Shop Local: Power Your Community and Cut the Deficit

Hello, everyone! 😊 Your smart choices can power your community and help shrink America’s $2 trillion budget deficit. Shopping at local stores keeps money in your neighborhood, supports your neighbors, and saves you cash, while boosting taxes to ease federal debt. In contrast, buying from international platforms like Temu or Amazon (when they source from abroad) can hurt local businesses and widen the deficit. In 2024, the government spent $6.9 trillion, with $690 billion just for debt interest. Shop local, budget wisely, and advocate for balanced budgets to build a secure future! 💪

Shopping local supercharges your community’s economy. Spend $100 at a local store, and ~$68 stays in your town, compared to $43 at chain stores and even less with international platforms like Temu, which shipped ~30% of low-value packages from China in 2024. Local businesses pay $287 per acre in property taxes, far more than big-box stores ($7/acre) or foreign platforms (near $0). These taxes fund schools and roads, cutting the need for federal programs like SNAP ($153 billion in 2024). Fewer federal dollars spent means a smaller deficit. Local shops also employ 47% of U.S. workers, keeping neighbors off unemployment and reducing federal welfare costs.

International platforms harm local economies. Temu’s low prices, enabled by tariff loopholes until 2025, grabbed 17% of the U.S. market, hurting small businesses and local jobs. Less local tax revenue and more unemployed workers increase federal spending, growing the deficit. Plus, Temu’s products have faced quality and safety concerns, like toxic chemicals, which could raise healthcare costs. Amazon, when sourcing abroad, also reduces local taxes and jobs, though it supports some U.S. sellers. Shopping local keeps money and jobs at home.

Your neighbors thrive when you shop local. Small businesses create 66% of new U.S. jobs and donate 2.5x more per employee to local charities, like food banks. A local coffee shop or market supports workers who spend locally, strengthening your community. You also save money—local shopping cuts driving (26% fewer car miles), and farmers’ markets or repair shops are often cheaper than shipped goods. Use savings to pay debts, like a $10,000 student loan at 5.5% interest ($100-$150/month). Budgeting locally saves thousands in interest, like paying $10/month on a $100 credit card debt to save ~$30.

Try this: visit a local market, track expenses with YNAB, or cut takeout to save $10-$20 for debt. For the government, post on social media about balancing budgets, or discuss cutting wasteful spending (e.g., unused programs) with friends. Try: “Leaders, cut the $2 trillion deficit with smart budgets!” The chart below shows how local spending keeps money in your community.

Your choices boost local taxes, reduce federal program demand, and ease the deficit. If millions spend $100 locally, billions stay home, cutting borrowing and keeping taxes low. Be proud—you’re a community leader! Take one step this week: shop local, budget for debt, or post about the deficit. Every choice counts. Join us next week for another way to help! 🙌 #BalanceTheBudget #YouGotThis


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4 responses to “Shop Local: Power Your Community and Cut the Deficit”

  1. Problems is though it is almost impossible to find a local store but do buy from a national one so it at least stays in Canada
    I do buy locally at the farmers market as long as they are locally gown ( a lot of the vendors go to a big storehouse and buy the same produce as the big stores and then sell it for more while pretending it was grown locally )
    As well I glean from the farms at harvest time to give to local soup kitchens ( it does anger me though that the ones cry babying they have no food are too lazy to go out and work with me harvesting the gleaning )

    1. For sure. At least some of the money is staying local. More people need to create businesses and do the work locally so that you can keep it close. I’m sure they do that here. I just don’t know it. Just do your best. We can only do our best not someone else’s.

  2. As well I grow my own fruits, vegetables and herbs ( I do not share though because nobody says thank you and when I needed help they all turned their backs on me and did not help me )

    1. I grow as much as I can myself. Your situation reminds me of the children’s story, “The Little Red Hen.” So sorry to hear.

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