According to a  new estimate from Politico.com  the Federal bailouts from the past year could end up costing a staggering  $23 Trillion. However, the author admits that this number is a “worst-case  scenario.” Neil Barofsky, the special inspector general for the government’s  financial bailout programs, also asserts that this total is unlikely  and that a number of problems would need to emerge forcing the government  to spend more. According to Barofsky, the government has spent about  $2 Trillion so far.
Still, the enormity of the IG’s projection  underscores the size of the economic disaster that hit the nation over  the past year and the unprecedented sums mobilized by the federal government  under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama to confront it.
 
In fact, $23 trillion is more than the  total cost of all the wars the United States has ever fought, put together.  World War II, for example, cost $4.1 trillion in 2008 dollars, according  to the Congressional Research Service.
Even the Moon landings and the New Deal  didn’t come close to $23 trillion: the Moon shot in 1969 cost an estimated  $237 billion in current dollars, and the entire Depression-era Roosevelt  relief program came in at $500 billion, according to Jim Bianco of Bianco  Research.
The annual gross domestic product of  the United States is just over $14 trillion.
Treasury spokesman Andrew Williams downplayed  the total amount could ever reach Barofsky’s number.
 
“The $23.7 trillion estimate generally includes programs at the hypothetical maximum size envisioned when they were established,” Williams said. “It was never likely that all these programs would be ‘maxed out’ at the same time.”