From Ben Samuels <[email protected]>
Subject Missouri's insanely bloated government(s)
Date April 8, 2025 2:11 PM
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Two things are true:
DOGE is ineffective, harming Americans, damaging faith in our government at home and our standing abroad, and run by a eugenicist [ [link removed] ] and generally bad person.
Government is bloated, and it’s not particularly efficient.
Want an example? Look no further than the counties in Republican-controlled Missouri.
Article summary:
Missouri’s centuries-old system of county government makes it harder to deliver high-quality services to its residents. Lots of states face similar issues.
A lack of accountability—no recent public data, few journalists, exemptions from reporting requirements—makes it hard to know why certain counties are so much less efficient than others.
If Missouri’s Republican supermajority were serious about efficiency, this is the first place they’d look. (But of course, they aren’t serious.)
We have way too many counties
Missouri has 115 counties, fifth-most of any state in the country [ [link removed] ]. That stat alone indicates serious bloat, but when you dig into the data, you start to realize how absurd it is that Missouri has that many counties:
56 counties—nearly half!—have smaller populations than they did in 1900 [ [link removed] ]. (For context, the U.S. population has grown 4.5× in that time [ [link removed] ].)
60 counties have populations smaller than 20,000. Those make up the vast majority of Missouri’s counties that have been shrinking for the last century-plus.
Once upon a time—when James Buchanan was President, and the Transcontinental Railroad [ [link removed] ] was still a decade or two away—this made sense. In the horse-and-buggy era, even if you had paved roads, you weren’t moving faster than 5-8 mph [ [link removed] ]. And since hardly any of the country’s roads were paved [ [link removed] ] back then, in practice you were moving even more slowly than that.
In that era, the services that a county provided [ [link removed] ]—everything from surveying to getting licenses to recording transactions to registering births and deaths—you had to be close to your county seat. Otherwise, there was no other way to do any of this without spending days on the road.
The need for this many counties is entirely obsolete
The problem now is that this whole set-up is totally vestigial:
You can reach your county offices by phone, and 98% of Americans have a phone [ [link removed] ].
You can access many records online. 96% of Americans use the internet [ [link removed] ], and 90% of Americans have broadband internet access [ [link removed] ].
You can reach your county officials by email, and well over 90% of Americans have email addresses [ [link removed] ].
If all else fails, and you have to go to your county seat in person, you can get there in an automobile, and 94% of Missourians have a personal vehicle [ [link removed] ]. (In rural Missouri, the rates are even higher than that.) You can drive there on roads where the speed limits are at least 50 mph [ [link removed] ], and usually much higher.
We’ve set up an entire system of government that works really well for people living in 1861, back when Missouri’s newest [ [link removed] ] and least populous county [ [link removed] ] was formed.
But for people living in 2025? We’re still using the exact same structure of government. It’s costly and it’s not necessary.
Having this many counties is inefficient, wasteful, and dangerous
Here’s a comparison between some of the state’s smallest counties and its largest.
People in rural Missouri make meaningfully less than people in urban Missouri [ [link removed] ]. And across rural Missouri, counties are spending significantly more (as a percentage of county per capita income) than cities.
The system we have now is inefficient, wasteful, and dangerous. This can and should be fixed.
Here’s why it’s inefficient.
There are certain fixed costs associated with running counties: maintaining a county courthouse and paying 13 elected officials, for instance. If five small counties merged, they could cut these costs by 80%. But the inefficiency is much deeper than that.
Take, for instance, the roads.
21% of rural roads in Missouri are in poor condition [ [link removed] ], the seventh-highest rate in the country.
Consequently, Missouri has some of the country’s highest rates of rural non-interstate traffic fatalities [ [link removed] ].
Even the smallest counties have many 100s of road miles [ [link removed] ] that they maintain.
To get roads repaired, counties need to contract out that work. But with so many small counties:
Counties are forced to bid against other small counties, meaning that critical work doesn’t get done for longer.
Counties lose the critical negotiating leverage with more volume, and they probably end up paying more.
Because of the poor state of Missouri’s rural county roads, people are needlessly dying. With larger counties, we could address those issues faster and more cost-effectively.
Here’s why it’s wasteful.
Let’s compare Missouri’s elected coroners.
First of all, I have no idea why Clark County pays its coroner so much more, given that it has roughly the same population as Putnam and Sullivan Counties.
Second, I also wonder why Sullivan and Clark Counties, whose collective population is half of McDonald County’s, each pays its coroner more than McDonald County.
Finally, I question whether each of these counties can even find qualified coroners.
Missouri’s statutory qualifications for the position are shockingly lax [ [link removed] ], requiring no knowledge of what it takes to be a coroner. There just aren’t that many people I’d consider qualified for the role, since there are only 61,000 funeral service workers [ [link removed] ] in the whole country.
I’m sure that the coroners of Putnam, Sullivan, Clark, and McDonald Counties are fine people. But statistically speaking, when 1-in-5,600 Americans is qualified to be a coroner, and when a tiny fraction of Americans want to run for public office [ [link removed] ], the odds that they live in one of those counties and want to run for office are pretty darn low.
With larger counties, the pool for these technical roles is larger. Training and support for coroners is a real issue [ [link removed] ]; the Missouri Legislature, to its credit, recognizes this. Merging the state’s smaller counties will lead to a larger pool of more qualified people running for office.
We can joke about this with coroners. But when it comes to Prosecuting Attorneys or Treasurers—both elected positions—this is a very real and very acute problem, where (living) people will suffer if we don’t have qualified people in those roles.
Here’s why it’s dangerous.
I already talked about the fact that Missouri’s inadequate roads are literally killing people. This goes beyond that.
I wanted to run an analysis on whether Missouri’s rural counties were systematically spending more. But I couldn’t do that. Why? Only a small percentage of Missouri’s counties have up-to-date data with the auditor’s office [ [link removed] ], because for no obvious reason, counties are literally exempt [ [link removed] ] from certain reporting requirements with the State Auditor.
Large swaths of Missouri, like the rest of the country, are increasingly news deserts [ [link removed] ] without robust local reporting. In all of Missouri, there are only 580 reporters [ [link removed] ], one of the lowest ratios of reporters-to-residents in the country. In the northern part of the state, there are just 30.
Why does this matter? Because without good data and without proper reporting, it’s extremely hard to hold all of these local governments accountable—either to responsible spending or to fend off corruption or both.
Who’s reviewing contracts to make sure there isn’t self-dealing? Who’s there to explain why Chariton County is so much less efficient than Linn County, its direct neighbor to the north?
With this much inefficiency, no one is being properly held to account. And the way that Missouri has structured its governments is leading to less efficient spending, less accountability, and more corruption [ [link removed] ].
This issue isn’t limited to Missouri
I’m using Missouri as an example, but this is true just about everywhere in the country.
Hardly anyone has done anything to reconcile inefficient and outdated county governments in more than a century [ [link removed] ]. I’m more familiar with Missouri than other states, but it’s clear to me that other states are flailing around with the same bloated governments too.
With the right reforms, government can work better
There is a remarkable lack of imagination in government today. Our bloated, antiquated, dispersed systems of government are inefficient, dangerous, and bad for residents.
In the grand scheme of things, does it matter whether a small county pays its coroner $16,000 or $52,000? No, not really.
What does matter: our systems are not well set up to deliver the best services possible to people, around the state and around the country.
This gets at the farce of DOGE: they aren’t doing anything to meaningfully cut federal spending [ [link removed] ]. And unless they improve laws and processes, which they’re not, what they’re doing will make federal programs worse, and people will suffer as a result.
Urban areas have their problems too, something I’ve written about before [ [link removed] ]. Democrats are falling short in making government work well, and that’s hurting Democratic electoral hopes everywhere. People are right to be angry about what they’re seeing in some of the country’s bluest states.
No matter where you are, it’s essential that we do more to make government efficient. Democrats must be talking more about that—especially if the Trump Administration is needlessly barreling us towards a recession [ [link removed] ].
But since Republicans control Missouri, and since Missouri’s [ [link removed] ] elected [ [link removed] ] Republicans [ [link removed] ] are [ [link removed] ] so [ [link removed] ] keen [ [link removed] ] on [ [link removed] ] attacking [ [link removed] ] government [ [link removed] ] inefficiency [ [link removed] ], why don’t they show us the way: merge counties and create a better, leaner, more efficient government for everyone.
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