I won't dwell on all in the minor details but money printing is the closest thing to QE in reality. Where did the federal reserve get the money to buy this debt?? How far can the USA take this debt....that's unknown. Japan has gone up to 200% of GDP.....but does not rely on foreign investment in debts like USA does.
This will have longer term ramifications for the USA. Any significant increase in interest rates will have a huge impact on USA government spending. In the medium term, the USA may be forced to choose between reduced defense spending or entitlement programs domestically. In the long run he USA may reach a point where all it can do is payoff its debt....no money for any other government spending.
i answered all of those questions . and also u dont understand macro economics so let me clear some concepts so u can understand. but QE is a part of economy if the economy is growing too fast u need to ensure there is enough paper money to account for it.
"Where did the federal reserve get the money to buy this debt??"
As i said again federal reserve does NOT buy this debt . it prints the treasuries and sell the debt in the open market market.
right now the debt holdings are as follow
foreign entities e.g govt : 27%
domestic entities e.g business, mutual funds, retirements/ pension funds: 73%
How far can the USA take this debt?
Forever, As i said in my earlier post as long as the gdp of the US increases us will always be able to get debt. because entities giving the debt will have no problem issuing us debt as long as they know us has the capacity to pay them interest and when few of their treasuries matures, pay their underlying debt
Japan has gone up to 200% of GDP.....but does not rely on foreign investment in debts like USA does. ?
japan "cannot" rely on foreign debt because its currency is not a world reserve currency. basically given a choice between yuan and the dollar any external entity would pick the dollar because its the reserve. as long as ur domestic population believe thar ur govt can pay u the debt and the interest that govt will get debt.
Also, a little tid-bit back in the 70's japan was about to overtake US economy there wqas this loom and gloom like it is with china today. but PLAZA ACCORD set japan back 30 years.
Also another tid-bit having ur currency as the world's reserve currency is for the most part what makes u a super power. before world war 1 pound sterling was the worlds reserve currency. as a reserve currencies u have access to the whole worlds wealth because entire world is ok providing u debt. and if they hold ur debt in ur currency it is less likely that they would in the future choose any other currency to replace ur currency as the reserve or let ur currency fall because it would also erode their wealth. thats one of the reasons US issues debt to foreign entities because then its less likely those countries would support the fall of the dollar.
Also another perk, u have jurisdiction wherever ur currency is used. e.g if a money launderer converted his rupee to USD in a pakistani bank. US now has jurisdiction over that person even though hes pakistani national. thats how they prosecuted FIFA even FIFA has nothing to do with the US
"his will have longer term ramifications for the USA. Any significant increase in interest rates will have a huge impact on USA government spending"
Nope, US can to some degree control interest rate thatch the whole reason of the fed. if it contracts treasuries interest will go low. interest starts rising if the govt takes on more debt relative to the increase in economy of if people start losing faith in the US. think about it if there is a risk that the money i lend u will not make it back to me i will charge u higher interest to ensure i can recoup as much as possible
entitlement programs domestically. In the long run he USA may reach a point where all it can do is payoff its debt....no money for any other government spending.
Nope, as i said earlier it depends on the growth of economy which impacts the tax revenue. for example. in 2006 US govt tax collection was 2 trillion in 2020 it was 3.6 trillion so US increased 1.6 T in tax revenue which means it can afford to pay more interest and hence investors arent afraid to buy US treasuries and hence giving it loans.
out of $3,600 Billion dollars tax revenue.
US paid $200 billion interest and i believe close to $500-$600 billion to pay off some of the treasuries that matured
Also another tid-bit US can pay off its debt in 7 years if it closed the loop holes that big business use to hoard money in cayman island and avoid paying federal tax. US in estimate lose close to $3 trillion dollar worth of tax revenue because these companies use loop holes to pay $0 federal tax. i mean Apple is a technically owned by its ireland subsidiary company that has $250 billion in cash but because its an "ireland" company it doesn't have to pay US any tax.
The funniest one Bank of AMERICA. is technically owned by a company in bahamas i think and paid $0 federal tax lol