Federal workforce shrank by 256,000 in 2025. Deficit barely moved.

Federal workforce shrank by 256,000 in 2025. Deficit barely moved.

Spread the love

The federal civilian workforce shrank by nearly 256,000 employees, 11.3%, across every major agency in 2025, a government watchdog report confirmed, providing the first comprehensive accounting of the Trump administration’s workforce cuts.

The Government Accountability Office reports found the workforce across 22 of 24 major federal agencies fell from 2.27 million to 2.01 million employees between December 2024 and January 2026. The net reduction of 256,000 employees was the result of nearly 378,000 separations offset by about 127,000 new hires.

Chris Edwards, a federal tax and budget expert at the Cato Institute, estimated the reductions saved taxpayers about $41 billion annually – just over 2% of the federal deficit.

“New hires do not inherently mitigate or offset the effects of separating employees on the agency’s ability to meet its mission or current and future financial obligations,” a GAO spokesperson said.

The 378,000 gross separations exceeded OPM Director Scott Kupor’s August 2025 projection of about 300,000 departures. The federal workforce fell by 256,000, net of new hires.

Of the nearly 378,000 employees who separated from their agencies during the year, 83% retired or resigned voluntarily, including about 129,000 who left under the government’s deferred resignation program. Agencies hired about 127,000 workers during the same period.

The Department of Education saw the steepest decline, losing 45.6% of its workforce and falling from 4,273 to 2,326 employees. The General Services Administration fell 36.8%, Housing and Urban Development 30.5% and Energy 29.4%. Two agencies did not provide data to GAO, but OPM figures show the Small Business Administration fell 37% and USAID dropped 95%.

The Internal Revenue Service, a Treasury Department subagency, lost more than 5,000 employees, ending the period with 74,557 workers.

Desmond Lachman, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and former deputy director at the International Monetary Fund, said the cuts could hurt revenue collection over time.

“You might want to fire everybody else, but you don’t fire the people who are enforcing the taxes,” he told The Center Square.

The IRS estimates the gross tax gap, the difference between taxes owed and taxes paid on time, at $696 billion for tax year 2022.

Edwards said the fiscal impact was limited.

“They reduced the workforce, but that really hardly affected the deficit,” he told The Center Square.

Edwards said the cuts were most meaningful in agencies he views as duplicative of state government functions.

“A lot of the cuts were in activities that were simply duplicative of what state governments were doing anyway,” he said.

He noted Education fell 45.6% and HUD 30.5%, both areas where state and local governments already operate their own programs.

Edwards said the workforce reductions likely left significant empty federal office space, a longstanding taxpayer cost. “Department of Education has gone from 4,300 workers to 2,300. They need half the office space they used to have in DC,” he said.

The Department of Veterans Affairs ended the period with 445,256 employees, well above the roughly 400,000 target the agency set in partnership with DOGE in March 2025. The VA abandoned plans for a large-scale reduction in force by July 2025 after attrition and voluntary departures reduced headcount by nearly 30,000 without forced cuts.

Lachman said the cuts are unlikely to change the country’s fiscal trajectory.

“I don’t think that that’s going to make much of a dent in the budget deficit,” he said.

The Congressional Budget Office projects the deficit will grow from 5.8% of GDP in 2026 to 6.7% by 2036. Interest payments on the national debt topped $970 billion in fiscal year 2025, more than the government spent on national defense, according to a separate GAO report on the nation’s fiscal health.

OPM, the White House and the majority staff of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee did not respond to requests for comment by deadline. Sen. Rand Paul leads the committee.

The GAO report, GAO-26-108583, was requested by Sen. Gary Peters, D-Mich., ranking member of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, and dozens of other Democratic lawmakers. It was released June 17.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

U.S. Ed Dept. investigates Puyallup wrestler’s sexual assault allegation by trans athlete

U.S. Ed Dept. investigates Puyallup wrestler’s sexual assault allegation by trans athlete

By Brett DavisThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Education is investigating the Puyallup School District for how it handled an alleged sexual assault of a female wrestler late last...
FRESH program would provide one-time SNAP cash; critics question cost

FRESH program would provide one-time SNAP cash; critics question cost

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – As new federal work requirements for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program take effect this month, Illinois...
Partial government shutdown imminent as Congress leaves town

Partial government shutdown imminent as Congress leaves town

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Lawmakers have left town after failing to pass the Homeland Security full-year funding bill, ensuring a partial shutdown of DHS beginning Saturday. This is the...
Illinois Quick Hits: Man sentenced for robbing postal worker

Illinois Quick Hits: Man sentenced for robbing postal worker

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A federal judge has sentenced a Chicago man to four years and three months in prison for...
Sultan in Epstein files resigns, global turmoil continues

Sultan in Epstein files resigns, global turmoil continues

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square An executive of a Dubai-based company resigned on Friday after documents released by the Justice Department tied him to convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Sultan...
Temporary protected status terminated for Yemen nationals

Temporary protected status terminated for Yemen nationals

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square Yemeni nationals in the U.S. on temporary protective status will have 60 days to leave the country. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem announced...
Advocates argue new data center restrictions might close Illinois market

Advocates argue new data center restrictions might close Illinois market

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers have proposed stricter regulations on data centers in the state, but an industry advocate says...
Illinois advocates urge senate action on SAVE Act

Illinois advocates urge senate action on SAVE Act

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois election-integrity advocates are pushing the U.S. Senate to agree with a recent House move and...
Ford returning to the Middle East as tensions rise with Iran

Ford returning to the Middle East as tensions rise with Iran

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square A second aircraft carrier is en route to the Middle East as tensions build with Iran, according to multiple reports. The USS Gerald Ford, the...
Lemon faces federal arraignment today in St. Paul church protest case

Lemon faces federal arraignment today in St. Paul church protest case

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Journalist Don Lemon is scheduled to appear in a Minnesota courtroom today to be arraigned on federal charges related to a protest that disrupted a...
Senate GOP wants companies funding lawsuits to be revealed

Senate GOP wants companies funding lawsuits to be revealed

By John O’Brien | Legal NewslineThe Center Square U.S. Senate Republicans have introduced a bill targeting companies that invest in lawsuits, proposing rules that would force them to identify themselves...
Election 2026: Cooper social post is now you see it, now you don’t

Election 2026: Cooper social post is now you see it, now you don’t

By Alan WootenThe Center Square Roy Cooper vetoed mandatory requirement of photo identification in 2018. Thursday, the U.S. Senate candidate vetoed a photo of himself presenting photo ID to cast...
Illinois Quick Hits: Chicago mugging captured on video

Illinois Quick Hits: Chicago mugging captured on video

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A video capturing an armed assault and robbery Thursday afternoon in Chicago has drawn millions of views...
January inflation cools to 2.4%, lowest since May

January inflation cools to 2.4%, lowest since May

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Consumer prices rose by 0.2% overall in January, according to recent data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Overall, the inflation rose to...
McCuskey praises federal rollback of Endangerment Finding

McCuskey praises federal rollback of Endangerment Finding

By Chris Dickerson | Legal NewslineThe Center Square West Virginia Attorney General J.B. McCuskey is praising the federal government’s decision to repeal an Obama-era scientific finding on climate change. On...