Debt Be Not Proud: The Sorry Tale of Americaâs Out-of-control Spending
By John Steele Gordon Monday, September 7, 2009
Filed under: Government & Politics, Economic Policy
How the richest country in the history of the world got into a position where its debt is spiraling out of control.
At the end of fiscal 2008, which came on September 30 of last year, the American national debt stood at $9.6 trillion. That sum is, perhaps, quite beyond the imagining of most people. It is, after all, 250 million times the average per capita income. Even the total fortunes of the entire Forbes 400 list add up to less than 15 percent of it. To use a journalistic measure that dates back to the late 18th centuryâwhen the British national debt had become a major political issue in that countryâif you laid 9.6 trillion silver dollars end to end, they would reach to the sun and back, with enough left over to wrap around the Earth more than 1,700 times.
But while that is a nice little bit of mathematical calculation, it still does not tell us much that is useful, for the size of a national debt in absolute terms is meaningless. Only when it is measured against the size of a countryâs GDP do we get a sense of a national debtâs real size, just as a bank looks at a familyâs income to determine how large a mortgage it is willing to give.
And the United Statesâ economy is so large that the seemingly titanic sum of $9.6 trillion is only 60.8 percent of American GDP. The national debts of France and Canada are similar, with France at 68.1 percent of GDP and Canada at 63.8 percent. Italyâs debt, in contrast, is over 100 percent of its GDP, while Japanâs is a staggering 173 percent. The worldâs two emerging economic giants, India and China, have sharply different debt loads. Indiaâs national debt is 61.3 percent of its rapidly rising GDP, while Chinaâs is a mere 16.2 percent.
So the United States' national debt is not out of line with those of other major countries and has been much higher in the past. At the end of World War II, the debt was nearly 130 percent of GDP.
The budget deficit for fiscal 2009 is estimated to be a staggering $1.6 trillion, larger than the entire national debt as recently as 1984.
Thatâs the good news.
The bad news is that the debt is rapidly rising, both in absolute terms and relative to GDP, thanks to the current recession, the stimulus effort to end that recession, and the bailout of the countryâs financial system. The budget deficit for fiscal 2009 is estimated to be a staggering $1.6 trillion, larger than the entire national debt as recently as 1984. It is the largest peacetime deficit (measured as a percentage of federal revenues) since 1936, when the country was still in the throes of a far worse economic downturn. The deficit will cause the ratio of debt to GDP to rise to over 80 percent by the end of fiscal 2009. That will be the highest it has been since 1950.
Worse, the Obama administration is projecting unprecedented annual deficits over the next ten years if its political agenda of cap and trade, universal healthcare, and other expensive programs is enacted. According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, these programs will average more than 4 percent of GDP each year and total $9.3 trillion over the decade. That would mean a doubling of the national debt in absolute terms and at least a 50 percentage point rise in the ratio of debt to GDP, taking us back nearly to where the debt was at the end of World War II.
And that, of course, assumes a quick recovery from the current recession and an economy expanding at a rate averaging 2.5 percent a year beginning in 2010. If the economy were to continue to lag or the country face a serious crisis, such as a major war, or if the Obama agenda is enacted and turns out to be more expensive than estimatedâas government programs usually doâthe result could be a debt load that not even the United States could sustain. The only alternatives would then be a tax rate that would cripple the economy, radical reductions in government spending, or a deliberate policy of inflation that would send interest rates soaring.
If the economy were to continue to lag or the country face a serious crisis, or if the Obama agenda is enacted and turns out to be more expensive than estimated, the result could be a debt load that not even the United States could sustain.
How did the richest country in the history of the worldâand one with great international financial responsibilitiesâget into a position where its debt might easily spiral out of control? A little history explains a lot.
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By John Steele Gordon Monday, September 7, 2009
Filed under: Government & Politics, Economic Policy
How the richest country in the history of the world got into a position where its debt is spiraling out of control.
At the end of fiscal 2008, which came on September 30 of last year, the American national debt stood at $9.6 trillion. That sum is, perhaps, quite beyond the imagining of most people. It is, after all, 250 million times the average per capita income. Even the total fortunes of the entire Forbes 400 list add up to less than 15 percent of it. To use a journalistic measure that dates back to the late 18th centuryâwhen the British national debt had become a major political issue in that countryâif you laid 9.6 trillion silver dollars end to end, they would reach to the sun and back, with enough left over to wrap around the Earth more than 1,700 times.
But while that is a nice little bit of mathematical calculation, it still does not tell us much that is useful, for the size of a national debt in absolute terms is meaningless. Only when it is measured against the size of a countryâs GDP do we get a sense of a national debtâs real size, just as a bank looks at a familyâs income to determine how large a mortgage it is willing to give.
And the United Statesâ economy is so large that the seemingly titanic sum of $9.6 trillion is only 60.8 percent of American GDP. The national debts of France and Canada are similar, with France at 68.1 percent of GDP and Canada at 63.8 percent. Italyâs debt, in contrast, is over 100 percent of its GDP, while Japanâs is a staggering 173 percent. The worldâs two emerging economic giants, India and China, have sharply different debt loads. Indiaâs national debt is 61.3 percent of its rapidly rising GDP, while Chinaâs is a mere 16.2 percent.
So the United States' national debt is not out of line with those of other major countries and has been much higher in the past. At the end of World War II, the debt was nearly 130 percent of GDP.
The budget deficit for fiscal 2009 is estimated to be a staggering $1.6 trillion, larger than the entire national debt as recently as 1984.
Thatâs the good news.
The bad news is that the debt is rapidly rising, both in absolute terms and relative to GDP, thanks to the current recession, the stimulus effort to end that recession, and the bailout of the countryâs financial system. The budget deficit for fiscal 2009 is estimated to be a staggering $1.6 trillion, larger than the entire national debt as recently as 1984. It is the largest peacetime deficit (measured as a percentage of federal revenues) since 1936, when the country was still in the throes of a far worse economic downturn. The deficit will cause the ratio of debt to GDP to rise to over 80 percent by the end of fiscal 2009. That will be the highest it has been since 1950.
Worse, the Obama administration is projecting unprecedented annual deficits over the next ten years if its political agenda of cap and trade, universal healthcare, and other expensive programs is enacted. According to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, these programs will average more than 4 percent of GDP each year and total $9.3 trillion over the decade. That would mean a doubling of the national debt in absolute terms and at least a 50 percentage point rise in the ratio of debt to GDP, taking us back nearly to where the debt was at the end of World War II.
And that, of course, assumes a quick recovery from the current recession and an economy expanding at a rate averaging 2.5 percent a year beginning in 2010. If the economy were to continue to lag or the country face a serious crisis, such as a major war, or if the Obama agenda is enacted and turns out to be more expensive than estimatedâas government programs usually doâthe result could be a debt load that not even the United States could sustain. The only alternatives would then be a tax rate that would cripple the economy, radical reductions in government spending, or a deliberate policy of inflation that would send interest rates soaring.
If the economy were to continue to lag or the country face a serious crisis, or if the Obama agenda is enacted and turns out to be more expensive than estimated, the result could be a debt load that not even the United States could sustain.
How did the richest country in the history of the worldâand one with great international financial responsibilitiesâget into a position where its debt might easily spiral out of control? A little history explains a lot.
* * *
