US Debt Interest Bill Rockets Past a Cool $1 Trillion a Year

US Debt Interest Bill Rockets Past a Cool $1 Trillion a Year

Estimated annualized interest payments on the US government debt pile climbed past $1 trillion at the end of last month, Bloomberg analysis shows. That amount has doubled in the past 19 months, and is equivalent to 15.9% of the entire Federal budget for fiscal year 2022.

The figures are calculated using US Treasury data which state the government’s monthly outstanding debt balances and the average interest it pays.

The worsening metrics may reignite debate about the US fiscal path amid heavy borrowing from Washington. That dynamic has already helped drive up bond yields, threatened the return of the so-called bond vigilantes and led Fitch Ratings to downgrade US government debt in August.

“There will be further increases to Treasury coupon auctions and T-bills outstanding going forward,” Bloomberg Intelligence strategists Ira Jersey and Will Hoffman wrote in a research note. “Besides deficits of over $2 trillion in the foreseeable future, climbing maturities following the increase of issuance from March 2020 will also need to be refinanced.”

There is no debt as long as we print money.

Just hit me with another (global) force majeure and we're back at raising balance sheets and buying gov debt with money that noone ever had to work for.
 
There is no debt as long as we print money.
If you modify this slightly to "there is no debt as long as what you call "debt" is denominated in the same money units you can print without limit," then you've got it. Unfortunately, there is such a thing as price inflation.
 
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Technically they didn't... it was the democrats in 1913 (W. Wilson).

You're right! We sold war bonds to finance WWI. Big time debt! After the war ended (1919?), Wilson wanted us to pay off our war debt, so taxes were increased to retire the war bonds as quickly as possible. Naturally that threw the private sector economy into recession, just as we would expect if suddenly a lot of money was withdrawn from the economy. (We didn't understand our own money back then. Nothing has changed in that regard!) Then the Roaring twenties and bathtub Gin came in to vogue, and all was conveniently forgotten. Everybody was either happy-happy, or just plain drunk. (The income tax, 16th Amendment, went in in 1913 (probably first year for collection was 1914?) so the tax was in place by the time Wilson said, "Shucks y'all, let's just go ahead and retire those war bonds using increased tax revenue." In today's world, Mexico would pay for the war.
 
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There is no debt as long as we print money.

Just hit me with another (global) force majeure and we're back at raising balance sheets and buying gov debt with money that noone ever had to work for.
Actually someone has to work for most dollars that enter the private sector economy because most dollars enter when the government decides to buy something that requires the private sector's time and energy to create. I guess the exception might be certain types of transfer payments such as the Covid payments, or the government decides to buy something that was originally stolen, e.g., land. OK, I guess that's not true because it does take time and energy to steal something.
 
If you modify this slightly to "there is no debt as long as what you call "debt" is denominated in the same money units you can print without limit," then you've got it.

Absolutely, i took this for granted :)

Unfortunately, there is such a thing as price inflation.

Inflation is a problem only when it's a supply shock driven. Demand driven inflation means nothing. If i print a million to every citizen then prices will just adjust to a level that doesn't give me any benefit of having that million.

So monetary policy driven inflation don't really exist. Or should i say, worsening of standard of living. Proof? Look at prices and affordability ratios post GFC until covid (2009-2020). Contrast to popular opinion, in that 10 years, you had one of the best times in a looong time to buy a home/real estate.
 
Actually someone has to work for most dollars that enter the private sector economy because most dollars enter when the government decides to buy something that requires the private sector's time and energy to create. I guess the exception might be certain types of transfer payments such as the Covid payments, or the government decides to buy something that was originally stolen, e.g., land. OK, I guess that's not true because it does take time and energy to steal something.

No, i meant the dollars printed are money that have an market price of 0. It's created out of nothing and it enters into a world where money has a market price. So what happens is, those two are bundled together and the result is lower cost of capital WITHOUT lower level of risk. Risk is taken out the equation ONLY thanks to capital that noone had to work for.

Otherwise, who would be stupid enough to lend their hard earned money at 0 or negative?


Actually someone has to work for most dollars that enter the private sector economy because most dollars enter when the government decides to buy something that requires the private sector's time and energy to create.

You're explaining synthetic demand. A demand that would never exist without printed money. So, in other words, this is just a job that was created because the real world is/was unable to create it.

So, your story is correct ofc but it doesn't change the fact that the market price of printed dollars is 0.
 
So, your story is correct ofc but it doesn't change the fact that the market price of printed dollars is 0.
Maybe rethink this.

Our newly created "dollars" don't exist until the are spent into the economy. It is the actual act of deficit spending, as authorized by Congress, that "prints" the new outside money that appears in the private sector economy the instant it's spent into the economy. That's what we call "printing." These new dollars have the same value as all other dollars once they are in the private sector and they don't exist until they are in the private sector. (Only referring to new outside money here.)
 
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