Elon Musk has said he would consider giving American taxpayers a payout from DOGE savings.
The Tesla CEO responded to a proposal on X (formerly Twitter) suggesting a âDOGEÂ Dividend.â
In other words, Musk would give Americans a $5,000 tax refund check using savings from the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE).
The idea was pitched by James Fishback, CEO of Azoria and an outside adviser to DOGE. Fishback is also an outspoken supporter of Trump and Musk and posted the idea on X.
He posted on X: âPresident Trump and @ElonMusk should announce a âDOGE Dividendââa tax refund check sent to every taxpayer, funded exclusively with a portion of the total savings delivered by DOGE.â
The CEO also attached a pretty in-depth PDF that he titled âThe case for a DOGE Dividend.â
Musk replied to the proposal with a short but intriguing message: âwill check with the Presidentâ.
As the SpaceX founderâs response was gaining reach, he responded to another post, adding: âObviously, the President is the Commander-in-Chief, so this is entirely up to himâ.
Fishback thanked Musk for his response and said that he was âhonoredâ that the worldâs richest man expressed interest in âour DOGE Dividend proposal for President Trump.â
Fishback also insisted that the âDOGE Dividendâ would not âbe inflationary,â claiming it would be funded entirely by savings from the agency.
Either way, Trump would need to approve the proposal before anything was to happen.
When Vivek Ramaswamy â who Trump originally planned to have run DOGE alongside Musk â stepped down from the agency, Fishback told NBC News he was âwilling to step upâ and take his place.
James Fishback/X
According to doge.gov, DOGE has already saved $55 billion by cutting government waste. The savings reportedly come from a combination of âfraud detection/deletion, contract/lease cancellations, contract/lease renegotiations, asset sales, grant cancellations, workforce reductions, programmatic changes, and regulatory savings,â as per their official website.
Since its launch during Trumpâs second term, DOGE has been praised for reducing spending through a reduction in the federal workforce, and cancellation of grants and contracts.
But the agency has also been criticised for reportedly getting unrestricted access to sensitive government data across multiple federal agencies, including the Treasury Department.
Elsewhere, the head of DOGE was invited to Fort Knox by Republican Senator Paul of Kentucky to inspect the US gold reserves after it was revealed thereâs no yearly audit of the stash.
The Bullion Depository holds around 147 million troy ounces of gold, representing over half (56%) of the US federal gold reserves.