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Visualizing the Cost of the U.S. Government Shutdown

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Visualizing the Cost of the U.S. Government Shutdown

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Key Takeaways

  • Roughly 1.4 million federal workers were impacted by the record U.S. government shutdown, with 730,000 working without pay and 670,000 furloughed.
  • Total delayed federal government spending was estimated to be $54 billion.

The record-long U.S. government shutdown resulted in billions in losses to the economy.

Over a million federal workers went without pay for more than six weeks, limiting their spending capacity. Meanwhile, about $2 billion in food stamp spending was delayed over the six-week period, affecting 40 million people.

This graphic shows the estimated cost of the U.S. government shutdown, based on analysis from the Congressional Budget Office.

The Government Shutdown’s $54 Billion Freeze

Below, we show the financial impact of delayed federal spending by category:

Category Six Week Shutdown Estimates
Delayed Spending on Goods and Services $36B
Delayed Compensation $16B
Delayed Spending on SNAP $2B
Total Delayed Spending $54B

As we can see, delayed compensation was estimated to reach $16 billion over a six-week period.

In total, 730,000 federal employees were working without pay, while 670,000 were furloughed. Many air traffic controllers looked for other work during the shutdown, an industry already facing a shortage of 3,903 fully certified workers prior to the shutdown.

Delayed spending on goods and services totaled $36 billion, the largest category overall. For instance, the shutdown forced the Small Business Administration to halt $170 million in federal loan guarantees per day, impacting at least 8,300 small businesses.

Given these disruptions, it is estimated that the shutdown will shave off $28 billion from real GDP in the fourth quarter of 2025. For the travel industry alone, spending fell by an estimated $5 billion.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on America’s federal workforce.