newspapaer, radio, TV, magazines, internet, anything that reports on the activities of the government...want to read about it in excruciating detail...it is all absolutely available...both as projected (budget reports) and as actually done by any number of services and of course the government websites and printing offices themselves...in total or any any individual item...basically to the penny. US Treasury Dept is a good place to start, unless you are only concerned with some specific area, say education, in which case go to the health Education and Welfare site and start looking oveer their financials.
the government spends this tax money by aiding and helping everyone to obtain all their needs in the society and country.
The government spends it.
The banking and financial services industry spends the most money on information technology at 10.5 percent. The education and government industry also spend a significant amount on IT.
Government spending is the amount of money that a government allocates and eventually spends in a specific period of time. The US government spends about one trillion dollars per year.
The Cuban government spends most of their money on importing goods such as oil and food. It also spends a significant amount of money on relief programs for its citizens.
When a government spends more money in a year than it takes it, it is called a deficit. When it spends less than it takes in, it is called a surplus.
Taxes are used when ever the government spends money. Anything that was government-funded used tax money.
A pie chart dividing up the budget into categories
if a government spends more money than it brings in, it has a deficit
Yes
I think the government spends money (on regulation for instance) rather than making it
Promote the general welfare