The U.S. national debt is $34 trillion. How worried should we be? - Marketplace (2024)

The U.S. national debt is about 120% of what the economy generates in a year. But is this cause for concern? Win McNamee/Getty Images

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The U.S. is in a record amount of debt. (That’s the national debt, the total amount the federal government owes its creditors.)

And now the $34 trillion question: Should we change our hard-charging ways, or should we stop worrying and learn to love the debt?

How high should the government’s debt be? Is it bad to be in a lot of debt? Should we make painful cuts to bring the debt down? These are questions coming up a lot lately, as the government comes up against another budget deadlinein early March. Yet again, Congress will have to come to a budget agreement or risk a government shutdown.

How much do we owe, anyway?

The U.S. national debt totals about $34 trillion.

“That is a really hard number to really understand, right?” said Rachel Snyderman, the director of economic policy at the Bipartisan  Policy Center in Washington, D.C.

Debt can be a great thing, she said,helping to fund important programs and deal with crises. Still, she said, when the numbers get this big, they’re almost impossible to really understand. (Does it help if I tell you that if you had 34 trillion footlong Subway sandwiches and stacked them end to end, you could get toNeptune and back? Probably not so helpful, but maybe NASA needs to know about this, and also it’s been too long since I’ve had a meatball sub).

Maybe it’s more useful to put that number into an economic context: $34 trillion is bigger than theChinese economy. Add to that the economies of Japan, Germany, India and the United Kingdom, and combined they generate about $34 trillion a year.

Debt-to-GDP Ratio

The $34 trillion is also bigger than our own economy. The United States’ gross domestic product, or GDP, which is the sum total of all the goods and services we produce in a year, is about is about $27 trillion. “ What this really shows is that the United States likes spending money more than it likes bringing in revenues,” Snyderman said.

Our debt is around 120% of what our economy generates in a year; that’s our debt-to-GDP ratio.

Is a lot of national debt bad?

So, if my friend Ralph was spending 120% of what he earned, I would strongly recommend he go on a strict spending regimen and probably stop eating Subway sandwiches entirely.

But countries are different — they can print their own money. So if you’re a country, is a lot of debt really bad? Not so bad? The truth is, we just don’t know. In fact, this very question sparked a major debate among economists in the last few years.

That’s the funny thing about the national debt: Although the numbers are knowable, very often the consequences are not.

Of course, some consequences we do know, like the amount of interest we pay on that debt: about$2 billion a day, andby 2050, theCongressional Budget Office projects the interest payments on our debt will be the country’s single biggest expense.

“Is that where Americans want their hard earned tax dollars going?” asked Snyderman. “Probably not.”

Another potential consequence of the debt? Trust issues. And that’s not as benign as it might sound.

When debt gets this high, it can alarm investors, said Raghuram Rajan, a professor of finance at the University of Chicago’s Booth School of Business, who also served as chief economist at the International Monetary Fund. “Eventually, you rack up huge debts and nobody trusts you anymore,” he explained.

Let’s do the numbers

In the world of debt, if someone doesn’t trust you, they charge you a lot of interest when they lend you money.  If you’re a country, loans come in the form of government bonds.

So when Kai Ryssdal does the numbers and says: “Bond prices fell, the yield on the 10-year T-note rose to…” Kai is talking about debt. Ten-year Treasury notes are government bonds, little loans the government sells. But the amounts it sells are not so little. The governmentsometimes sells hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of government bonds in a week. Bonds are the government’s main source of revenue along with taxes.

Make no mistake: the 10-year T-note is keeping the lights on.

The trouble with trust issues

So the government loves its bonds and investors love them too. U.S. government bonds are one of the most popular investments on the planet. The reason? Safety.

U.S. government bonds are perceived to be extremely safe. Sometimes they are even referred to as a riskless asset.

And that safety might get called into question if U.S. debt gets much higher, said economist Rajan. People might start to think: ‘Wow, the U.S. owes a lot of money. Are they going to be able to pay all of this back? If I lend them money, will they be able to pay me back?’”

If that happens on a large scale, that yield on the 10 year T-note Kai is always talking about will start going up and up.

That’s investors demanding higher interest rates for buying U.S. bonds and lending the government money. And that could be the moment when our $2 billion a day in interest payments quickly balloons, Rajan said.

And that will happen soon?

The truth is, we don’t know. That’s the other tricky thing about national debt: We don’t know the limits and whenever we think we do, we seem to be wrong, says economist Rajan. “Is there a level of debt-to-GDP that we should worry about? Yes. What is that level? We don’t know.”

What we do know is that so far, investors haven’t really blinked,even though conventional wisdom used to hold that a country’s debt should not get higher than 90% of its GDP.

“But Japan blew way past that [its debt-to-GDP ratio ismore than 250%] and nothing happened, and then Italy has blown way past that [its debt-to-GDPratio is 140%) and nothing has happened,” Rajan said. “We are in totally uncharted territory.”

Given all of that, is a measly 120% debt-to-GDP ratio really such a big deal?

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The first rule of debt crises

“Beware, because the nature of debt crises is that no one can see them coming,” said John Cochrane, an economist at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. He said debt is an important tool for a country, and its importance is why we should be so concerned.

Cochrane points out that during the Great Recession and  the COVID-19 shutdown,  the United States was able to swoop in fast with billions for  bailouts, stimulus checks and aid programs.

“Government debt is a wonderful invention,” he said. “Governments should borrow and spend carefully during wars, recessions, crises.”

But if the debt gets too big, Cochrane cautioned, the government might not be able to respond so decisively next time. The money might be slower to come, and the government might not be able to raise as much.

“If we go into another hard time, does the government have the capacity to persuade people: ‘Another $8 trillion, we’re good for it’?”

That’s when the all-important trust issues could kick in.

One possible place to start in the $34 trillion question? Congress could agree on a spending plan for this fiscal year, so the government can keep operating past March.

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The U.S. national debt is $34 trillion. How worried should we be? - Marketplace (2024)

FAQs

Should we be worried about the U.S. debt? ›

A nation saddled with debt will have less to invest in its own future. Rising debt means fewer economic opportunities for Americans. Rising debt reduces business investment and slows economic growth. It also increases expectations of higher rates of inflation and erosion of confidence in the U.S. dollar.

What is the $34 trillion national debt? ›

The $34 trillion U.S. debt is nearly as big as the economy and there's (still) no plan to fix it. John Waldron, the president and COO of Goldman Sachs, believes the country's lack of control over it's debt could risk a Truss-style economic crisis, he said at Semafor's World Economic Summit on April 18.

How much does the US owe China? ›

China (Mainland)

China is the U.S.'s second-largest foreign creditor, owing more than $1 trillion of U.S. debt. With 1.4 billion people, the world's second-largest economy and rapid economic growth, mainland China is an undisputed economic powerhouse [source: World Bank].

Who does the US owe money to? ›

Nearly half of all US foreign-owned debt comes from five countries.
Country/territoryUS foreign-owned debt (January 2023)
Japan$1,104,400,000,000
China$859,400,000,000
United Kingdom$668,300,000,000
Belgium$331,100,000,000
6 more rows

Can the US ever get out of debt? ›

Under current policy, the United States has about 20 years for corrective action after which no amount of future tax increases or spending cuts could avoid the government defaulting on its debt whether explicitly or implicitly (i.e., debt monetization producing significant inflation).

How bad is US debt compared to the world? ›

As of 2023, the United States' debt-to-GDP ratio is among the highest in the developed world, behind only Japan and Italy. However, the United States has long been the world's largest economy, with no record of defaulting on its debt. Moreover, the U.S. dollar has been the world's reserve currency since the 1940s.

Which country has no debt? ›

The 20 countries with the lowest national debt in 2023 in relation to gross domestic product (GDP)
CharacteristicNational debt in relation to GDP
Macao SAR0%
Brunei Darussalam2.33%
Kuwait3.18%
Turkmenistan4.7%
9 more rows
7 days ago

Who owns most of our national debt? ›

Public debt is held by the public: individual investors, institutions, foreign governments. After intragovernmental holdings, the next largest category is national debt held by foreign governments. Of those, Japan has the most, followed by China.

Why is the US in so much debt? ›

One of the main culprits is consistently overspending. When the federal government spends more than its budget, it creates a deficit. In the fiscal year of 2023, it spent about $381 billion more than it collected in revenues. To pay that deficit, the government borrows money.

What country owns most of the United States? ›

Which countries own the most land in the U.S.?
  • CANADA. 31%
  • Other. 28%
  • NETHERLANDS. 12%
  • ITALY. 7%
  • UNITED KINGDOM. 6%
  • GERMANY. 6%
  • PORTUGAL. 3.6%
  • FRANCE. 3.2%
Mar 29, 2024

What happens if China stops buying U.S. debt? ›

If China (or any other nation that has a trade surplus with the U.S.) stops buying U.S. Treasuries or even starts dumping its U.S. forex reserves, its trade surplus would become a trade deficit—something which no export-oriented economy would want, as they would be worse off as a result.

What country is in the most debt? ›

Japan has the highest percentage of national debt in the world at 259.43% of its annual GDP.

How much is Russia in debt? ›

Russia National Government Debt reached 284.6 USD bn in Apr 2024, compared with 283.2 USD bn in the previous month. Russia National Government Debt data is updated monthly, available from May 2009 to Apr 2024. The data reached an all-time high of 384.2 USD bn in Jun 2022 and a record low of 86.1 USD bn in May 2009.

What countries still owe the US money? ›

Top 20 Countries that Owe the US Money
  • Bermuda. Total Debt Held: $77.4 Billion. ...
  • Germany. Total Debt Held: $91.3 Billion. ...
  • Norway. Total Debt Held: $104.4 Billion. ...
  • Korea. Total Debt Held: $105.8 Billion. ...
  • Saudi Arabia. Total Debt Held: $111 Billion. ...
  • France. Total Debt Held: $183.9 Billion. ...
  • Singapore. ...
  • Brazil.
Nov 22, 2023

Which country has the highest debt in the World Bank? ›

India takes the top spot. The world's most populous country owed $38.3bn to the WB at the end of 2022, down by almost $1.5bn from a year earlier. India's outstanding balance is almost double that of the next biggest debtor, Indonesia, with $20.6bn.

Is US debt a risk? ›

The US Department of Treasury building seen in March 2023. US government debt is nearing $35 trillion. The high and rising level of US government debt risks driving up borrowing costs around the world and undermining global financial stability, the International Monetary Fund has warned.

How badly is America in debt? ›

The $34 trillion gross federal debt equals debt held by the public plus debt held by federal trust funds and other government accounts. In very basic terms, this can be thought of as debt that the government owes to others plus debt that it owes to itself. Learn more about different ways to measure our national debt.

Has the US ever not been in debt? ›

By January of 1835, for the first and only time, all of the government's interest-bearing debt was paid off. Congress distributed the surplus to the states (many of which were heavily in debt). The Jackson administration ended with the country almost completely out of debt!

How much is the US debt per 100 days? ›

At current rates, the U.S. national debt is growing by a remarkable $1 trillion about every 100 days, equal to roughly $3.6 trillion per year. As the national debt has ballooned, debt payments even exceeded Medicaid outlays in 2023—one of the government's largest expenditures.

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