Background: In most of my classes I will either show the picture nearby of federal agency acronyms (remember that none of these are cabinet departments spelled out in the Constitution), or start writing them one-by-one on the blackboard while rattling off their name and purpose. If I show the slide I’ll see how many agencies students can identify from their acronym (usually not very many, and I’ve forgotten some of these myself), but if I recite them seriatim,after a few minutes students get the point: the government is massive, and largely beyond the direct—or even indirect—control of voters. (Recall Obama saying that he couldn’t control the “independent” National Labor Relations Board when it tried to stop Boeing from opening a plant in South Carolina. No reporter thought to follow up: “Mr. President, just who does control the NLRB if it’s not you?”)
[. . .]

Clyde Wayne Crews of the Competitive Enterprise Institute reports:
Digging through other counts offered by federal officials, he found an online Federal Register Index of 257.

United States Government Manual lists 316.
Then there was a 2015 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing during which a senator listed over 430 departments, agencies and sub-agencies.
“As bureaucracy sprawls, nobody can say with complete authority exactly how many federal agencies exist,” blogged Crews on the CEI site.

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2015/09/just-how-big-is-the-government.php
POSTED ON SEPTEMBER 13, 2015
JUST HOW BIG IS THE GOVERNMENT?
The answer is . . . no one really knows. At least the government can’t tell you.





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