investment.
Accessible, jargon-free, and grounded in everyday experience, What the Cuts Cut is designed for voters, journalists, educators, organizers, candidates, and anyone trying to understand why so many aspects of modern life feel increasingly fragile. It connects policy decisions to tangible outcomes, showing how the effects of cuts ripple outward through communities, businesses, public services, and family finances.

At its core, this book argues that government is not an abstract institution operating somewhere far away. It is embedded in the systems that make modern life work. When those systems are weakened, the consequences are often invisible at first-but eventually they become impossible to ignore. What the Cuts Cut makes those connections visible and helps readers understand not only what is being cut, but what is truly being lost.

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