ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
AP U.S. Government and Politics Videos 87 videos
AP U.S. Government 2.3 Constitutional Foundations. Which amendment stated that the right to vote could not be denied on the basis of race?
AP U.S. Government 1.3 Institutions of National Government. What did the Twenty-fifth Amendment do?
AP U.S. Government 3.1 Institutions of National Government. In what case did the Court hold that there was a Constitutional right to marital privacy?
AP U.S. Government 3.1 Public Policy 201 Views
Share It!
Description:
AP U.S. Government 3.1 Public Policy. All of the following are true about entitlements except what?
Transcript
- 00:00
Thank you We sneak in his your shmoop du jour
- 00:05
Brought to you by defense spending congress most reactionary budget
- 00:09
measures Yeah All right All the following are true about
- 00:12
entitlements Except what and hear the potential answers me man
- 00:17
down All right Ever since fdr shook up the political
Full Transcript
- 00:22
landscape during the new deal americans have felt pretty entitled
- 00:27
to certain things from their government Let's see what exactly
- 00:30
is driving the inflation of our bureaucratic ego is a
- 00:34
social security and entitlement program Well it sure is Social
- 00:39
security which provides monthly retirement benefits Toe workers makes up
- 00:42
about twenty five percent of the budget We sure which
- 00:45
we had a quarter for every time someone asked us
- 00:48
that question What about b medicare Well medicare which was
- 00:52
part of lbj's great society agenda is an entitlement program
- 00:56
that provides health care for the elderly along with medicaid
- 00:59
and the children's health insurance program which provide health care
- 01:02
for low income individuals These health insurance and tattle on
- 01:06
programs make up around twenty percent of the budget every
- 01:08
year It's a lot of room for healthy debate Do
- 01:11
see entitlements fall under the category of mandatory spending The
- 01:16
federal budget has two major areas discretionary spending which is
- 01:20
up to surprise surprise the discretion of lawmakers and then
- 01:23
we have mandatory spending which congress is forced to spend
- 01:28
even if they don't want to spend it they have
- 01:29
to entitlement programs fall into that mandatory category since benefits
- 01:34
promised toe eligible individuals are pretty non negotiable E entitlements
- 01:39
represent more than fifty percent of all federal spending Well
- 01:43
let's say we're up to forty five percent with social
- 01:45
security and those health insurance programs but they're also benefits
- 01:49
for federal retirees and veterans wants another eight percent plus
- 01:53
there's unemployment insurance food stamps and other safety net programs
- 01:57
well that's another twelve percent right there though the entitlement
- 02:00
glasses weigh more than half full which means the government
- 02:03
does not d spend more on defense than on entitlements
- 02:09
even though defense counts for about twenty percent of discretionary
- 02:12
spending each year That's only a third as muchas is
- 02:14
spent on entitlements which account for over sixty percent of
- 02:18
the budget So d is that correct answer Because discretionary
- 02:21
spending on lee makes up one third of the budget
- 02:23
each year advocates for defense spending really have tio stick 00:02:28.028 --> [endTime] To their guns in order to guarantee their funding
Related Videos
AP U.S. Government 2.2 Public Policy. What did the Budget Impoundment Control Act do?
AP U.S. Government 1.1 Institutions of National Government. What was the scale of representation in the House of Representatives when the Constitut...
AP U.S. Government 2.3 Civil Rights and Liberties. Classifications based on sexual orientation receive...what?
AP U.S. Government 1.3 Political Beliefs and Behaviors. What sort of poll would you commission to monitor popularity over three months?
See how much you know about British political factions. That's what the cool kids read about nowadays, right? Well...we think it's cool.