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The national debt will hit 140 percent of GDP before the end of the 2040s, and that's the optimistic scenario.


Muda69

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https://reason.com/2019/06/25/man-this-cbo-report-about-unprecedented-debt-levels-is-a-bummer/

Quote

The national debt will hit "unprecedented levels" in the coming decades, soaring well above the record highs set during World War II and reaching nearly one-and-a-half times the size of the entire U.S. economy by 2049, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected in a report released Tuesday.

And that's the optimistic view.

The CBO says the national debt will hit 144 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), a rough estimate for the overall size of a country's economic output, within 30 years, even if planned spending cuts materialize next year and even if Congress repeals the 2017 tax cuts in 2026, as planned. Neither of those developments should be treated as a sure bet—and, indeed, Republicans have admitted that the planned expiration of those tax cuts was nothing more than a gimmick designed to favorably influence the CBO's analysis of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

062519CBOProjection.jpg

 

(Actually, the numbers are worse. That's because the CBO is looking only at debt held by the public, which excludes the portion of the national debt that's held as internal loans between different parts of the federal government. For the CBO's purposes, the current national debt is about 78 percent of America's GDP, though including government-held debt puts the figure above 100 percent already.)

If current tax and spending policies remain in place, the national debt will soar to 219 percent of GDP by 2049, the CBO estimates.

....

One of the major problems created by the growing mountain of debt is paying for it. That might sound obvious enough, but one of the major drivers of the long-term debt problem is the interest on the debt itself, according to the CBO's projections. Discretionary spending is expected to be mostly flat—actually, it's likely to decline a little—relative to GDP over the next three decades, but the growing cost of the debt and the increasing cost of entitlement programs are real problems.

 

062519CBOProjection3.jpg Source: Congressional Budget Office

This is also one area in which there is a tremendous amount of uncertainty in the CBO's projections. If the interest on the national debt increases—as many observers believe it will at some point, as it becomes increasingly obvious that America has more debt than it can afford—the overall cost of paying down the debt will grow.

The CBO assumes that the interest rate on the debt will never rise above 4.2 percent—well below rates paid as recently as the 1990s. "Many economists believe rising debt will raise interest rates," says Brian Riedl, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute, and the author of a plan to hold the debt in check at barely less than 100 percent of GDP. He estimates that every 1 percent rise in interest rates would add $13 trillion in interest costs over 30 years.

"So there is massive interest rate risk in these projections," he says. "Rising rates will bury us."

The national debt is "a glaring vulnerability" for America's long-term national security, warned Maya MacGuineas, president of the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, in an op-ed published this week. If China were to sell-off a sizable portion of the U.S. Treasury bonds it owns—and it owns more than $1 trillion of them—the resulting shake-up could easily trigger a rise in interest rates. Even just a 1 percent increase would cost the United States more next year than we currently spend on the entire U.S. Army, MacGuineas pointed out.

"We don't know whether China will go as far as to weaponize their Treasury holdings," she added, somewhat ominously. "Maybe they won't. Or maybe they will wait until we are in a recession, or until they want to invade Taiwan."

And if the debt crisis could arrive at any moment, well, there's no need to wait until the CBO's projections turn into reality. The debt crisis is already here. Congress, and Trump, should start acting accordingly.

And nobody in the federal government seems to care.  All they care about is getting re-elected and accumulating power.  Again, just look at the future we are setting up for our children and grandchildren.  Is this what we want, here in 2019?

 

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