Estimates vary on the economic impact of government shutdowns, but by most measures, the just-completed standoff cost the economy roughly $15 billion per week. Since the shutdown lasted seven weeks, the U.S. economy just took a $105 billion hit.
For most of us, that sounds like an enormous amount of money, but given the size of the nation’s overall gross domestic product, $15 billion per week in lost economic output is unfortunate but not disastrous.
With that in mind, Donald Trump apparently decided it was time to exaggerate the cost of the shutdown — a lot. In an item published to his social media platform, the president argued: “The Democrats cost our Country $1.5 Trillion Dollars with their recent antics of viciously closing our Country.”
That was, by any responsible metric, bonkers. Trump appears to have taken a credible number and, on a whim, started adding zeroes so that he could use the word “trillion.”
As it happens, it’s a word he struggles with all the time. Take this week, for example.
On Monday, the president wrote online that he’s expecting tariff revenue to be “in excess of $2 Trillion Dollars.” A day later, he published another missive in which he boasted about tariff revenue “in excess of 3 Trillion Dollars.”
Both figures were spectacularly wrong, but more important was the question hanging overhead: How did the total go from $2 trillion to $3 trillion in the span of one day?
Similarly, in October, Trump made a series of boasts about international investments in the United States that he’s secured. He started by claiming the total was $17 trillion. It was soon after revised to “very close to $18 trillion.” In the days that followed, the new total was “$18 trillion,” followed by “over $18 trillion.”








