I harp on the national debt and how it breaks down per citizen, $107,172, per taxpayer, $271,791, and the stooges in Washington, DC who are content to keep racking up this debt which is used to enrich the OCGFC who run them and the world (Trump is an OCGFC member who shows no concern for the debt). If we look at how they forced austerity on unraveling nations, cutting bank deposits… They’re just waiting for the problem to be so ominous that they’ll force austerity on all the useless eaters (retired depending on Social Security). And after years of exploding inflation and propping up investment bubbles soon to pop, how many will find out their pensions are no longer solvent, and how many will find those investment accounts were wiped out significantly? They have floated one idea to push things out a bit, and that’s everyone giving up their investment accounts with the government’s promise to pay them when they retire. Would you trust this lot to honor that agreement even if capable? Of course, this could be God’s plan for the tribulation in breaking the entire global banking system and the OCGFC who run it.
https://www.libertynation.com/the-year-national-debt-exploded/
The US government is borrowing billions a day.
by Andrew Moran
The national debt is a political football. Over the last four years, Republicans have proclaimed that the ocean of red ink flooding Washington is an existential threat. In the previous four years, it was the Democrats who rang the IOU alarm bells. A chief tenet of Politics 101 is to worry about the national debt when in opposition and then ignore it upon securing the highest office in the land. Will President-elect Donald Trump be more fiscally responsible than President Joe Biden? What about Trump’s successor in 2029? Whether in war or peace, boom or bust, America’s fiscal health deteriorates.
The National Debt Is How Much?
As of December 24, 2024, the national debt stands at $36,146,819,184,367.10. This is broken down into categories: debt held by the public (debt held by individuals, corporations, foreign governments, and the Federal Reserve) and intragovernmental holdings (debts the federal government owes to itself). The former totals $28,839,543,803,673.77, and the latter totals $7,307,275,380,693.33.
Liberty Nation News recently reported that Uncle Sam unlocked three notable milestones this year: $34 trillion, $35 trillion, and $36 trillion. Since January 2, the national debt has climbed nearly $2.2 trillion. Compared to previous years, it’s high, but hardly record breaking. For instance, the debt grew by about $1.858 trillion in 2022 – but it surged about $2.6 trillion in 2023.
The $2 trillion budget shortfalls and the $2 trillion increase in the national debt come as the US government generates near-record revenues, topping $7 trillion. This, of course, supports the common refrain that the nation’s capital does not suffer from a shortage of revenue, but an excess of spending. Indeed, to simplify America’s fiscal mismanagement, the federal government borrows approximately $6 billion per day and spends more than $2 billion every day on interest payments (more on this soon).
According to the Congressional Budget Office’s “An Update to the Budget and Economic Outlook: 2024 to 2034” report in June, the situation will worsen in the coming years. Over the next decade, the national debt is poised to exceed $50 trillion, annual $2 trillion budget deficits are on track to become the norm, and the debt will swallow the entire economy.
Mandatory outlays, such as Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, are a significant driver of spending and the broader red ink challenges. Based on the most conservative estimates, they face about $100 trillion in unfunded obligations. As the population ages and inflation remains as intense as it is in this field, these government programs will become costlier to manage. While common sense dictates that they need reforms, no politician on either side of the aisle will touch them with a 39-and-a-half-foot pole. Doing so would be electoral suicide in a deeply fractured country.
The other component surrounding the national debt debate is interest payments. In fiscal year 2024, the US government spent nearly $1 trillion to service the debt, and the Treasury expects to make roughly $1.2 trillion on interest payments in fiscal year 2025. Since the interest rate edges higher when the national debt increases – it is presently 3.3%, up from 1.7% in January 2021 – debt-servicing costs are quickly spiraling out of control. About one-third of individual income tax collections were allocated to interest on the debt.
Unsustainable
Be it lawmakers or monetary policymakers, the consensus is that the United States is on an unsustainable path. Even outgoing Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who had assured the public for the last four years that everything was fine and dandy, has had a sudden change of heart (again!) and declared that fiscal circumstances are metastasizing. She went as far as apologizing for not doing enough to improve the public purse. While her soon-to-be successor, billionaire financier Scott Bessent, has agreed that the mandatory side of the equation needs to be addressed, he believes the next administration should be the one to handle it, not President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming team.
When neither side possesses the political courage to take an ax to the underlying fiscal issues, the nation will be forced to make tough decisions that will inevitably harm the most vulnerable.