Debt crisis

The one bright side of the looming debt crisis

By almost every historical indicator, the US is clearly approaching a debt crisis. The federal government’s aggregate liabilities now exceed its gross domestic product. The annual interest required to service federal obligations is greater than what Congress spends each year on defense. And projected annual deficits for the next decade are well ahead of estimated revenues by more than $2 trillion. Many state legislatures are deeply underwater as well, despite receiving generous Covid related bailouts from President Biden’s 2021 American Rescue Plan Act. California’s temporary $100 billion surplus in 2022, for example, has morphed into a projected deficit of $68 billion over the next two years.

dollar debt

As America’s fiscal storm approaches, government prepares to save itself

It’s a familiar response whenever the National Weather Service warns of a Category 5 hurricane, a life-threatening winter blizzard or some other looming natural disaster. Government officials urge local citizens to seek shelter immediately, while promising that area police will keep guard to ensure that looters do not use the emergency to rob boarded-up homes and abandoned stores. Today, Americans are being warned to brace for another kind of storm, one involving not the weather but their personal finances.

fiscal debt