Fortune USA 201902

(Chris Devlin) #1
1982
1984
1986
1987
2018
1981
1984
2018
1982
1983
1990
1995
1977
1977
1976
1979
1977
2013
1978
1995
2018

REAGAN
REAGAN
REAGAN
REAGAN
TRUMP
REAGAN
REAGAN
TRUMP
REAGAN
REAGAN
H.W. BUSH
CLINTON
CARTER
CARTER
FORD
CARTER
CARTER
OBAMA
CARTER
CLINTON
TRUMP

Labor, health, education, and welfare

Abortion funding
Abortion funding

Abortion funding

Nuclear-powered aircraft carrier project, abortion funding

Raises for public servants, abortion funding

Spending bill that didn’t include White House–requested cuts

Failure to pass spending bill on time

Missile programs, public works spending
Foreign aid, defense, and education spending

Crime fighting, water projects, and civil rights

Crime fighting, water projects, and civil rights

Railway privatization, welfare funding
Nicaraguan “Contra” funding

Deficit-reduction plan
Medicare premiums, deregulation

Balanced-budget requirements

Defunding Obamacare

DACA immigrants

Budget caps

01 23456

13 12 11 10 9 8 7

14 15 16 17 18 19 20

25 24 23 22 21

LENGTH OF GOVERNMENT FUNDING GAPS (DAYS)

REPUBLICAN PRESIDENT DEMOCRATIC PRESIDENT

Border wall

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R

LO

NG

ER

28 27 26

LAST BYTE


104
FORTUNE.COM// FEB.1 .19

FROM A 30,000-FOOTVANTAGE, a government shutdown doesn’t cost
much. S&P Global estimates that the border-wall impasse—the longest
in history, unresolved at press time—shaved only $3.6 billion off the U.S.
economy over its first three weeks. But other barometers, including ris-
ing airport delays and a screeching halt in IPOs, remind us how much our
commerce depends on a well-functioning state. And a recent tumble in
consumer confidence points to the ripple effects of an erosion of faith
in a system that routinely stops public servants from serving the public.
That’s a cost that could become incalculably high.—MATT HEIMER

CLOSING


COSTS


GRAPHIC BYNICOLAS RAPP

SOURCES:CONGRESSIONAL RESEARCH SERVICE; NEWS REPORTS
NOTE: DATESSHOWN HEREARE THE CALENDAR YEARINWHICHEACH SHUTDOWN STARTED.
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