http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/2005-09-13-katrina-spending_x.htmCost of Katrina to hit budget hard
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By Mark Trumbull, The Christian Science Monitor
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Think of it as the financial equivalent of another Iraq war.
Relief efforts for the storm-ravaged Gulf Coast throw a huge fiscal burden onto a U.S. Treasury that is already deep in the red.
Spending tied to hurricane Katrina has hit as much as $2 billion per day, or about 10 times the amount the United States is spending on military operations in Iraq. The pace will slow, but the recovery effort could easily cost the federal government $150 billion, experts say. Spread over a couple of years, that would roughly match the $6 billion a month being spent in Iraq.
As staggering as these numbers are, the question is not whether America can absorb this shock but whether it will alter the mind-sets of policymakers and financiers on other budget matters.
Already, for example, some U.S. lawmakers cite the storm as a reason to reconsider plans to cut entitlement programs, which would shrink government assistance to the poor by $35 billion over five years. At the least, the looming tab for everything from road repairs to business loans is a reminder that America's current budgetary path is not sustainable.
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